Item is a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows six unidentified men standing in front of Halifax City Hall, the location of the original Dalhousie College.
Item is a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows a crowd of attendees at an alumni dance. There are large flags hanging from the ceiling.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows a group of unidentified people on the front steps of the Forrest Building.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows four unidentified men, two of whom are shaking hands.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows six unidentified people standing in front of a car.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows six unidentified people standing by a pile of rocks and shaking hands or talking to each other.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows four unidentified boy scouts standing behind a French Gun from Louisbourg, dated 1758.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows several unidentified people reenacting a historical scene with a table and chairs. A crowd of people are watching the reenactment, which is taking place on a field.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows a group of unidentified girls, possibly girl scouts, who are posing for a picture being taken by an unidentified person. The girls are standing near a football field where several other people are watching an event.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows several unidentified people in historical dress reenacting a historical scene with a table and chairs. A crowd of people are watching the reenactment, which is taking place on a field.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows several unidentified people in historical dress reenacting a historical scene, which appears to be about British and Indigenous people. A crowd of people are watching the reenactment, which is taking place on a field.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows several unidentified people in historical dress reenacting a historical scene, which appears to be about British and Indigenous people. A crowd of people are watching the reenactment, which is taking place on a field.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows several unidentified people in historical dress reenacting a historical scene with a table and chairs. A crowd of people are watching the reenactment, which is taking place on a field.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows a group of historical reenactors in British and Indigenous historical dress. They are sitting or standing in two rows on a field.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows six unidentified people standing on a field at a reunion event. One of the people is speaking to an audience who are sitting on the edge of the field.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows a large group of people performing a dance on a field. Some of the performers are wearing flowing white outfits. There is an audience watching from the edge of the field.
Item is a postcard featuring a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows a group of unidentified people sitting on the ground and holding plates and cups.
Item consists of a print and a negative of a photograph of five unidentified women and two children wearing period costumes. Each of the women's costumes represent a different decade from 1884 to 1924. The children are wearing signs around their necks that say "1934."
Item is a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows a large group of people performing a dance or march on a field while an audience watches from the bleachers.
Item is a photograph taken during a Dalhousie University reunion in 1924. The photograph shows a band in uniform performing a football field while a crowd of people watch them.
File contains a photograph of the reunion held at Dalhousie University from August 28-30, 1929. The photograph shows all of the reunion attendees sitting on bleachers.
File contains draft and final speeches and addresses delivered by Carleton Stanley between 1931 and 1934, early in his tenure as Dalhousie President. File also contains related correspondence.
Item consists of typescript of Carleton Stanley's address to future graduates at the Dalhousie Alumni dinner at the Lord Nelson Hotel on May 9, 1932, discussing the curiosities of professors.
Item consists of Carleton Stanley's typescript copy of Judge George Geddie Patterson's article submitted to the Halifax Chronicle on December 6, 1932, discussing the importance of alumni contributions to Dalhousie University as a result of the funding and construction for the new gymnasium.
Item consists of a typescript copy of an address delivered by Carleton Stanley before Dalhousie University alumni at an event in New York, May 4, 1934, discussing the financial situation at Dalhousie during a period of worldwide economic tumult. Speech was initially prepared May 2, 1934.
Item consists of an annotated typescript copy of Carleton Stanley's address to Dalhousie alumni (present and future) at the Lord Nelson Hotel, Halifax, May 14, 1934.
The fonds consists of records relating to the administration and governance of the association; correspondence carried out on behalf of the Association; events such as the amalgamation of Dalhousie University and the Technical University of Nova Scotia, various university campaigns, Dalhousie Centenary celebrations; association-sponsored activities such as memorials and tributes, track and field meets, and reunions; graduate and alumni lists; photographs of alumni who served in World War I; and press stories about the Association.
Item is a typed list, dated January 7, 1943, of Dalhousie women who received honorary LLDs: Eliza Ritchie (1927); Jemima MacKenzie (1940); and Edith MacGregor Read (1942). The first page is mistakenly titled "Honorary Degrees of Bachelor of Laws (Women). The second and third pages contain a biographical sketch of each recipient under a title corrected to read Honorary Degrees of Doctor of Laws (L.L.D.).
Item is a letter from Dalhousie Alumni Secretary, Helen Balcom, to Bertha Oxner at the University of Saskatchewan regarding the latter's written query about the history of early women graduates of Dalhousie University. Her letter makes reference to recently made lists, which are likely those listed elsewhere in this file (UA-32, Box 9, Folder 1, Items 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, and 9). Bertha Oxner's letter of response is also included.
Item is a typewritten alphabetical list with the handwritten title "Women Graduates" and a note: "copied from calendars summer of 1919 (probably complete to 1917)." The list includes students' names, home towns, degree earned and date granted.
Item includes a covering letter from Dalhousie's business manager to Mrs. Heinish of Preston Street, Halifax, explaining that the list is sent at the request of Dr. Lehv.
Item is a typed list, created 7 January 1943, of Dalhousie women graduates in the Faculty of Arts and Science. The list is chronological and alphabetical and includes addresses, notes about name changes (i.e., marital status), family connections and academic honours and areas of study, and is annotated by hand to indicate those deceased.
Item is a typed list of 15 women graduates in law, created on January 6, 1943, beginning with Frances Lilian Fish (1918) and ending with Maureen O'Mullin Allen (1941). The second page contains an identical list, created January 7, 1943, with an expanded title, that includes "from Dalhousie University."
Item is a typed list, created on June 13, 1942 for Mrs Bean, of women graduates in medicine from Dalhousie University. The list is chronological and contains 48 names and graduation dates, beginning with Annie Isabella Hamilton (1894) and ending with Mary Wheeler MacIntyre (1939).
Item is an undated typed list of women graduates in medicine from Dalhousie University, beginning with Annie Isabella Hamilton (1894) and ending with Mary Wheeler MacIntyre (1939/1940). The list is chronological and includes 51 names with graduation dates, name changes (i.e., marital status) and addresses, some of which are amended by hand.
Item is a typed list of women graduates in dentistry, created on January 6, 1943. The list includes four names: Arabel Catherine MacKenzie (1919); Hazel Alice Thompson (1923); Mabel Angela St. John Magee (1924); and Roberta MacKenzie Forbes (1924). The second page contains an identical list, created January 7, 1943, with an expanded title, that includes "from Dalhousie University."
Item is a typed list, created on January 7, 1943, of Dalhousie women graduates up to 1900, beginning with Margaret Florence Newcombe (1885) and ending with Elizabeth Helen Stewart (1900). There are 55 names on the list, which is annotated by hand with information about degrees granted, current occupations and addresses, and indicating those deceased. The second page contains handwritten notes about some of the graduates.
Item is an undated, typed alphabetical list of Dalhousie women graduates and their addresses. There are 88 names on the list, some with asterisks but no corresponding note.
Item is a videocassette of compiled interviews with alumni for the series "Dalhousie Medical School Remembered." The interviewees include Dr. Stan Wainwright, Dr. John Szerb, Dr. James Hammerling, Dr. Jim Purvis, Dr. Edwin Ross, and twelve others. The interviews were conducted in the interviewees' homes, with a few exceptions. The interviews discuss each doctor's memories of attending or teaching at the School, how the School has changed, and impressions of how the medical field has changed over the years. The video was requested by Dr. T.J. Murray from the Dean's Office.
Item is a videocassette of and interview with June Penny for the series "Dalhousie Medical School Remembered." The interviews for this series were conducted in the interviewees' homes, with a few exceptions. The interviews discuss each doctor's memories of attending or teaching at the School, how the School has changed, and impressions of how the medical field has changed over the years. The video was requested by Dr. T.J. Murray from the Dean's Office.
Item is a videocassette of a guest lecture by Dr. Allen Tough about Dr. Cudmore, a Dalhousie Medical School graduate from the class of 1959. The lecture was given as part of the Friday at Four lecture series, which was sponsored and organized by the Dalhousie Medical School. The series focused on a variety of subjects by lecturers invited to speak about specialized areas of medicine, and the lectures were held each Friday by the School from the 1970s to the 1990s. The tape was requested by Dr. Putnam from the Division of Continuing Medical Education.
Item is a videocassette of an interview with Dr. Enid MacLeod as part of a series of interviews with alumni, "Dalhousie Medical School Remembered." The interviews were conducted in the interviewees' homes, with a few exceptions. The interviews discuss each doctor's memories of attending or teaching at the School, how the School has changed, and impressions of how the medical field has changed over the years. The video was requested by Dr. T.J. Murray from the Dean's Office.
Item is a videocassette of two separate interviews as part of a series of interviews with alumni, "Dalhousie Medical School Remembered." The interviews were conducted in the interviewees' homes, with a few exceptions. The interviews discuss each doctor's memories of attending or teaching at the School, how the School has changed, and impressions of how the medical field has changed over the years. The video was requested by Dr. T.J. Murray from the Dean's Office.
Item is a videocassette of an interview with Dr. Beecher Wild, who was appointed to the Dalhousie Medical School in the Spring of 1936 and was the only faculty person in the Department of Physiology for several years. The interview was conducted by June Penny and was part of a series of interviews with alumni, "Dalhousie Medical School Remembered." The interviews were conducted in the interviewees' homes, with a few exceptions; Dr. Wild's interview took place at his home on Waegwoltic Avenue in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The interviews discuss each doctor's memories of attending or teaching at the School, how the School has changed, and impressions of how the medical field has changed over the years. The video was requested by Dean Hatcher from the Dean's Office.
Item is a videocassette of three separate interviews with Dr. Carl Tupper, Dr. Atley, and Dr. Larry Swail. The interviews were conducted by June Penny and were part of a series of interviews with alumni, "Dalhousie Medical School Remembered." The interviews were conducted in the interviewees' homes, with a few exceptions. The interviews discuss each doctor's memories of attending or teaching at the School, how the School has changed, and impressions of how the medical field has changed over the years. The video was requested by Dean Hatcher from the Dean's Office.
Item is a videocassette of an interview with Dr. Fraser Nicholson. The interview was part of a series of interviews with alumni, "Dalhousie Medical School Remembered." The interviews were conducted in the interviewees' homes, with a few exceptions. The interviews discuss each doctor's memories of attending or teaching at the School, how the School has changed, and impressions of how the medical field has changed over the years. The video was requested by Dean Hatcher from the Dean's Office.