A Cross Country Team Member in Biggar, Saskatchewan
- 98.530.341II
- Item
- ca.1982
Parte deBiggar Photograph Collection
A Cross Country Team member
49 resultados directamente relacionados Excluir términos relacionados
A Cross Country Team Member in Biggar, Saskatchewan
Parte deBiggar Photograph Collection
A Cross Country Team member
The Cross Country Team in Biggar, Saskatchewan
Parte deBiggar Photograph Collection
Team members of the Cross Country Team posing for a group photograph
The Track Squad in Biggar, Saskatchewan
Parte deBiggar Photograph Collection
Two small inset photos have members of the high school track and field team posing for group photographs. There are two illustrations at the bottom of the page
University of Saskatchewan Men's Track and Field - Clayton Crosby
Team member Clayt Crosby posing with a javelin.
Bio/Historical Note: Clayton (Clayt) Crosby was a member of the Western Intercollegiate Championship winning team in 1933, capturing the Cairns Trophy. He competed in the broad jump and relay team.
Betty Wilson and Pat Lawson in Sprint
Betty Wilson (left) finishes ahead of Pat Lawson, both Huskiettes track and field members, in a sprinting race; unidentified runner and building in background at [Griffiths Stadium].
Bio/Historical Note: Betty Clare Bray was born in 1928 in Saskatoon and attended Wilson and King Edward public schools and City Park Collegiate. She obtained her BA at the University of Saskatchewan. Later, in her fifties, she earned a BSW at the same institution. Bray was a three-sport athlete, competing on the track and field team for three seasons as a sprinter, highlighted by the U of S winning the Western Canadian Intercollegiate Athletic Association title in 1947. Bray was also on the tennis team for three years, capturing the doubles tournament in 1946-47 and winning the Hudson Bay Trophy in 1948-49. Bray played guard on the basketball team for two seasons. In addition to competing in sports, she served on the Women's Athletic Board. In 1987 Bray was inducted into the U of S Athletic Wall of Fame for basketball, tennis and track. She was inducted as a team member, also for basketball, in the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame. Betty Wilson died in 2012 in Saskatoon.
Track and Field Meet - Inter-Faculty
Athletes ready for race at starting line. Crowd in the background.
University of Saskatchewan Men's Track and Field Team
Indoor posed image of "S" winners, back row (l to r): J. House; [Edward Hubert Mapleton] Knowles; F. Wooten; Robert Mowatt Muirhead. Middle row: Ernest Gordon Booth; Henry Veeder Bigelow; Thomas Wilfred Hunt; William Whittaker. Front row: Stafford Zimmerman Bennett; G. Yates, Joe Griffiths (coach), Drayton Ernest Walker; William Charles Pearson.
Four unidentified men break from starting blocks in a track race.
College of Arts and Science - Men's Track Team
Group photo of team members. Names: Clarence Edmund Maguire; Gordon Berkeley Leitch; R. Knowles; G.G. Patrick, Robert Mowatt Muirhead; William Codrington Weaver; Drayton Ernest Walker; Stafford Zimmerman Bennett, Henry Veeder Bigelow; Thomas Wilfred Hunt, [Graham] Mathers, and the Cairns Cup.
Gil Watson Memorial Annual Torch Race
Joe Griffiths firing the starting pistol to start the Gil Watson Annual Torch race at "Griffiths' Rally," part of annual Frosh Week activities. Four unidentified male racers crouch holding torches.
University of Saskatchewan High Jumper Andy Phoen
Andy Phoen clearing the high jump bar.
College of Arts and Science - Men's Track and Field Team
Posed indoor image of Cairns Cup winners. Names: H. Sharp, Clarence Edmund Maguire, Alfred Lazaresco, H.A. Sutherland, Walter Whittaker, Alfred Leroy Paine, [Edward or Edwin Hubert Mapleton] Knowles, J.D. Beavis, W. Johnson, Stafford Zimmerman Bennett, Drayton Ernest Walker, Harold Lockhart Winter, Robert Mowatt Muirhead (mgr); Joe Griffiths (coach) standing with the Cairns Cup on a pedestal.
Joanne McTaggart - Presentation
Joanne McTaggart, Physical Education student and Huskie track and field sprinter, being congratulated for breaking the world indoor record for the women's 300 meter run at a CWUAA (CIS) meet in Edmonton, Alberta.
Bio/Historical Note: Joanne McTaggart, indisputably one of Canada’s premier runners of the 1970s, was born in Regina in 1954. She moved to Saskatoon for Grade XI and graduated from Walter Murray Collegiate, where she once won five events at the school meet. McTaggart also started to compete on behalf of the Saskatoon Track and Field Club. She was named to Canada’s national track team in 1972 while in Grade XI. She qualified for the relay team at the 1972 Munich Olympics but Canada didn't send a team. McTaggart enrolled at University of Saskatchewan (B.Ed. 1977) in 1974. In her rookie year with the Huskies, she won conference championships in the 40 yards and 300 metres. That same year she was Western Canadian Junior Champion in the 50 and 200 metres and the Canadian senior indoor 200 champion. McTaggart won 10 conference titles in her four years with the Huskies, highlighted by a world record performance of 38.2 seconds in the 300 metres at the 1975 indoor CWUAA (CIS) meet in Edmonton, Alberta. McTaggart qualified for the Canadian team at the 1975 Pan-American Games, won a bronze medal in the 4x100-metre relay and half an hour later, was invited to run the 4x400-metre relay where Canada held off the Americans and the Cubans to win the gold medal. At the 1976 Montreal Olympics, Joanne competed in the 200 metres and finished fourth in the 4X100-metre relay. McTaggart was inducted into the University of Saskatchewan Athletic Wall of Fame in 1984; the Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame in 1994, and the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame and Museum in 1996.
Joanne McTaggart - Presentation
Joanne McTaggart, Physical Education student and Huskie track and field sprinter, being congratulated for breaking the world indoor record for the women's 300 meter run at an indoor CWUAA (CIS) meet in Edmonton.
Bio/Historical Note: Joanne McTaggart, indisputably one of Canada’s premier runners of the 1970s, was born in Regina in 1954. She moved to Saskatoon for Grade XI and graduated from Walter Murray Collegiate, where she once won five events at the school meet. McTaggart also started to compete on behalf of the Saskatoon Track and Field Club. She was named to Canada’s national track team in 1972 while in Grade XI. She qualified for the relay team at the 1972 Munich Olympics but Canada didn't send a team. McTaggart enrolled at University of Saskatchewan (B.Ed. 1977) in 1974. In her rookie year with the Huskies, she won conference championships in the 40 yards and 300 metres. That same year she was Western Canadian Junior Champion in the 50 and 200 metres and the Canadian senior indoor 200 champion. McTaggart won 10 conference titles in her four years with the Huskies, highlighted by a world record performance of 38.2 seconds in the 300 metres at the 1975 indoor CWUAA (CIS) meet in Edmonton, Alberta. McTaggart qualified for the Canadian team at the 1975 Pan-American Games, won a bronze medal in the 4x100-metre relay and half an hour later, was invited to run the 4x400-metre relay where Canada held off the Americans and the Cubans to win the gold medal. At the 1976 Montreal Olympics, Joanne competed in the 200 metres and finished fourth in the 4X100-metre relay. McTaggart was inducted into the University of Saskatchewan Athletic Wall of Fame in 1984; the Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame in 1994, and the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame and Museum in 1996.
Joanne McTaggart - Presentation
Joanne McTaggart, second-year Physical Education student and Huskie track and field sprinter, presented with flowers after breaking the world indoor record for the women's 300 meters at a CWUAA (CIS) meet in Edmonton, Alberta. At far left is R.W. Begg, University President; second from left is Lyle Sanderson, Huskie track and field coach. Winter scene; taken in front of Physical Education Building.
Bio/Historical Note: Joanne McTaggart, indisputably one of Canada’s premier runners of the 1970s, was born in Regina in 1954. She moved to Saskatoon for Grade XI and graduated from Walter Murray Collegiate, where she once won five events at the school meet. McTaggart also started to compete on behalf of the Saskatoon Track and Field Club. She was named to Canada’s national track team in 1972 while in Grade XI. She qualified for the relay team at the 1972 Munich Olympics but Canada didn't send a team. McTaggart enrolled at University of Saskatchewan (B.Ed. 1977) in 1974. In her rookie year with the Huskies, she won conference championships in the 40 yards and 300 metres. That same year she was Western Canadian Junior Champion in the 50 and 200 metres and the Canadian senior indoor 200 champion. McTaggart won 10 conference titles in her four years with the Huskies, highlighted by a world record performance of 38.2 seconds in the 300 metres at the 1975 indoor CWUAA (CIS) meet in Edmonton, Alberta. McTaggart qualified for the Canadian team at the 1975 Pan-American Games, won a bronze medal in the 4x100-metre relay and half an hour later, was invited to run the 4x400-metre relay where Canada held off the Americans and the Cubans to win the gold medal. At the 1976 Montreal Olympics, Joanne competed in the 200 metres and finished fourth in the 4X100-metre relay. McTaggart was inducted into the University of Saskatchewan Athletic Wall of Fame in 1984; the Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame in 1994, and the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame and Museum in 1996.