- FGPC-SC-P322
- Item
- [ca. 1912]
Parte de Frank Glass Photograph Collection
Glen Payne School with children playing in the yard.
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Parte de Frank Glass Photograph Collection
Glen Payne School with children playing in the yard.
Extension to St. Joseph's School
Parte de Frank Glass Photograph Collection
An addition being added to St. Joseph's Convent School in 1953.
Parte de Frank Glass Photograph Collection
Jerome School with teacherage and children with horses and buggys lined up.
Schools & Education, Sports & Recreation
Parte de Frank Glass Photograph Collection
Photos of Rosetown and area schools, parks, sports teams/events, and event centres, collected by Frank Glass.
N.W.M.P riding school in Regina, Saskatchewan
Parte de City of Regina fonds
Exterior front-side view of the North West Mounted Police (NWMP) riding school located at Depot Division in Regina, Saskatchewan.
Parte de Book Collection
Two copies of a coil-bound book containing poems and stories based on the events of the author Myra (Smith) Stilborn's life. One copy is larger than the other.
Sem título
Parte de Howard Jackson Collection
The collegiate grounds are very well treed, mostly with elm trees.
Little Stone School - Opening Ceremonies
J.W.T. Spinks, University President, addresses guests at the official opening of the Little Stone School on the U of S grounds. An unidentified woman is seated next to Dr. Spinks at a small table, while guests stand and sit next to school entrance.
Bio/Historical Note: The original Victoria School, now known as the Little Stone Schoolhouse (LSS), was built in 1887 by Alexander Marr, known for owning the Marr residence, currently the oldest residential building in Saskatoon. The LSS building was not only Saskatoon’s first school and library, it was also its first public building. In the evenings, various community events were held here, such as dances, meetings and various religious events. The one-room school house was used until a two room school house was constructed in 1905, followed by an even larger Victoria School in 1909, officially assuming the role of the original Victoria School. In 1911 the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire raised funds to preserve and relocate the building to the University of Saskatchewan campus. The school was carefully dismantled and moved. Almost 50 years later, in 1967, the Saskatoon Council of Women raised money to renovate the building and officially opened the LSS as a museum. Later that year the LSS was declared a Municipal Heritage Site and eventually Provincial Heritage Property in 1982. The Little Stone Schoolhouse continues to play an important role in the Saskatoon community and on the University of Saskatchewan campus. The U of S took over the operation of the building in 1981 and the Diefenbaker Canada Centre has ensured the continued appreciation of this historical landmark. The main Little Stone Schoolhouse program focuses on a historical introduction and the docent roleplaying as a school teacher.
A photo of the St. Joseph's school building in 1987, a year before its demolition and after the building had been purchased by the Rosetown School Division for $200,000. Grades 7, 8, and 9 were taught here until construction began on the new high school in 1988.
St. Joseph's Convent not long before it was demolished in 1988. Note that the statue of St. Joseph has been removed, gone to its home at the St. Joseph Roman Catholic Parish in Kindersley.
Last Meridian School Photo Shoot
Parte de LRA Photograph Collection
Large group stand in front of the school building.
Stone Rural School, ca. 1900-1960
A teacher stands with her students by a tethered horse outside a stone rural school (small wooden stable in background)
Kensmith School near Biggar, Saskatchewan
Parte de Biggar Photograph Collection
An exterior view of the old Kensmith Rural School near Biggar, Saskatchewan.
St. Margaret's Church and School in Biggar, Saskatchewan
Parte de Biggar Photograph Collection
A street view of St. Margaret's Church and School in Biggar, Saskatchewan
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.