Adult hockey players in Kenaston
- GM-PH-1628 (1)-(3)
- Item
- [193-?]
Part of Joe Zeman fonds
Male members of an adult hockey team in Kenaston, Saskatchewan.
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Adult hockey players in Kenaston
Part of Joe Zeman fonds
Male members of an adult hockey team in Kenaston, Saskatchewan.
Albert Williams, descendant of black settlers in Saskatchewan
Albert Williams, descendant of black settlers in Saskatchewan.
Andrew Deitner and Annie Powell seated in a buggy
Andrew Deitner and Annie Powell seated in a buggy. Couple later married.
Andy and Steve Powell at work on their grain farm, Kenaston.
Andy and Steve Powell at work on their grain farm, Kenaston.
Annie and Steve Powell seated in a buggy with their nephew Peter George
Annie and Steve Powell seated in a buggy with their nephew Peter George. Annie Powell became Annie Deitner. Kenaston.
Chapters of Saskatchewan's Spoken History Oral History Project
Interviews conducted by Carol Sponsler, Susan MacLean, Allan Quigley and Linda Quigley for the Chapters of Saskatchewan's Spoken History oral history project, an Opportunities for Youth Project conducted by students with financial assistance from the federal government . Brief summaries are available in the Audio transcript file.
Hilda M. Bond of Regina, Saskatchewan recalls her experiences homesteading in the Whitewood district.
Thomas S. Mack of Lumsden, Saskatchewan, a beekeeper born around 1910, recalls his experiences raising bees in the Lumsden district, forming the first beekeepers' association and starting a beekeeping supply shop. He comments about the effects of the Depression.
Henry Peters, a farmer born around 1926, recalls his experiences as a German immigrant homesteading in the Kenaston district from 1926 with comments about the Depression, why he left Germany and his feelings about Canada.
Marie-Malvina Rondeau of Assiniboia, Saskatchewan, a farmer born in 1892, discusses her homesteading experiences in the Lisieux district from 1913.
Tom Ross of Assiniboia, Saskatchewan, a farmer and funeral director born in 1884, relates the history of the Assiniboia area. Ross was the founder of the Ross Funeral Home in Assiniboia.
Lindsay B. Stewart of Regina, Saskatchewan, a farmer born around 1910, recalls life in Regina from 1910 to 1918 and on dairy farms near Qu'Appelle and near Regina.
Church programmes collected by Sterret C. Collins
Original and photocopied programmes of: a Conference Sunday service at the Evangelical Church, 1932; an Anglican Young People's Association and Dundurn Camp Choir variety concert, ca. 1933-1935; and a concert sponsored by the Evangelical League of Christian Endeavor, ca. 1934-1941. All took place at Kenaston.
Church service and reception in Kenaston marking visit by Bishop M. Rusnak
Part of Joe Zeman fonds
Church service and reception at St. Andrew's Church, Kenaston, Saskatchewan, marking the visit by Bishop M. Rusnak in honour of the 100th anniversary of Slovak settlement in the Kenaston and Broderick district.
Spot (excerpts): (1) Blaine Lake. (2) Davidson. (3) Bruno. (4) Wilkie. (5) Marcelin, Leask, and Parkside. (6) Dundurn and Hanley. (7) Mayfair. (8) Rosetown. (9) Kenaston. (10) Watrous. (11) Kerrobert. (12) Bladworth. (13) Speers. (14) Melfort. (15) Shellbrook. (16) Meacham.
CFQC (Television station : Saskatoon, Sask.)
Eager, John Livingstone : General pioneer experiences questionnaire
File consists of the response by/about John Livingston Eager to the Saskatchewan Archives' questionnaire pertaining to general pioneer experiences. Archives staff recorded that the respondent indicated on the questionnaire that they or their family came to Saskatchewan and/or the Canadian prairies in 1906.
Questionnaire number 2 on pioneer experiences included questions on: places lived; income; family relations; travel; commerce; "firsts"; sources of place names; availability of historical source materials; and important changes since their arrival.
Eager, John Livingstone, 1876-1962