- GPC-SP4
- Series
- 1920-1989
Photos of hockey teams and players in Rosetown.
54 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Photos of hockey teams and players in Rosetown.
The Boys Hockey Team in Biggar, Saskatchewan
Part of Biggar Photograph Collection
Eight boys standing in a group in front of a building, all wearing winter and hockey gear, some holding hockey sticks.
Young boys identified as: (from left to right) W.M. Devine, Harvey Beech, Earl Calvert, Adam Dickson, Allan Gates, Jack Mitchell, Bill Zenick, and Jack Jones.
Randall Photo Shop (Biggar)
University of Saskatchewan Huskies Men's Hockey - Gary Wilson
Head and shoulders image of Gary Wilson, Huskies hockey.
[University of Saskatchewan Huskies Men's Hockey Team] - Action
Likely an [intervarsity game at Rutherford Rink].
University of Saskatchewan Huskies Men's Hockey Team - Lew Parres
Lew Parres, Huskies player, in uniform with his stick on the ice.
Bio/Historical Note: Alfred Lewis (Lew) Parres was born 19 February 1915. He was a juvenile and junior hockey star with the Nutana Athletic Club in Saskatoon. He also excelled at track and field, winning many awards. In 1932 his brother Jim entered Geological Engineering at the University of Saskatchewan with Lew following in 1934. Lew played hockey for the Huskies and after graduation could have had a career in hockey but chose the mining business instead. Parres was a staunch Northerner. He knew the North and loved the North. His vision in proposing a new Northern Province (which he called Precambria) was to keep the wealth (especially the tremendous mineral wealth) of the North in the North working to improve the lives of Northerners. His dream was to combine Northern Manitoba and Northern Saskatchewan and a small piece of Northern Alberta into one entity. His plan was backed by the local Chamber of Commerce in the early 1950s and made headlines across western Canada.
University of Saskatchewan Huskies Men's Hockey Team - Practice
Unidentified Huskies hockey player and goalie practice in [Rutherford Rink].
University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes Hockey Team
Action, group and coach photos on page mock-up for the Huskiettes hockey page in the 1949 Greystone.
University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes Hockey Team - Georgia E. McConnell
Image of Georgia McConnell, dressed in uniform, posing for the camera.
Bio/Historical Note: Georgia E. McConnell graduated from the School of Accounting in 1939.
University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes Hockey Team - Group Photo
Huskiettes team members: Vi Harper, Mavis Bennett, Jean McMillan, Pat Lamone, Eleanor McFadyen, Joyce Hindley.
University of Saskatchewan Men's Hockey Team - Group Photo
Hockey team members in uniforms and equipment; taken outdoors. Identified are Reginald Brehaut (coach; with hat), Charlie Hay (capt), K. Dewar (asst mgr) and Prof. Lovell (mgr.).
University of Saskatchewan Women's Hockey Team - Group Photo
Indoor group photo of women's hockey team members holding hockey sticks (l to r): Christine Cameron Murray, Iona Dorine Lawless, Queade Isabel Helen Johnston, Edith Maud Hartt, Ellen Andreasen, Ada L. Staples (captain, centre), E. Alice Robinson (manager, cover point), Nan McKay (rover).
University of Saskatchewan Women's Hockey Team - Group Photo
Group photo of hockey players: Miriam Jardine, Nora Harrel, Kent Philips (coach), Kay White, Rose Mushiniski, Maine Olsen, Bessie Nicoll, Gladys Munroe (captain), Rosalean Burns (manager). Gertrude Cox.
University of Saskatchewan Women's Hockey Team - Group Photo
Hockey team members, Eddie Carr (coach), F. Miller, Ginger Catherwood, Alda Mathers, F. Mahaffy, O. Leitch, F. Brown, Queade Isabel Helen Johnston.
Bio/Historical Note: Born in Hannah, North Dakota in 1902, Ginevra (Ginger) Irene Catherwood and her family moved to a homestead just outside Scott, Saskatchewan, four years later. Ginger likely learned to skate and play hockey on frozen sloughs. She also played baseball and excelled as pitcher. Catherwood entered the University of Saskatchewan on a scholarship in 1919. It was on the ice, as captain of the Varsity women’s hockey team, where she excelled. Catherwood’s arrival at the U of S coincided with the beginning of inter-varsity competition in women’s hockey. During the 1920-1921 season, playing against the University of Manitoba, Catherwood scored five goals in the first period and finished the game with three more in a 9-1 victory. She netted four goals in the first 11 minutes in a match against the University of Alberta. The final score was Saskatchewan 7 (Catherwood 6) and Alberta 1. The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix declared the U of S team the unofficial champion of university women’s hockey that season (there was no formal league at the time.) Opposing teams quickly learned that Catherwood was a scoring threat every time she had the puck. During the 1921-1922 season, she was hurt in the first period in a game in Edmonton and left the ice. The team squeaked out a 2-1 win. She was still nursing her injury in the next game against Manitoba and played defence in a 2-2 tie. Catherwood graduated with a three-year Arts degree in 1922. After attending Normal School in Saskatoon, she found work as a teacher in the Plenty, Saskatchewan district. Then in 1928, her sister Ethel won Olympic gold in high jump and Ginger was called upon by their family to chaperone her during her Canadian travels. Ginger was rumoured to have accompanied Ethel when she left Canada for the United States sometime around 1932. Ginger Catherwood later married English-born Charles Mitchell in Toronto in the fall of 1933.
3 photographs depicting the Village of Fiske in 1910 and the Fiske hockey team in 1947.
Part of WHFA Photos Collection
Team photo of the Wolseley Mustangs in uniform on the ice.