Item is a photograph taken at an opening ceremony for the Dalhousie Law School. The photograph shows an unidentified person speaking at a podium with others sitting behind him.
Item is a photograph taken at an opening ceremony for the Dalhousie Law School. The photograph shows an unidentified person speaking at a podium with others sitting behind him.
Item is a photograph of a sculpture called "20th Century Student" by Reg Dockrill. The sculpture was located in front of the Student Union Building at Dalhousie University. There is a tie around the sculpture's neck.
Item is a photograph of a sculpture called "20th Century Student" by Reg Dockrill. The sculpture was located in front of the Student Union Building at Dalhousie University.
Item consists of three copies of a photograph of three unidentified men sitting in swivel chairs in a lounge on the main floor of the Student Union Building at Dalhousie University.
Item is a photograph of Henry Hicks, Dalhousie University president, and Alice Moore, his secretary, standing together in a bar or restaurant. Moore is holding a jewelry box.
Item is a fish-eye photograph of the Technical University of Nova Scotia campus, including the F. H. Sexton Memorial Gymnasium. The campus is now part of the Sexton Campus at Dalhousie University.
Item is a photograph of the front entrance of the Student union Building at Dalhousie University. There are signs over the door with information about events and there are students walking by.
Item is a photograph of the concrete staircase between the Killam Memorial Library and the Henry Hicks Academic Administration Building at Dalhousie University. An unidentified person is walking up the stairs. The clock tower of the Henry Hicks building is visible in the background. The photograph was taken by Kathi Petersen.
Item is a photograph of trees and landscaping near the F. H. Sexton Memorial Gymnasium on Dalhousie University' Sexton Campus, formerly the Technical University of Nova Scotia. The photograph was taken in the winter and the trees and ground are covered in snow. The gymnasium is visible through the trees.
Item is a photograph of the F. H. Sexton Memorial Gymnasium on Dalhousie University' Sexton Campus, formerly the Technical University of Nova Scotia. The photograph shows the TUNS sign and a bed of daffodils in front of the building.
Item is a photograph of the front facade of the Sir James Dunn Science Building at Dalhousie University. The photograph was taken by the Dalhousie University Photography Department,
Item is a map of the harbour of present-day Halifax, Nova Scotia created in 1779 by Joseph-Bernard de Chabert. The map was commissioned by Antoine de Sartine. Depths shown by soundings.
Item is a glass plate of a drawing of Rev. Thomas McCulloch, D.D. The drawing by Arthur Lismer itself is based on a painting of McCulloch by Daniel Munro. The drawing was commissioned and used for history books on Dalhousie University, like One hundred years of Dalhousie 1818-1918 (1920), and Daniel Cobb Harvey's, An introduction to the history of Dalhousie (1938).
Item is a letter (1823) from Lord Dalhousie to W. Smith, requesting that two barrels of Pictou oatmeal be shipped to Quebec on the next available vessel as a sample of Smith's produce.
Item consists of four copies of a photograph of the old Dalhousie College building, located on the Grand Parade in Halifax, Nova Scotia. One copy is mounted on a green matboard.
Item is a photograph of the old Dalhousie College building, located on the Grand Parade in Halifax, Nova Scotia.The photograph was taken from Barrington Street and there are carriages on the street.
Item is a photograph of Charles Fenerty, a native of Lower Sackville, NS. A caption is printed on the photograph which reads: "Charles Fenerty: Inventor of the process of producing paper from spruce wood pulp, he made his method public in 1844. Born in Upper Sackville, N. S., January 1821, he died at Lower Sackville, N. S., June 1892 at the age of 71."
Item is a copy of a photograph annotated: "(Skutching Flax) Pictou Co. 1847". The photograph shows three individuals, full pose. One individual is wearing a hat and pressing flax on a wooden machine, and two individuals are wearing scarves on their heads and working with flax inside a wooden building. Print copy is available: PC-2-333-69.
Item is a reproduction of a pastel drawing of Thomas McCulloch, the first president of Dalhousie University. The drawing was produced by Munro of Pictou, Nova Scotia. The original drawing was created by Daniel Munro in 1850, after an older drawing hanging in Wellington Presbyterian Church in Glasgow, Scotland. The drawing was given to Dalhousie as a centennial gift by Isabella McCulloch in 1939.
Item is a photograph of buildings and equipment at the Dalhousie Pit in Stellarton. Acadia Coal Company opened the Dalhousie Pit on the Foord Seam in 1850. The mine was destroyed by fire in 1870. A negative is available: PC-2-318-66.
Item is a print of a drawing of the brig Europa. Writing on back reads: Brig "Europa" of Maitland, N.S. entering (port of) Leghorn 1858. Alexander MacDougall, master. The above Alex MacDougall was father of Captain Everett MacDougall.
File contains a photographic collage of the faculty, graduates, and students of Dalhousie University in the 1869-1870 academic year. The item consists of portraits of Walter M. Thorburn; A. W. H. Lindsay; John Wallace; Hugh McD. Scott; James Liechti; James DeMill (De Mille); John Johnson; Charles MacDonald; William Lyall; James Ross; and George Lawson arranged around a photograph of the Dalhousie College building and a group picture of the college's students.
Item is a print of a sketch of the Barque(bark) Snow Queen. The writing on the back states that the ship (984 tons) was built in Maitland, N.S. in 1872.
File contains a photographic collage of the Halifax Medical College faculty and class of 1874. The collage consists of photographs of the faculty and class arranged around a photograph of the Halifax Medical College. The people in the photographs are unidentified.
Item is a photograph of a group of men and boys standing in the foreground of the area destroyed by the fire of April 19, 1874, in New Glasgow. Two horse-drawn carriages are visible at the edge of the group. Negative also available: PC-2-317-19
Item is a photograph of the south side of Granville Street in the 19th century. There are notes written in pen on the photograph with the names of the busnesses and their street numbers.