[Greystone Theatre] - Unidentified Scene
- A-4953
- Item
- [196-?]
Two male students in costume sit on a checkered stage.
[Greystone Theatre] - Unidentified Scene
Two male students in costume sit on a checkered stage.
[Greystone Theatre] - "The Desert Song"
Three actors on stage, dressed in costumes.
Frank holroyd, professor of Drama, points to two dioramas designed for the Greystone Theatre production of "The Wild Ones" by W.O. Mitchell.
Image of main doors of the Hangar Building. Sign among weeds and brush in foreground.
Bio/Historical Note: The Hangar Building was originally constructed as a World War II Royal Canadian Air Force training facility at Dafoe, Saskatchewan. At a cost of $156,560, the hangar was dismantled and completely reassembled on campus by January 1947. It was intended to provide temporary teaching space for the Department of Household Science. The shingle clad wooden structure was built of post and beam construction on a concrete slab base, and many part-time students participated in its construction. It contained lecture rooms with seating space for 300, 200, 150, 125, 25 and 25 persons respectively, as well as three laboratories. Eight offices were also built for administrative staff so that offices on the ground floors of Qu’Appelle Hall and Saskatchewan Hall could be made available as residence space for returning veterans. While the Hangar Building had been designed to house the Department of Household Science the building was eventually occupied by the College of Commerce, while Household Science was relocated to the Physics Annex. Original intentions were to convert the building into a student curling rink after approximately five years. However such plans were abandoned by the mid-1950s in favour of a new curling facility located near Rutherford Rink, where it could share the existing ice-making plant. In 1967 the College of Commerce vacated the building to occupy the new Law-Commerce Complex, and the Department of Drama moved in. The Hangar Building thus became home to the Greystone Theatre. In September 1993 the Drama Department vacated the building to move into the recently renovated John Mitchell Building. The Hangar Building then remained unoccupied until its demolition in May 1994.
Members standing around a camp fire for closing ceremonies.
4-H Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
H. Dowkes and W. Abbott, representatives of Maple Creek Poultry Club.
University Co-operative School - Group Photo
Informal outdoor group photo of attendees taken on University of Saskatchewan campus.
Emma Ducie and F. Hedley Auld, Deputy Minister, talking to a woman; outdoor scene.
Bio/Historical Note: Emma Roberts Ducie was born in England in 1883 and emigrated to Canada with her family in 1907. She married Harry Ducie, a farmer and school trustee, in 1909; they had three children, Harold, Rose, and Emmie. Emma Ducie organized the Coates Homemakers' Club and continued to be an active member of the Clubs and Women's Institutes at the local, provincial, and national level. Ducie also served with the Saskatoon Council of Women, the Saskatoon Friendship Club and the Canadian Institute of International Affairs. Ducie was also a long-serving member of the advisory council for the College of Agriculture at the University of Saskatchewan. Ducie died in 1990.
School of Agriculture - Students
Group photo of School of Agriculture students and faculty taken in front of the College Building,
Two females from Rocanville, Saskatchewan, wearing white blouses with the 4-H emblem on their pockets and dark skirts standing at each end of a display each holding a large button. Sign on wall in background reads "Button Button Who's Got The Button".
4-H Homecraft Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
Image of five competitors; location unknown.
4-H Clubs - Provincial Interclub Competitions
G. Hass of Hanley and J. Hickie of Waldron, Saskatchewan, representatives of their respective grain clubs.