A festive welcome for students
- OCN-2001-122
- Item
- 12-Sep-01
Part of Office of Communications fonds
First Nations; Powwow
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A festive welcome for students
Part of Office of Communications fonds
First Nations; Powwow
Part of Office of Communications fonds
College of Agriculture graduates of 1961
Part of H.A. Lewis fonds
A field is seen laying fallow after it was cultivated with a V-shaped Noble Blade.
Lewis, Hartford Allen
Part of H.A. Lewis fonds
A field is seen laying fallow in the summer at the Regina Experimental Station. One half was cultivated with a Duckfoot Cultivator and the other with a One-way discer.
Lewis, Hartford Allen
A field with a stack of square hay bales
Part of Hans Dommasch fonds
A large long stack of square hay bales in a field near Emma Lake, Saskatchewan.
Hans S. Dommasch
A field with several rolled Hay Bales
Part of Hans Dommasch fonds
Mist hangs over a field with several rolled bales of hay near Emma Lake, Saskatchewan.
Dommasch, Hans Siegfried
A field with several rolled Hay Bales
Part of Hans Dommasch fonds
Several rolled bales of hay are seen in a field near Emma Lake, Saskatchewan.
Hans S. Dommasch
Part of H.A. Lewis fonds
A field is seen with stacks of straw on it; two cabins and a barn are seen in the background.
Lewis, Hartford Allen
Part of H.A. Lewis fonds
A man is seen in a field standing next to a "barge" stack of straw. Several more stacks are seen around him.
Lewis, Hartford Allen
Part of H.A. Lewis fonds
A field is seen with "barge" stacks of straw on it. Several more stacks are seen in the distance.
Lewis, Hartford Allen
Head and shoulders image of A. Forrest Angus, first chairman, University Board of Governors, May 1908-1911.
Bio/Historical Note: Alexander Forrest Angus (1857-1927) was born in Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland. He emigrated to Canada in 1877. Angus was employed by the Bank of Montreal in different cities from 1879 to 1901. He was transferred to Regina, Saskatchewan in 1901 and retired to Victoria, British Columbia, in 1920. Angus was the first chairman of the University Board of Governors from May 1908 to 1910, and remained on the Board until 1920. Angus died in Victoria in 1927.
Part of Office of Communications fonds
Lyle Sanderson; Ross Wilson
Part of Office of Communications fonds
Mary Humstone; Red Williams