Women - Societies and clubs√

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Women - Societies and clubs√

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Women - Societies and clubs√

  • UP Women's group

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Women - Societies and clubs√

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Richardson, Grand Coulee, Pense, and Drinkwater Pastoral Charges fonds

  • FL 565
  • Fundo
  • 1901–1998

The fonds consists of textual materials generated by several associated churches and their varying governing pastoral charges: Richardson, Grand Coulee (including Sherwood), Pense (including Cottonwood), Drinkwater, Stoney Beach, Pense - Grand Coulee, and Pense-Drinkwater, as well as predecessors and constituent churches – their boards, committees and related bodies, local women’s units and youth groups.

Contents include: minutes of church boards, sessions, stewards, congregational, trustee meetings; meetings of local Ladies Aid Societies, Women’s Missionary Society (W.M.S.), Women’s Federation (W.F.), Women’s Association (W.A.) and United Church Women (U.C.W.) groups; records from Sunday Schools, Mission Bands, Hi-C, Explorers, C.G.I.T. and other youth groups; correspondence and property files; financial records and annual reports; church histories, bulletins and leaflets; historic rolls and communion rolls; and registers of baptisms, marriages and burials held at Richardson, Pense, Cottonwood, Grand Coulee, Sherwood, Stoney Beach, Belle Plaine, Kronau, Estlin and related locations.

Sem título

Assiniboia Pastoral Charge fonds

  • FL 028
  • Fundo
  • 1910–2008

The fonds consists of textual materials generated by Assiniboia Pastoral Charge and its constituent congregations (including Willow Bunch) – the church boards, committees and related bodies, local women’s units and other groups.

Contents include: minutes of official boards and councils, congregational, committee, choir and Sunday School meetings; records of local Women’s Missionary Society (W.M.S.), Women’s Associations (W.A), and United Church Women (UC.W.), as well as men’s (A.O.T.S.) groups; correspondence; various financial records; communion and historic rolls; and a register of baptisms, marriages, and burials held at Assiniboia, Willow Bunch, Viceroy, Coronach and related locations.

Sem título

Woman's Missionary Society (United Church) publications collection

  • FG 12
  • Coleção
  • 1941–1962

The collection consists of publications relating the Women's Missionary Society of the United Church of Canada. Contents include: reports of the Women's Missionary Society; reports of the Dominion Board; and historical accounts of the W.M.S., church missions and missionary work.

Cadillac, Neville, Vanguard, Aneroid Pastoral Charges fonds

  • FL 102
  • Fundo
  • ca.1909–2002

The fonds consists of records generated by several associated churches and their varying governing pastoral charges: Cadillac Pastoral Charge, Admiral Pastoral Charge, Admiral-Cadillac Pastoral Charge, Neville Pastoral Charge, Vanguard Pastoral Charge, Neville-Vanguard Pastoral Charge, Cadillac-Neville-Vanguard Pastoral Charge, Aneroid Pastoral Charge, and New Venture Pastoral Charge, as well as predecessors and constituent churches – their boards, committees and related bodies, and local women’s units.

Contents include: minutes of church boards, councils, stewards, and congregational meetings; minutes and other records from local Woman’s Association (W.A.), and United Church Women (U.C.W.) groups; Sunday School records; historic rolls and related membership records; some financial records and annual reports; church record books and registers documenting baptisms, marriages and burials in Aneroid, Hillandale, Val Marie, Hazenmore, Glencaid (Kincaid), Ponteix, and nearby area(s). There is also a history book and a Mission Band scrapbook, as well as 9 photograph prints relating to St. Paul’s United Church, Cadillac.

Sem título

Canora, Invermay, Pelly, Norquay Pastoral Charges fonds

  • FL 106
  • Fundo
  • 1890–2004

The fonds consists of records generated by several associated churches and their varying governing pastoral charges: Canora Pastoral Charge, Canora (Ukrainian) Pastoral Charge, Invermay Pastoral Charge, Canora-Invermay Pastoral Charge, Invermay-Margo Pastoral Charge, Pelly Pastoral Charge, Pelly-Malonek Pastoral Charge, and Canora-Norquay-Pelly Pastoral Charge, as well as predecessors and constituent churches – their boards, committees and related bodies, and local women’s units.

Contents include: minutes of church boards, councils, stewards, session, and congregational meetings; records from local Ladies Aid Societies, Women’s Missionary Society (W.M.S.), and United Church Women (U.C.W.) groups; Sunday School, church choir and youth group records; historic rolls, communion rolls, and related membership records; some financial records, correspondence and annual reports; Home Mission Record Books from Grantsville and Norquay areas; church registers from Invermay, Margo, Hampton, St. Andrew’s (Canora), St. Stephen’s Ukrainian (Canora), Gorlitz, Buchanan, Belleau Brook, Maloneck, Pelly, and nearby area(s). There area also 7 photographic prints from Canora.

Sem título

Foam Lake – Leslie Pastoral Charge fonds

  • FL 228
  • Fundo
  • 1904–2011

The fonds consists of textual materials generated by Foam Lake – Leslie Pastoral Charge and predecessors, including Foam Lake Pastoral Charge and Leslie Pastoral Charge, as well as their constituent congregations – church boards, committees and related bodies, local women’s units and other groups.

Contents include: minutes of official boards, Stewards, Session, congregational, and committee meetings; records of local Ladies Aid Society, Women’s Missionary Society (W.M.S.), Woman’s Associations (W.A.), and United Church Women (UC.W.) groups; some financial records and annual reports; communion and historic rolls; and registers of baptisms, marriages, and burials held at Foam Lake, Leslie, Kelvin Grove, Mt. Hecla, Tuffnell, Bertdale, Elfros, and related locations.

Sem título

Rosetown and Prairie Pine Presbyterials United Church Women fonds

  • FW 35
  • Fundo
  • 1926–1981

The fonds consists of records created by Rosetown Presbyterial U.C.W., its members, treasurers, circles and committees, as well as those of its successor, Prairie Pine Presbyteiral U.C.W., and their predecessors: Rosetown Presbyterial of the W.A. (Woman's Association); and Rosetown and Kindersley Presbyterials of the United Church W.M.S. (Woman's Missionary Society).

Contents include: minutes, correspondence, histories, programmes, financial records, and annual reports.

Yorkton Presbyterial United Church Women fonds

  • FW 41
  • Fundo
  • 1926–1969

The fonds consists of records created by Yorkton Presbyterial U.C.W., its members, treasurers, circles and committees, as well as those of its predecessors: Yorkton-Abernethy [or Abernethy-Yorkton] Presbyterial of the W.A. (Woman's Association); and Yorkton, Abernethy, Abernethy-Yorkton and Kamsack Presbyterials of the United Church W.M.S. (Woman's Missionary Society).

Contents include: minutes, reports, membership lists; programs, bulletins, [financial] ledgers, and scrapbooks.

Hospital Women's Auxiliary

Back row, L-R: D. Ross, D. Coulter?, 2 unknown, Betty Mann, -- Thrasher, Lucy Dubois, unknown, Irene Paquette, unknown. Middle row: 3 unknown, -- Shaw, unknown, Marj Kerr, Lucille Bechard, unknown, Alice Belangie, unknown. Front row: Verna Smith, unknown, Marj Halliday, Phyllis Ahrens, Marg Nicolls, Bess Ogle, Ma Clarke.

Members of the United Church Women's Missionary Society

Members of the United Church Women's Missionary Society; Back row, L-R: Mrs. Sid (Lil) Card, Mrs. Laura (Bob) Clarke, Mrs. Geo. Kempling, Mrs. Isaac Ediger, Mrs. Andy Blue, Mrs. Wallace McDougall, Mrs. Wm. Mullins, Mrs. Wm. Hutcheon, Mrs. Lillian Wright, Mrs. Pat Lamborn, Mrs. Roy Rea.
2nd row, L-R: Mrs. Geo. Adnam, Mrs. Wm. Klemmer, Mrs. Jack Harris, Mrs. Phil Javens, Mrs. Norman Cooke.
Front row, L-R: Mrs. Roy Gordon, Mrs. Ray Hough, Mrs. Alice Glendenning, Mrs. Lawrence Scrivens, Miss Nettie Stewart.

Rosetown Presbyterian Church Women's Auxiliary

Back row, L-R: Stella Nicolson, Anna Kingwell, Mrs. Dentith, Mary Whyte, unknown, Christina Beaton, Margaret Clarke, Florine Klassen, Hilda Brooks. Front row: Dorothy Coulter, Marguerite Nicolson, Marion Cochrane, Cath Moore, Leona Livingstone, Mabel Wilson (could be Mrs. Brennan).

University of Saskatchewan Women's Basketball Team - Dorothy McKenzie

Posed indoor image of Dorothy (Dot) McKenzie dressed in team uniform and holding a basketball.

Bio/Historical Note: Dorothy (McKenzie) Walton, born in 1909 in Swift Current, Saskatchewan, enrolled at the University of Saskatchewan (BA 1929; MA 1931) in 1926. From 1926-1930 she won more than 50 championships at the local, provincial and intervarsity levels. Walton played on 14 U of S athletic teams and was the first female awarded the Oak Shield as the University's outstanding athlete. While a student she represented the school on the intervarsity debate team, was a member of the Athletic Directorate and served as vice president of the Students’ Representative Council. Walton moved to Toronto in 1931 where she took up badminton. In 1939-40 she became the first player to hold Canadian, United States and All-England badminton titles concurrently and was recognized as the premier player in the world. In 1940 she was runner up in voting for the Lou Marsh Trophy as Canada's athlete of the year. In a poll by the Canadian Press, Walton was named one of the top six female athletes in Canada for the first half of the 20th century. She was a founding member of the Consumers' Association of Canada and was its first president from 1950-1953. In 1973 Walton was made a Member of the Order of Canada, Canada's highest civilian honour. She is an inductee into the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame (1961), the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame (1966), the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame (1971), and the U of S Athletic Wall of Fame (1984). Walton died in 1981 in Toronto.

Bio/Historical Note: Green and white were established as the official colours of U of S sports teams in 1909-1910 by Reginald Bateman, a native of Ireland and the first English professor at the University of Saskatchewan. But the Huskies name did not appear at that time. Teams were generally referred to as “varsity” or “the green and white” when they played or appeared in media. The name Huskies was included in an article in the 20 September 1932 Star-Phoenix: “The Varsity Stadium yesterday morning saw the advance guard of over twenty gridiron Huskies swing into action.” The origin of the Huskie name is unclear. One of the earliest images of players wearing sweaters with ‘Huskies’ on across the front was in the 1932-1933 Greystone yearbook, showing the men’s hockey team in uniforms with the new name. By 1937 women’s teams were generally referred to as Huskiettes.

University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes Basketball Team - Player Photos

Individual photographs of team members in uniform grouped. Names: Jean Howes, Noreen Wallace, Dorothy Lake, Pat Lawson, Sylvia Fedoruk (co-capt), Charrie Tofsted (Mgr), Lydia Yaremchuk (co-capt), Eleanor Ciuca, Shirley Howes, Camille Garnier, Peggy Wilton.

Bio/Historical Note: The 1948-1949 Huskiettes won four on the floor, defeating the University of Alberta and the University of British Columbia in Edmonton to take the Cecil Race Trophy as Western intercollegiate champions, winning the Gardiner Trophy as Saskatoon city league champions and adding the provincial junior and senior women's titles. Exams prevented the team from attending the Western Canadian championship. The Huskiettes were undefeated in the 1948-49 season, Ivan King's third as coach of the team. Pat Lawson was the leading scorer, averaging 13 points per game in 18 games. Lydia Yaremchuk was the leading scorer and MVP in the city league, while Peggy Wilton was named the cleanest player. Sylvia Fedoruk and Lydia Yaremchuk were both in their third season with the Huskiettes, Lawson, Wilton and twin sisters Shirley and Jean Howes in their second, while Eleanore Ciuca, Camille Garnier, Dot Lake and Noreen Wallace were all in their first year.

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