Item is an unsigned sketch (likely by President Arthur MacKenzie) for the Macdonald Library that indicates two lecture rooms, a faculty room, offices for the president, bursar and secretary, and coat and toilet facilities for faculty.
Item is a pencil sketch of a plan for Dalhousie University's Studley campus. The drawing was produced by President Arthur Stanley MacKenzie; written on the back is: "One of early attempts by ASM to design the campus. When slightly modified it became final design."
Item is an unsigned sketch, likely drawn by President Arthur MacKenzie, of first and second floor plans for the Macdonald Library, indicating stack rooms and undefined extensions to the rear of the building as well as the front.
Item consists of an offprint containing the text of a speech delivered by President Arthur Stanley Mackenzie at the September 1905 Dalhousie University Convocation ceremonies.
File contains three copies of a photograph of Prof. H. A. Bumstead making a vacuum to split atoms at Cambridge University in the Cavendish Laboratory. A. S. MacKenzie is visible in the background, measuring a magnetic field.
Item is a composite photograph of the 1906 senior class in Arts and Science at Dalhousie University. The photograph consists of portraits of B. E. Murphy; M. L. McKenzie; E. K. Pennington; E. P. Sinnott; A. M. Haverstock; M. G. Lawrence; J. M. Hales; A. E. McLeod; D. E. Faulkner; W. G. Barnstead; J. A. McLellan; J. Wood; J. Beaton; Prof. W. Murray; Prof. J. Forrest; Prof. J. Liechti; Prof. R. C. Weldon; R. C. Burns; R. C. Buckley; C. G. Dickie; W. K. Fraser; E. G. MacKenzie; Prof. A. S. MacKenzie; Prof. D. A. Murray; Prof. F. H. Sexton; Prof. J. E. Woodman; C. W. MacAloney; W. S. Lindsay; A. Fraser; C. T. Sullivan; A. Moxon; Prof. E. B. Jack; Prof. A. MacMechan; Prof. E. MacKay; Prof. S. M. Dixon; E. W. Nichols; J. G. Bruse; P. I. Swanson; J. R. Archibald; A. A. McLeod; E. MacDougall; H. H. MacKenzie; Prof. H. Murray; W. H. Burns; Prof. T. C. Hebb; W. A. G. Bauld; F. P. H. Layton; H. S. Patterson; G. Farquhar; J. M. Stewart; R. B. H. Robertson; J. B. Morrow; H. J. Creightn; A. J. Barnes; F. A. Grant; A. G. Harlow; W. MacPherson; B. S. Gore; A. W. Seaman; A. Fraser; and F. D. Sinclair arrange around a photograph of the Forrest Building.
Item is a composite photograph of the Dalhousie University Arts and Science faculty and class of 1907. The photograph consists of portraits of J. Forrest; R. C. Weldon; W. Murray; J. E. Woodman; H. Murray; E. MacKay; A. MacMechan; J. Liechti; E. B. Jack; D. A. Murray; F. H. Sexton; R. A Watson; F. G. Knight; R. E. Dickie; W. P. Grant; G. F. Murphy; M. Payson; F. M. Cunningham; C. I. Gourley; J. T. Archibald; J. B. Gilliott; R. J. Bethune; A. Rettie; A. G. Macaulay; E. Fraser; J. H. Prowse; A. S. McKenzie; H. P. Jones; F. T. McLeod; A. F. Matthews; G. D. Finlayson; S. Rettie; J. MacKinnon; J. R. Miller; M. G. Burris; J. J. Macritchie; C. H. Patterson; M. E. Kerr; W. H. Sweet; H. F. McRae; B. L. Mackay; C. L. Blois; R. W. Maclellan; and D. S. Wickwire arranged in several rows around a photograph of the Forrest Building.
Item is a composite photograph of the Dalhousie University Arts, Science, and Engineering class of 1911. The photograph consists of portraits of A. T. MacKay; L. A. Mylius; M. E. MacLellan; H. P. Bell; E. J. O. Fraser; J. D. Vair; C. A. M. Earle; P. R. Flemming; F. McG. Stewart; B. D. Earle; W. Jr. Mitchell; E. F. Mitchell; E. G. Holder; A. S. MacKenzie; M. D. MacLeod; C. S. Creighton; A. MacLeod; D. M. Collingwood; E. M. Wier; M. C. Outhit; G. S. Stairs; J. A. MacKay; W. A. Ross; H. M. Blois; J. A. Doull; E. W. G. Chapman; K. Leslie; H. C. Gunn; H. D. Armitage; J. A. T. Weatherbee; A. M. James; O. B. Jones; J. H. L. Johnstone; M. J. Ross; G. U. Smith; J. L. Cavanagh; C. H. P. Willistor; J. E. Knowlton; W. B. MacLean; R. A. Neish; H. R. Crichton; I. M. Grant; J. E. MacGregor; C. L. Gass; F. R. Little; A. A. MacKenzie; G. M. Sylvester; T. M. Hibbert; A. D. MacDonald; H. M. Reynolds; E. T. Parker; R. A. Major; J. C. MacDonald; L. E. Brownell; E. MacKay (Ph.D); A. MacMechan (Ph.D.); D. S. McIntosh (M.Sc.); C. D. Howe (S.B.); M. Macneill (M.A.); R. Magill (Ph.D.); H. P. Jones (Ph.D.); H. L. Bronson (Ph.D.); R. C. Weldon (Ph.D.); H. Murray (L.L.D.); C. L. Moore (M.A.); and President John Forrest (D.D., D.C.L., L.L.D.) arranged in several rows with a photograph of the Forrest Building.
Item is a site plan for Studley campus produced by Mackenzie & Howe, Landscape Architects and Artists. On the reverse is written: "Trial suggestion of ASM for laying-out of grounds and approved with slight changes (shown in red) by Darling and Mawson, and adopted." A.S.M. is Arthur Stanley MacKenzie, Dalhousie University president.
File contains photograph of Arthur Stanley MacKenzie, the Duke of Connaught, and Mr. Campbell at the cornerstone laying ceremony for the Science Building (now the Chemistry Building) at Dalhousie University.
Item is a photograph of Arthur Stanley MacKenzie and Mr. Campbell standing together at the cornerstone laying ceremony for the Science Building (now the Chemistry Building) at Dalhousie University.
Item is a composite photograph of the 1912 faculty and class of the Dalhousie University faculties of Arts, Science, and Engineering. The photograph consists of portraits of A. S. MacKenzie (President); H. Murray; C. L. Moore; D. S. McIntosh; H. P. Jones; E. MacKay; A. MacMechan; John Forrest (Ex-president); R. Magill; J. A. Estey; M. Macneill; C. D. Howe; H. L. Bronson; R. C. Weldon; D. C. Mackenzie; A. P. MacIver; E. Kerr; D. A. MacMillan; H. P. Smeltzer; W. J. MacLeod; H. A. Bligh; G. L. Keeler; M. R. MacGregor; D. K. Munnis; S. M. Dennis; H. L. Garrett; J. C. Stairs; D. S. Cox; F. H. Toomey; A. L. Murray; N. T. Ashkins; C. G. Marsters; J. M. MacCabe; M. I. Davidson; F. H. Palmer; J. A. MacDonald; J. Messervey; L. M. McKittrick; Georgene Faulkner; E. A. Chisholm; Nora Lantz; M. P. Irving; J. P. McQueen (Class President); A. L. MacLean (Class Secretary); A. I. Rettie; A. K. Dickie (Class Vice President); B. E. Mumford; Fillis Boar; Mabel Magee; F. Collier; W. H. Noonan; D. S. MacIntosh; E. V. Ackhurst; F. E. Heisler; R. E. Day; L. B. MacCurdy; M. B. Henderson; E. M. Blackie; H. W. Doane; G. W. Grant; D. R. Fraser; R. B. Carson; G. K. King; E. S. Smith; W. K. Mackay; Jean Henry; J. K. Murchison; W. R. MacAskill; L. P. Archibald; H. W. Jones; L. W. Colquhoun; R. J. MacKinnon; and J. E. Henry arranged in several rows around a photograph of the Forrest Building.
Item is a photograph of Arthur Stanley MacKenzie, the Duke of Connaught, and Mr. Campbell by a gazebo at the cornerstone laying ceremony for the Science Building (now the Chemistry Building) at Dalhousie University.
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 second floor plan of the Macdonald Library as suggested (and perhaps drawn) by Arthur Stanley MacKenzie, who was president of Dalhousie from 1911-1931.
File contains a floor plan and exterior elevations for the MacDonald Library stacks, which show three different window styles for the east facing wall. There are also some early floor plans for the library indicating room appointments and elevations of bookshelves. Drawings are by both Andrew Cobb and Frank Darling.
Item is a first floor plan of the Macdonald Library as suggested (and perhaps drawn) by Arthur Stanley MacKenzie, who was president of Dalhousie from 1911-1931.
File consists of the petition to the Governors of Dalhousie in appreciation of gifts to the College supplied by George Munro, plus correspondence to Stanley MacKenzie.
Item is a composite photograph of the 1916 faculty and class of the Dalhousie University faculties of Arts, Science, and Engineering. The photograph consists of portraits of Martin Henry Dawson; N. E. McDonald; J. A. Nicholson; R. C. MacDonald; J. M. Fraser; F. C. Lantz; C. L. Moore; J. E. Todd; H. Murray; A. S. MacKenzie (President); H. L. Stewart; H. P. Jones; A. MacMechan; J. N. Finlayson; M. Macneill; H. R. Theakston; G. L. Stairs; G. P. Brookfield; H. A. McCleave; S. MacDonald; R. B. Mooney; E. MacKay; D. A. MacRae; D. S. MacIntosh; P. L. Whitman; W. B. Musgrave; M. A. Rogers; C. W. Holland; F. H. M. Jones; J. P. Matin; J. E. Webster; C. P. Blakeley; D. F. Marshall; C. H. Crosby; Dr. F. Harris; H. L. Bronson; J .R. Lawley; E. B. McLatchey; R. F. B. Campbell; H. Allum; P. L. Wright; F. L. Moseley; E. F. Whyte; H. A. Wilson; J. H. McLeod; Howard Charles Dawson; F. P. Malcolm; M. L. Power; U. Blois; G. L. Palmer; H. Mowat; J. M. Wyte; D. Nicholson; M. A. Ross; U. F. Shreve; L. S. Creighton; B. Hall; A. J. McInnes; E. M. Montgomery; L. J. Bayne; C. W. Ritchie; W. Pallen; A. G. Meloin; P. Freeman; G. R. Holmes; R. D. MacNutt; M. C. Fraser (Life Vice President); C. A. Pugsley (Life President); C. F. MacLennan (Life Secretary Treasurer); C. E. B. Smith; W. A. Wood; M. F. Johnstone; A. Ross; J. H. Ryan; and N. L. Chipman arranged in several rows along with photographs of the Forrest building and three other buildings.
Item consists of correspondence between Dalhousie President A. Stanley MacKenzie, Dr Leonard Sanford, C.J. Burchell, and Henry Fairfield Osborn, regarding Dalhousie's holding of extinct Labrador duck specimens in the Thomas McCulloch Museum.
Item is a letter written by James Baxter to President McKenzie (Arthur Stanley), written in Chatham on 2 November 1917 on letterhead from the Dominion of Canada Quarantine Station of the Public Health Branch of the Department of Agriculture. The letter refers to Baxter's attendance at both the Presbyterian seminary in Truro and Dalhousie College in Halifax in the 1850s and 1860s, and mentions enclosed course tickets and notebooks.
Item is a composite photograph of the 1918 graduating class of the Dalhousie University faculties of arts, science, and engineering. The photograph consists of portraits of W. R. McClelland; C. F. Bowes; J. C. Distant (President); A. S. MacKenzie (President); M. MacNeil; H. Murray; L. L. Harrison; D. A. MacRae; F. L. Moore; A. MacMechen; D. S. MacIntosh; H. L. Stewart; H. L. Bronson; C. H. Woody; E. MacKay; J. N. Finlayson; C. L. Moore; H. P. Jones; J. E. Todd; H. B. Dickey; B. E. Bayne; S. MacDonald (Vice President); E. P. Duchemin (Valedictorian); O. R. Crowell; H. R. Chipman; A. S. Murray; B. Urquhart; C. MacKinnon; D. M. E. MacKay; E. Chisholm; J. Campbell; M. MacDougall; N. McColl; A. MacKenzie; G. Harper; G. Fraser; C. W. MacMillan; K. Buchanan; A. A. Turnbull; J. H. Whelpley; G. Mason; R. A. Ross; D. Russell; J. R. Merrick; E. Simpson; C. Anderson; M. Buchanan; J. W. Keddy; W. Forsythe; G. R. Forbes; F. Mooney; K. Tattrie; J. A. D. Good; L. Bearisto; Jean Ross; C. Noiles; M. Southerland; E. Philips; S. Morash; A. Hemphill; V. Moore; J. Munroe; M. Dence; W. R. Cameron; J. A. McLean; J. Bentley; A. G. Fulton; H. V. Chow; Hugh Bell; J. T. McK. Harris; F. L. Fisher; H. Arthur; S. Keshen; J. B. C. Carson; L. T. Pentz; H. A. Mosley; E. D. Haliburton; J. S. Bonnell; A. J. Fraser; S. I. Robinson; V. A. Grierson; C. StC. Stayner; and E. T. Hallett arranged in several columns with photographs of the Forrest building and two other buildings.
Part is an original Arthur Lismer sketch of Arthur Stanley Mackenzie. The drawing is laid out on a grid, using pencil on tracing paper, and is probably an early study for an illustration commissioned for One hundred years of Dalhousie, 1818–1918 (1920). Ultimately, none of Lismer's portraits of President Mackenzie was published; the book featured a photographic portrait.
Item is an original Arthur Lismer pen and ink portrait of Arthur Stanley Mackenzie wearing a suit jacket and tie, commissioned for—but not used in—One hundred years of Dalhousie, 1818–1918 (1920). The publication featured instead a photographic portrait of President Mackenzie.
Item is an original Arthur Lismer pen and ink portrait of Arthur Stanley Mackenzie wearing academic robes, commissioned for—but not used in—One hundred years of Dalhousie, 1818–1918 (1920). Although the background appears unfinished, the drawing has been highlighted with white gouache, as if in preparation for reproduction. The publication featured instead a photographic portrait of President Mackenzie.
Part is an unfinished Arthur Lismer portrait of Arthur Stanley Mackenzie, commissioned for One hundred years of Dalhousie, 1818–1918 (1920). While the face appears in detail, the body is only roughly sketched. This is one of several very similar Lismer portraits of President Mackenzie, none of which was published in the centenary book, in which a photographic portrait was used. The image was reproduced in P.B. Waite, The Lives of Dalhousie University, volume one, 1818–1925 (1994), accompanied by the caption: "A Lismer sketch done from life in 1919."
Item consists of two copies of a postcard with a photograph taken during at Dalhousie University reunion in September 1919. The photograph shows a group of people, including Arthur Stanley MacKenzie, standing on the front steps of the Macdonald Memorial Library.
Item is an original Arthur Lismer pen and ink portrait of Arthur Stanley Mackenzie, commissioned for—but not used in—One hundred years of Dalhousie, 1818–1918 (1920). The drawing is unfinished and portrays Mackenzie in his academic robes. The publication featured instead a photographic portrait of President Mackenzie.
Item is an illustration board with unfinished Arthur Lismer drawings on both sides, images commissioned for One hundred years of Dalhousie, 1818–1918 (1920). One surface features a sketch of Arthur Stanley Mackenzie and the reverse has a preliminary drawing of Allan Pollok.
Item is a postcard with a photograph taken at a Dalhousie University reunion in September 1919. The photograph shows a procession of alumni or faculty, including Arthur Stanley MacKenzie, wearing academic dress. They are standing in front of a group of people holding banners with graduation years.
File contains a print and a metal engraving plate of a photograph taken at the cornerstone laying ceremony for Shirreff Hall at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows the Prince of Wales, Arthur Stanley MacKenzie, and other unidentified people sitting or standing on a platform at the event.
Item is an illustration board with original Arthur Lismer pen and ink portraits of Arthur Stanley Mackenzie on both sides. The portrait was commissioned for—but not used in—One Hundred Years of Dalhousie, 1818–1918 (1920); instead the publication appeared with a photographic portrait of President Mackenzie that, unlike the other illustrations, was cut and pasted in place rather than printed.
Item is an original Arthur Lismer pen and ink portrait of Arthur Stanley Mackenzie, commissioned for—but not used in—One hundred years of Dalhousie, 1818–1918 (1920). The subject's body has been drawn on paper and glued to the illustration board, joining the drawing almost seamlessly just below Mackenzie's collar and bow tie. Ink marks barely visible beneath the academic gown indicate the existence of an earlier drawing. The publication featured instead a photographic portrait of President Mackenzie.