- WWA.2023.359
- Item
- [192-?]
Part of Veterans Collection
Photograph of the Great War Veterans Association building
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Part of Veterans Collection
Photograph of the Great War Veterans Association building
Exterior view of the implements shed.
Agricultural Machinery - Tractors and Binders
Tractor and five binders at work in a grain field; [Sutherland] grain elevator in background.
Agricultural Machinery - Tractors and Threshing Machines
Men working at a separator and standing beside a tractor.
Image of Holstein cattle standing in front of University (Main) Barn.
Agricultural Research - Experimental Plots
Groups of people inspecting the plots; trees in the distance.
Saskatchewan Agriculture Societies - Convention
W.J. Rutherford, Dean of Agriculture, addressing attendees in the Livestock Pavilion.
[University] grounds in the distance.
Male students in front of a hearth in Qu'Appelle Hall (men's residence).
Male students standing and seated in front of a hearth in Qu'Appelle Hall (men's residence). Pictures hanging on walls in background.
Image of rear of Saskatchewan Hall (women's residence); tennis court fence visible at left and in front of building.
Image of rear of Saskatchewan Hall (women's residence); tennis court fence visible at left and in front of building.
Walter C. Murray in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
Walter C. Murray, first University President, talking with two unidentified men on the platform at the railway station in Prince Albert. Railcars in background.
Lucy Murray eating in bed [possibly a berth on a train] with a suitcase in foreground.
Bio/Historical Note: Born in 1902 in Nova Scotia, Lucy Hunter Murray was the second daughter of Walter C. Murray, the University of Saskatchewan's first president, and Christina Cameron Murray. Lucy Murray received her BA at the University of Saskatchewan in 1923 and her MA from the University of Toronto in 1925. Then followed a B.Ed. degree in 1933 at the University of Saskatchewan where she received the McColl scholarship in 1933. Murray earned a Ph.D. at the University of Chicago in 1935. She joined the Regina College's department of English in 1936 and was an Associate Professor there at the time of her death in 1967. She was given the Cliff Shaw Memorial Award for her contributions to the Blue Jay, the journal of the Saskatchewan Natural History Society.
Lucy Murray in a boat reading a book and holding a parasol over her head and left shoulder; at [Big River, Saskatchewan].
Bio/Historical Note: Born in 1902 in Nova Scotia, Lucy Hunter Murray was the second daughter of Walter C. Murray, the University of Saskatchewan's first president, and Christina Cameron Murray. Lucy Murray received her BA at the University of Saskatchewan in 1923 and her MA from the University of Toronto in 1925. Then followed a B.Ed. degree in 1933 at the University of Saskatchewan where she received the McColl scholarship in 1933. Murray earned a Ph.D. at the University of Chicago in 1935. She joined the Regina College's department of English in 1936 and was an Associate Professor there at the time of her death in 1967. Murray was given the Cliff Shaw Memorial Award for her contributions to the Blue Jay, the journal of the Saskatchewan Natural History Society.