Item is a photograph of the Macdonald Library (Macdonald Building) and Science Building (Chemistry Building) on Dalhousie University's Studley Campus. The photograph was taken at night with lights shining on the two buildings. The photograph was taken during a Dalhousie reunion in 1924.
Item is a photograph of the graduating class of 1933 from the Nova Scotia Technical College. The photograph shows the students standing on the front steps of a building and wearing academic dress. M. S. Smith is listed as not present but none of the people in the photograph are identified.
Item is a photograph of the third year class of 1937 from the Dalhousie medical school. The students are standing on the front steps of the Public Health Clinic.
Item consists of four copies of a photograph taken during the unveiling of plaques in honour of Dalhousie University's first three presidents. The photograph shows J.W. (Lucky) Logan (BA. 1894, MA 1909); Miss McCulloch (granddaughter of Thomas McCulloch, Dalhousie's first president); Mrs. James Ross (daughter-in-law of James Ross, Dalhousie's second president); Miss Jean Forrest (daughter of John Forrest, Dalhousie's third president); and Arthur Stanley MacKenzie (President) standing on the front steps of the Forrest Building with the three plaques.
Item is a photograph taken during the unveiling of a monument commemorating the British invasion of Castine, Maine, where they collected customs duties that funded the construction of Dalhousie College. The unveiling happened during a Dalhousie reunion in 1938. The photograph shows a large group of people sitting or standing in front of the Arts Building (University Club) as an unidentified man unveils the monument.
File contains photographs of taken at the 1925 Dalhousie University spring convocation. The photographs show members of the class of 1925 standing in a group. Each photograph has a page from the convocation program attached to it. The page is a list of graduates with numbers written next to the names. The subjects of the photographs are numbered with corresponding numbers.