This series includes secondary sources on Emmet Heiter and WWI including cemetery records, newspaper articles, excerpts from publications, and other research done by Bill and Dee Dee McCreary.
This series consists of blueprints, drawings, specifications and correspondence relating to the construction of the Providence Hospital in 1917 and all the additions and renovations made to the facility over the years.
This fonds is composed of three series. Included is a mission statement, rules and regulations for medical staff, an invitation to a Nursing School graduation and a program from a fund-raising event. There is material related to the building service employees. The second series is a compilation of hospital assets and inventory of equipment, some with descriptions and instructions. The third series consists of blueprints, drawings, specifications and correspondence pertaining to construction of the Providence Hospital in 1917 and all the additions and renovations made to the facility over the years.
This fonds contains three photographs of Archibald Piper at three stages of his life: during training in Calgary for the First World War, as a Sergeant in A Squadron on the 13th Regiment Canadian Mounted Rifles (though captioned as “O.M.R.”), and as a merchant of Massey-Harris farm implements. Also included is one photograph of men delivering grain to grain elevators in Tuxford, Saskatchewan.
This fonds consists of mementos of the 128th Battalion. It includes a programme of their performed music, a Christmas card, menus from their travels and a reunion programme.
This fonds consists of a black leather bound note book listing day to day orders for the members of the 210th Battalion from October 26, 1916 through to April 28, 1917 and a brown metal filing box of enlistment records (personal records on file cards) of the 210th Battalion, filed alphabetically by surname, 1916.
Joe Peters in his Moose Jaw Standard automobile; photograph taken in front of 72 Manitoba Street East, a former Roman Catholic Church, which was being used as an ‘auto livery’ and repair garage.
This series consists of primarily operational records of the Stony Beach, Saskatchewan station of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway which became Canadian National Railway.