Official road map, North Dakota
- A0033.03 (S)
- Item
- 19--
Index to cities and towns with populations on reverse side, 4 insets of city maps to Grand Forks, Fargo, Bismarck and Minot; and road map of the United States.
CONOCO
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Official road map, North Dakota
Index to cities and towns with populations on reverse side, 4 insets of city maps to Grand Forks, Fargo, Bismarck and Minot; and road map of the United States.
CONOCO
Item is a photocopy of a map showing the railways, trails, and telegraph lines used in the Riel Rebellion of 1885 for the districts of Alberta, Saskatchewan, Keewatin, Assiniboia, and Manitoba, along with parts of Montana and North Dakota. Along top edge of sheet are illustrations of: Qu'Appelle Valley; Sir John A. MacDonald; and Medicine Hat (showing bridge crossing over South Saskatchewan River); along bottom edge of sheet are illustrations of: Kopiassiswean (alternately known as Koriassiswean or Bird Skin) based on photograph taken near Calgary in 1884; Major General Sir Frederick Dobson Middleton; crossed rifles with bayonets; "Savage Indian Warfare" - a depiction of a First Nations' warrior standing over a prone figure with a raised arm; Louis Riel; crossed tomahawk and Indian pipe; and Ne-Raip-A-Shaw.
George Bishop Engraving and Printing Company
Railroad map of Western Canada and Alaska
Item is a map issued by the Canadian Freight Association that contains index of railroad stations on verso.
Toop, H., Dr.
Information about James H. Dickson likely compiled by staff of Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan (at the time known as Saskatchewan Archives Board) from homestead file in the Saskatchewan Archives. [195-?-197-?].
Copy of letter from A. R. Turner, Provincial Archivist, to A. I. Bereskin, Controller of Surveys, Department of Natural Resources, regarding information about James H. Dickson and his history in Saskatchewan, dated June 22, 1965. Date copied June 22, 1965.
Copy of letter from Ruth Dyck Wilson, Staff Archivist, Saskatchewan Archives Board, Regina, Saskatchewan, to Mr. Michael L. King, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, U.S.A., regarding information about the settlement of black persons in Saskatchewan. July 19, 1984. Date copied unknown. [2 copies].
One page of handwritten notes regarding the history of black Canadians in Saskatchewan. Creator of notes unknown, [after 1949].
Photocopy of chapter fourteen from the book entitled Many Trails, by R. D. Symons, Copyright 1963 R. D. Symons, Windjammer edition 1970. Chapter fourteen is entitled Dixie Transplanted, and describes a visit to a black settlement in northern Saskatchewan. Date photocopied unknown. [2 copies].
Articles from various sources regarding immigration and homesteading by black persons in Saskatchewan and Alberta. [after 1946-1972]. Some copies included, date copied unknown.
Copy of article entitled The Creek-Negroes of Oklahoma and Canadian Immigration, 1909-1911, by Harold Martin Troper, The Canadian Historical Review, Vol. LIII No 3 September 1972. Date copied unknown.
Correspondence between Allan R. Turner, Provincial Archivist, Regina, Saskatchewan, and Mr. Robin W. Winks, Department of History, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, regarding the history of black Canadians in Saskatchewan, with particular interest in a settlement near Maidstone, dated July-October, 1959. Letters sent from Turner are copies of originals, copied the same date as the letters were written.
Article entitled How they kept Canada almost lily white: The previously untold story of the Canadian immigration officials who stopped American blacks from coming to Canada, by Trevor W. Sessing, printed in Saturday Night, September 1970.
Saskatchewan Archives Board
Documentary: This film documents the 1946 automobile tour by the co-operative members from twelve states. Starting in Superior-Duluth, they travel to Manitoba and Saskatchewan where co-op enterprises are examined along the way. The tour arrives in Regina for the National Convention of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), and meets such persons as Frank Scott, David Lewis, M.J. Goldwell, Sam Watson and T.C. Douglas. Regina scenes include downtown buildings and Saskatchewan Wheat Pool employees on their tennis courts. Also contains scenes of Moose Jaw, Davidson and Saskatoon.
Co-op Film Service, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Agricultural Documentary: Lionel Moore and Stan Westaway visit the International Peace Garden situated on the Manitoba-North Dakota border.
CBC WINNIPEG
Agricultural Documentary: Hosts Dave Innes and Lionel Moore tour the Western Development Museum in Saskatoon and Stan Westaway visits the Inernational Peace Garden on the Manitoba - North Dakota border
CBC WINNIPEG
Nature film: Scenes of pinnated grouse dance, ruffed grouse, pheasant, Jimmie the talking crow, and the making of maple syrup. Film was shot in Wisconsin and Saskatchewan.
Stueck, Ralph Prescott, 1893-1979
PEAS AND LENTILS: '78 IDAHO AND WASHINGTON
Agricultural film: Scenes from a tour of lentil and field pea farms in Idaho and Washington. Scenes include landscape views of the two states and and demonstrations of agricultural machinery used in the harvesting of lentils and field peas.
Saskatchewan. Department of Agriculture
PEAS AND LENTILS '78 TOUR WASHINGTON AND IDAHO
Agricultural film: Scenes from from a 1978 tour of lentil and pea farms in the states of Washington and Idaho. The scenes include geography, fields, and agricultural machinery.
Saskatchewan. Department of Agriculture