College of Agriculture - Class in Session
- A-3618
- Item
- [ca. 195-?]
Students seated and facing instructor in a agricultural mechanics class. View from back of room looking towards instructor. Backboard and diagrams behind instructor.
College of Agriculture - Class in Session
Students seated and facing instructor in a agricultural mechanics class. View from back of room looking towards instructor. Backboard and diagrams behind instructor.
School of Agriculture - Class in Session
Second-year students of the School of Agriculture in a soil field study taken during registration period, and are lined up for a coffee break.
College of Agriculture - Class in Session
A group of students gathered around a machine in the machine shop.
College of Agriculture - Class in Session
Four students working on an engine in the machine shop.
School of Agriculture - Class in Session
Dr. Doug Knott (left), professor, Crop Science (Field Husbandry) Department, standing with students in a greenhouse and looking at a stand of grain.
Bio/Historical Note: The Field Husbandry Building was conceived and constructed as a direct result of the fire that destroyed the Engineering Building in 1925. The Department of Field Husbandry, which had moved to Engineering four years earlier, lost its entire seed stock to the blaze. The Engineering Building that rose from the ashes was not, however, to include the Department of Field Husbandry. They were to have their own new and separate structure. Designed by David Brown, the stone clad structure was finished in 1929 at a cost of $260,000 and contained offices, classrooms and laboratories. The building also acted as a screen to mask the brick portion of campus from the buildings around the Bowl. In 1937 an addition, designed by local architect and University lecturer G.J.K. Verbeke, extended the building northward. The School of Medical Science moved into the addition from their cramped quarters in the College Building and stayed until the completion of the Medical College in 1950. Field Husbandry changed its name to Crop Science in 1962 and remained in the building until the College of Agriculture Building was completed in 1991. In 1997 the Department of Anthropology and Archaeology moved into the building, which was renamed accordingly. The Department of Anthropology was amalgamated with the Department of Religious Studies and relocated from the building in 2002; the building was subsequently renamed the Archaeology Building.
College of Agriculture - Class in Session
Two students in a short course testing engines; one writes on a blackboard; the other works on a engine.
School of Agriculture - Class in Session
Students learning the art of cutting meat in a livestock project.
Two-tiered, four-sectioned chicken coop with door flaps with round holes in the top section, sitting on four legs.
Winter scene of a cattle exhibition at Yorkton, Saskatchewan; building and trees in background.
Cattle lined up for inspection in Livestock Pavilion; observers in foreground.
A bull stands with other cattle as observers stand at fence in background.
Winter scene of cattle lined up for judging with a crowd of people observing. Building and trees in background.
A judging competition of cattle at the McLaren farm at Shellbrook, Saskatchewan. People and cattle visible among trees.
Cattle resting under bough-covered shelters at the Saltcoats, Saskatchewan summer fair; building in background.
Visitors walking between cattle shelters at the Saltcoats, Saskatchewan summer fair; building in background.