Written in Arbos 1983: STF Memories, p. 21; "In 1909 Georgina McGill, a student at McMaster University, came west to visit her brother Jud at his farm near Stranraer. She stayed to teach for several months at Wynona school? built in 1907. Miss McGill taught fourteen students in this sodded frame schoolhouse." Georgina McGill standing outside the Wynona sod schoolhouse.
Written in Arbos 1983: STF Memories, p. 21; "In 1909 Georgina McGill, a student at McMaster University, came west to visit her brother Jud at his farm near Stranraer. She stayed to teach for several months at Wynona school? built in 1907. Miss McGill taught fourteen students in this sodded frame schoolhouse." Georgina McGill and students outside the Wynona sod schoolhouse.
Group photograph of teacher, Marie Jopp, and students at the White Beach outpost school in 1943; the students stand by the school that is a frame shanty with mud plaster, a board roof, no shingles and no chimney.
The Saskatchewan Bulletin, February 1952, p. 38; "Taken the second day, the photographs (left) show the general assembly when it was addressed on audio-visual matters?"
The Saskatchewan Bulletin, December 1966, p. 5; "Mrs. Norah Eileen Maywood, left, was presented with an engraved school bell by Mrs. Frances Till on behalf of the Nipawin Unit Branch of the Saskatchewan Teachers' Federation. The presentation was made at the Nipawin convention, of which Mrs. Maywood was president. Mrs. Maywood (née Denby) came from England to teach at Codette and taught a total of twenty-one years in the Nipawin area. Prior to her retirement she was teacher librarian in the Nipawin Composite High School. The stand for the bell was handmade by shop teacher Phillip Lyons."
A student writes on the blackboard as other students and the teacher look on. Photos of the King and Queen hang above the board and a Union Jack hangs to the side. Sheaves of grain, a calendar, a map of Africa and other projects are pinned to the side wall.
The Saskatchewan Bulletin, May 1958, p. 30; "The tightest spot in the Del Building was a room which housed an inadequate assortment of machines: duplicator, folder, addresser, stencil file, supply cupboards and salary schedule files and etceteras!"