Item is a photograph taken during the opening ceremony of the Student Union Building at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows a group of unidentified men and women walking with a live tiger and its handler.
Item is a photograph taken during the opening of the Dalhousie Student Union Building at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows Dalhousie president Henry Hicks and premier G. I. Smith with a live tiger and its handler.
Item is a photograph of the Student Union Building at Dalhousie University and a tree in front of the building. The photograph has been cut into an irregular circle.
Item consists of two copies of a photograph of students lounging in a music room in the Student Union Building at Dalhousie University. The room contains music listening equipment, chairs, and floor cushions.
Item is a photograph taken during a fire in a dressing room area in the Student Union Building at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows evacuated students standing outside the building next to a firetruck.
File contains negatives and proofs of 20 photographs of the Student Union Building at Dalhousie University. The photograph were taken to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the building and show interior and exterior views of the building.
Item is a photograph taken during the construction of Eliza Ritchie Hall at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows one side of the unfinished building, with unfinished plywood walls. The photograph was used in Volume 17, No. 15 of Dal News.
File contains two copies of a photograph of the former location of Halifax's Africville neighborhood. The photograph shows an empty lot and the partially completed MacKay Bridge.
Item is a photograph of the former location of Halifax's Africville neighborhood. The photograph shows the partially completed MacKay Bridge and the ruins of a building.
Item is a photograph taken on the former location of Halifax's Africville neighborhood. The photograph shows train tracks and the partially completed MacKay Bridge on-ramp.
Item is a photograph of the former location of Halifax's Africville neighborhood. The photograph shows the partially completed MacKay Bridge and a dirt road passing through an empty lot.
Item is a photograph of the former location of Halifax's Africville neighborhood. The photograph shows the partially completed MacKay Bridge and a dirt road passing through an empty lot.
Item is a photograph of Uniacke Square, a residential area in Halifax's North End. The photograph was used in Donald Clairmont's "Africville Relocation Report" ("Uniake Square" pg. 8-29).
File contains photographs of the Dalhousie University faculty and class of 1913. The photographs include individual portraits of J. B. Dickie; W. A. Grant; F. F. McLellan; D. J. Morrison; W. R. Auld; C. G. Smith; J. D. Irving; L. K. Smith; D. A. Guildford; O. S. McCurdy; S. W. Gray; F. D. Graham; M. Ferguson; A. R. Yeoman; C. A. MacKay; W. S. Irving; C. B. Henry; N. E. MacKay; J. S. MacDonald; M. I. MacIntosh; H. Steeves; J. Fraser; A. L. B. Umlah; M. I. McLeod; M. M. Currie; M. L. Clayton; W. M. Nelson; L. C. MacKinley; H. A. Smith (Class Secretary); V. P. Cunningham; L. B. Campbell; K. E. Allen; C. Crowe; M. W. Nicoll (Class Vice-President); G. D. Floyd; W. M. Billman; G. M. Sibley; K. Morrison; W. A. MacQuarrie; E. H. Milne; H. K. MacMahon; G. M. Lewis; W. S. Irving; R. F. Yeoman; B. C. Salter; F. A. Heffler; J. B. Carson; G. H. Henderson; J. W. MacArthur; A. H. MacKinnon; C. R. Hawkins; R. A. Clemen; J. R. Cornelius; C. G. Sutherland; M. MacNeill (M.A.); C. D. Howe (S.B.); H. L. Bronson (Ph.D.); J. A. Estey (Ph.D); H. P. Jones (Ph.D.); H. Murray (L.L.D.); J. K. Swanson (Class President); R. C. Weldon (Ph.D.); D. S. McIntosh (M.Sc.); E. MacKay (Ph.D); A. MacMechan (Ph.D.); C. L. Moore (M.A.); J. Laird (M.A); R. Magill (Ph.D.); John Forrest (D.D., Ex-President); A. S. MacKenzie (Ph.D., President); and the Dalhousie College Building. The individual photographs were removed from a larger composite.
Item is a photograph of W. S. Irving, a member of the Dalhousie University class of 1913. The photograph may actually be a mislabeled photograph of William S. Irvine.