4-H Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions - Visit to Ottawa
- A-2171
- Item
- 1955
Winners standing in a doorway at the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. M. Hartnett and Lynn Biggart of Wilbert represented Saskatchewan.
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4-H Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions - Visit to Ottawa
Winners standing in a doorway at the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. M. Hartnett and Lynn Biggart of Wilbert represented Saskatchewan.
4-H Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions - Visit to Ottawa
John G. Diefenbaker, Prime Minister of Canada, meets with winners in his office; members holding certificates. Alvin Hamilton, federal Minister of Agriculture, at extreme left.
4-H Homecraft Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
Four females standing in a room holding the 4-H emblem. Draperies hanging in the background. Eleanor Geib, Joan King (both from the Conquest 4-H Homecraft Club), J. Law and M. Amundrud are identified.
4-H Homecraft Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
Group photo of females sitting and standing holding the 4-H emblem. Members identified are Eleanor Geib, Joan King (both from the Conquest 4-H Homecraft Club), J. Law and M. Amundrud.
4-H Homecraft Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
Head and shoulders image of Joan King and Eleanor Geib, Food Winners from the Conquest 4-H Homecraft Club.
4-H Homecraft Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
I. Dieker and L. Dieker, representing the Sovereign, Saskatchewan Clothing Club. Emblem on jacket pocket, "Saskatchewan Golden Jubilee 1905--1955".
4-H Homecraft Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
Image of group of young women examining clothing. Location unknown.
4-H Homecraft Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
D. Bridges and G. Bridges representing the Tisdale food club. Emblem on jacket pocket, "Saskatchewan Golden Jubilee 1905--1955".
4-H Homecraft Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
Four unidentified women examine food products on a table. Foods displayed include a Windsor Salt tin, a carton of eggs, a loaf of bread, and several potatoes. Location unknown.
College of Law - M.I.A.B. Football Champions - Group Photo
Image of Men's Intramural Athletic Board (M.I.A.B.) football champions seated on bleachers. Team members: K.C. Prefontaine (Mgr), R. Evans, John Klebuc, R. Bell, Ian Disbery, K. Norman, M. Schulman, S. Cichan (Mgr), E. Marshall, M. Sihvan, E. Dietrich, P. Caron, G. Naylor, K. Andreychuk, E. Sojonky, D. Osborn, P. Hengen, A. Blott (coach), E. Ratushny, J. Ferguson (coach), M. Henderson, T. Ferguson, A. MacLean.
4-H Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
H. Dowkes and W. Abbott, representatives of Maple Creek Poultry Club.
4-H Clubs - Leadership Advisory Committees of Saskatchewan
Three unidentified women working at a table. Note on back: "Leadership Advisory Committees of Saskatchewan for 4-H Clubs advises Extension Division on types of workshops to hold for adult and junior leaders, 1967".
4-H Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
H. Jowsey and E. Wigmore, representatives of Yorkton Dairy Club.
Students Walking in a Blizzard
A line of people walk on a campus sidewalk passed the Field Husbandry (later Crop Science, Archaeology) during a blizzard. The Engineering Building can be seen in the background but is obscured by blowing snow.
Note that the main building in this photo had been misidentified as the Physics Building, and updated in May 2024.
Main building of Camp Rayner on Lake Diefenbaker, Saskatchewan; trees in foreground.
Bio/Historical Note: John George Rayner was born 1 Oct. 1890 in London, England. At age 2 his family came to Canada, settling on a farm near Virden, Manitoba. After completing his high school education there, he attended the Manitoba College of Agriculture in Winnipeg and graduated with a BSA in 1913. In 1914 Rayner was employed as agricultural representative with the Saskatchewan Department of Agriculture, his district taking in a large portion of the northwest part of the settled area of the province. With an appointment in 1918 as director of boys' and girls' club work at the Extension Department at the U of S in Saskatoon, Rayner began a 34-year association with the rural young people of Saskatchewan. He was dedicated to the principle of development of the individual, and was one of the founders of the Canadian Council of Boys' and Girls' work in 1933. Rayner served as the council's president in 1937 and 1947, and was instrumental in getting the name "4-H" applied to rural youth clubs in Canada. He served as director of the Extension Department from 1920 until the time of his death in 1952. Rayner was a charter member of the Canadian Society of Technical Agriculturists (now the Agricultural Institute of Canada) of which he became a fellow. He was also a charter member of the Saskatchewan Institute of Agrologists. In 1965 the 4-H Foundation's Camp Rayner was named in Rayner’s honour, and in 1973 he was posthumously named to Saskatchewan's Hall of Fame. John Rayner died in Saskatoon on 30 June 1952.