- A-1269
- Item
- [194-? -195-?]
Squadron marching in street of unidentified German town. Buildings of European design, people and Volkswagen in background.
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Squadron marching in street of unidentified German town. Buildings of European design, people and Volkswagen in background.
Arts-Commerce-Law Complex Building - Construction
Elevated view of worksite with equipment, vehicles and men working on the sides of the building.
Bio/Historical Note: The Law and Commerce Buildings were designed and constructed as part of a single project between 1965 and 1967. The architect was John Holliday-Scott of the Saskatoon firm Holliday-Scott & Associates.
Academic Procession During Convocation
Top image shows procession walking past Saskatchewan Hall during Convocation. Bottom image shows members of procession ascending the stairs into the College Building.
Agriculture - Class in Session
Instruction is being given to a class on motor mechanics.
Field Crop of Sunflowers - Eston
Rows of sunflowers in foreground. People and vehicles in background. Scene is near Eston, Saskatchewan. (Annotated).
Group photograph of participants in the Kiwanis Homecraft Camp in front of campus building.
Bio/Historical Note: As early as 1913 Agriculture societies were sponsoring the "Farm Boys Club and the Farm Girls Club,” organizations for youth. The Saskatchewan Agriculture Extension Department promoted the idea of separate classes for youth to exhibit and judge their produce or livestock at local fairs. The "Farm Boys and Farm Girls Clubs" were combined and the name changed to "4-H Clubs" in 1952 and the motto became "Learn To Do By Doing.”
Unidentified girls and women seated and standing on a lawn with trees, a vehicle and buildings in the background. Figures are small and difficult to make out.
Farm Boys Club - Short Course - Regina
Club members taking short course walk in orderly rows on wide street to the Legislative Building. Trees at right and parked vehicles at left.
Farm Boys and Girls Club - Moose Jaw
Group photo of club members standing on steps of a building and on the sidewalk. Large tree alongside building. Vehicle parked at right.
Field Day - Mossbank - Livestock Judging
Horse judging competition at the Sadlemeyer farm; crowds observing; buildings, barns and vehicles in the background.
Vehicles and people gathering in a field at the Sadlemeyer farm; vehicles in the foreground and wood building at left; trees, cattle and horses in the background.
People gathering in a field at the Sadlemeyer farm; vehicles, men and a wood building in the foreground; more buildings in the background.
Field Day - Beatty - Addresses
People seated and standing on the grass listening to a speaker; barn and vehicles in the background. Sign on the roof of the barn reads "Golden North 1927 ASA Lobb and Sons." Annotation on the back of the photograph describes the event as MacEwan, G. speaking at the farm of Lobb, A.
Large number of people standing and facing the camera; tent, barn, vehicles and bushes in the background, with prairie field beyond.
Large crowd gathered in front of the home of Charles Marks of Midale, Saskatchewan.
Bio/Historical Note: The event at the farm of Charles Marks was the first of its kind to be known as a Field Day. Charles M. Hamilton, Saskatchewan Minister of Agriculture; A.M. Shaw, professor of Agriculture, and John G. Rayner, director of the Extension Department, attended.
Bio/Historical Note: “A new feature was tried out this year, viz. that of holding a picnic or field day at the home of a farmer who had made good in some one or more lines of endeavor, such as crop or live stock production. One was held on the farm of Charles Marks at Midale. Mr. Marks has the only silo in his district and a herd of good Holstein cows, quite a large acreage of corn, sunflowers and sweet clover. What Mr. Marks had done was used by the speakers present from the College and the Department to show others what might be done to improve agriculture. An automobile tour was arranged in the Snipe Lake district and a number of good farms were visited to the end that suggestions might be found that would lead to improvement in farm practice.”
Dean of Agriculture’s Report, 1922.