- E. Photographs, 5. Birds - 1960-1970
- Item
- [196-]
Part of Hans Dommasch fonds
A Great Horned Owl is seen in mid-flight from a log where a dead rabbit lays.
Dommasch, Hans Siegfried
Part of Hans Dommasch fonds
A Great Horned Owl is seen in mid-flight from a log where a dead rabbit lays.
Dommasch, Hans Siegfried
The Year it didn't Rain - story of Dust Bowl
Part of Agriculture Collection
Article by Max Brathwaite in Maclean's Magazine about 1937, the driest year on the prairies of the 1930's.
Jim Williams receiving the Provincial Championship Trophy
Part of Recreation Collection
Jim Williams, manager of the Indian Head Rockets, accepting the trophy for having won the 1951 provincial championship.
Indian Head Rockets (Baseball)
16th/22nd Saskatchewan Horse - September, 1941
Part of Military Collection
The 16th/22nd Saskatchewan Horse regiment in their full uniforms in a field with buildings in the background
16th/22nd Saskatchewan Horse
16th/22nd Saskatchewan Horse - D Company
Part of Military Collection
The 16th/22nd Saskatchewan Horse group in their full uniforms
16th/22nd Saskatchewan Horse
Man/hobo atop a log car of a train.
1st Saskatchewan Mounted Rifles, 1923
Part of SMM Photo Collection
Group photograph of the 1st Saskatchewan Mounted Rifles in1923
Posed photo of a Doukhobor family; parents Fedya (Fred) N. Storgeoff and Tatiana Storgeoff seated. Daughter Nellie Gleboff and husband Peter W. Gleboff standing (left) with Fedya's nephew Walter G. Storgeoff center, and daughter Kate Storgeoff on the right /photo by Wride/Kamsack". Image was likely taken around the time of Nellie and Peter's wedding in 1922.
Constitution and Bylaws Saskatchewan Grain Growers Association
Part of Organizations Collection
Handbook with the rules, regulations and organizational structure of the Saskatchewan Grain Growers Association
Part of Rice's Studio collection
Image of man standing on the back of farming equipment while breaking a field for the first time
Rice, Lewis
Posed photograph of young Doukhobor family. The father holds a small child; the mother and two small children stand. On back: Doukhobor family/photo by Wride/Kamsack".
Part of Rice's Studio collection
A field of mature wheat, ready to be harvested
Rice, Lewis
A Clydesdale stallion, Hiawatha, with cropped tail, four white legs and white face. Man at left holding bridle in yard with a stone fence in background.
Bio/Historical Note: By 1910, 19 horses had been purchased by the College of Agriculture that were good work horses or suitable for student class work. Two were purebred Clydesdales. Three light horses were also purchased. One named Barney was used in the morning to deliver milk to faculty in Nutana and in the afternoon on the buggy as Dean Rutherford made his farm rounds. In 1920 the Province asked the Animal Husbandry Department to establish a Clydesdale breeding stud. This led to development of an outstanding collection of prize winning horses that became a focus of the Department. In the 1920s the Percheron and Belgian breeders also demanded support for their breeds and so they were included in the university stud and some cross breeding was undertaken. The campus horses were used for field work for all Departments, general hauling and site work for new buildings. An unofficial use was for the Lady Godiva ride across campus each fall. By the 1940s it was clear that the era of horses as a main source of farm power was over. The final stallion used in the breeding program was the imported "Windlaw Proprietor," grand champion stallion at the 1946 Royal Winter Fair.
Saskatchewan History Spring 1958
Part of Book Collection
A small (magazine about Saskatchewan history. This issue contains Part 3 (of 3) of the letters of Edwin Jackson Brooks from July 4, 1882 to March 11, 1884 that he wrote home to his wife Helena (Nellie). in Sherbrooke, Quebec.
Brooks, Edwin Jackson
Saskatchewan History Winter 1958 Vol. XI, No. 1
Part of Book Collection
A small magazine about Saskatchewan history. This issue contains Part 2 (of 3) of the letters of Edwin Jackson Brooks from July 4, 1882 to March 11, 1884 that he wrote home to his wife Helena (Nellie). in Sherbrooke, Quebec.
Brooks, Edwin Jackson