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9 records – page 1 of 1.

George Thorman Bachelor of Arts diploma

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions10249
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
GMD
textual records
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
Series Number
11
Item Number
11.17
GMD
textual records
Physical Description
56 cm x 43 cm
History / Biographical
See MG 2 Brandon College Students, 2.15 George Thorman for biographical information.
Scope and Content
Item is George Thorman's Bachelor of Arts degree (1934) from Brandon College (McMaster University).
Language Note
Diploma is in Latin, although liberties have been taken with the language, particularly in the case of names.
Storage Range
Oversized drawer 2
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Stanley Knowles Bachelor of Arts diploma

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions10250
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
GMD
textual records
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
Series Number
11
Item Number
11.18
GMD
textual records
Physical Description
56 cm x 43 cm
History / Biographical
See RG 6, Series 1 (Office of the Chancellor) for biographical information.
Custodial History
Presented to Brandon University by Stanley Knowles on May 3, 1980.
Scope and Content
Item is Stanley Knowles' Bachelor of Arts degree (1930) from Brandon College (McMaster University).
Language Note
Diploma is in Latin, although liberties have been taken with the language, particularly in the case of names.
Storage Range
Oversized drawer 2
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Leta Marian Fry Bachelor of Arts diploma

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions7945
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1927
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
Series Number
11
Item Number
11.4
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1927
History / Biographical
Biographical information available in the 1927 Quill commencement issue.
Scope and Content
Item is Leta Marian Fry's Bachelor of Arts degree (1927) from Brandon College (McMaster University).
Notes
Signed by Harris Lachlan MacNeill and Howard Whidden.
Language Note
Diploma is in Latin, although liberties have been taken with the language, particularly in the case of names.
Storage Range
Oversized drawer 2
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Eva Mabel Gibson Bachelor of Arts diploma

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions7973
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1923
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
Series Number
11
Item Number
11.5
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1923
Physical Description
56 cm x 43 cm
History / Biographical
Biographical information available in the 1923 Quill commencement issue.
Scope and Content
Item is Eva Mabel Gibson's Bachelor of Arts degree (1923) from Brandon College (McMaster University).
Language Note
Diploma is in Latin, although liberties have been taken with the language, particularly in the case of names.
Storage Range
Oversized drawer 2
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Agnes Jean Mills Bachelor of Arts diploma

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions7974
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1938
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
Series Number
11
Item Number
11.6
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1938
Physical Description
56 cm x 43 cm
History / Biographical
Biographical information available in the 1938 Sickle.
Scope and Content
Item is Agnes Jean Mills' Bachelor of Arts degree (1938) from Brandon College (McMaster University).
Language Note
Diploma is in Latin, although liberties have been taken with the language, particularly in the case of names.
Storage Range
Oversized drawer 2
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Duncan Alexander MacGibbon Bachelor of Arts diploma

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions7976
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1908
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
Series Number
11
Item Number
11.8
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1908
Physical Description
60 cm x 45 cm
Material Details
Vellum?
Physical Condition
Water damage and spotting
History / Biographical
Duncan Alexander MacGibbon, economist, was born in Lochaber Bay, Quebec, on 12 March 1882. He was educated at McMaster University and then went to Brandon College, Manitoba, to teach. He left Brandon to enrol at the University of Chicago where he received his Ph.D. in economics in 1915. He began to teach at McMaster University but his teaching career was halted by World War I. After the war he joined the University of Alberta as professor and head of the Department of Political Economy. He served as Commissioner for the Alberta Government on banking and credit with respect to the industry of agriculture in 1922. He was a member of the Royal Grain Inquiry Commission, Canada, 1923-1924. He left the University of Alberta in 1929 to become a member of the Canadian Board of Grain Commissioners, a post he held until his retirement in 1949. In 1930 he was attached to the Canadian delegation to Imperial Conference, London; in 1932 he served the same role at the imperial Economic Conference in Ottawa in 1932. After his retirement, he returned to McMaster University to teach part-time. Among his many writings, MacGibbon published two definitive books on the grain trade: The Canadian Grain Trade (1932) and The Canadian Grain Trade, 1931-1951 (1952). He died in Hamilton, Ont. on 10 October 1969.
Scope and Content
Item is Duncan Alexander MacGibbon's Bachelor of Arts degree (1908) from McMaster University.
Notes
History/Bio information taken from the Duncan Alexander MacGibbon fonds (McMaster University Archives.)
Language Note
Diploma is in Latin, although liberties have been taken with the language, particularly in the case of names.
Storage Range
Oversized drawer 2
Related Material
Duncan Alexander MacGibbon fonds (McMaster University Archives)
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Paul DeArmande Bugg Bachelor of Arts diploma

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions7977
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1933
Part Of
BUPC 11 Documents, diplomas and certificates
Description Level
Item
Series Number
11
Item Number
11.9
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1933
Physical Description
56 cm x 43 cm
History / Biographical
Biographical information is available in the 1932 Sickle. (The Sickle says Bugg graduated in 1932, but the diploma is dated 1933).
Scope and Content
Item is Paul DeArmonde Bugg's Bachelor of Arts degree (1933) from Brandon College (McMaster University).
Language Note
Diploma is in Latin, although liberties have been taken with the language, particularly in the case of names.
Storage Range
Oversized drawer 2
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BC 15: Brandon College library

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/descriptions4291
Part Of
RG 1 Brandon College fonds
Description Level
Series
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1912-1967
Part Of
RG 1 Brandon College fonds
Description Level
Series
Series Number
15
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1912-1967
Physical Description
33 cm
History / Biographical
From the very beginning, Brandon College has maintained library services for its students. A professor was put in charge of the library, although in the beginning it was little more than an empty shelf in a cabinet. As it grew, there became more of a need for an administrative body. A Library Committee was created in order to keep the library running smoothly. With the construction of the A.E. McKenzie Building in 1960 came a permanent resting place for the Brandon College Library.
Scope and Content
The records include a 3 cm book of Library of Congress Card Orders of Recent Publications from 1957 to 1960. As well, there are applications for employment, minutes from the Library Committee and Sub Committees. There is also correspondence from the Director of Library Services and accession records. Series has been divided into three sub-series, including: (1) Minutes; (2) Director of Library Services; and (3) Library Accession Records.
Storage Location
RG 1 Brandon College fonds Series 15: Brandon College Library
Related Material
RG 6 (Brandon University fonds), series 8 (Brandon University Library Services).
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Manitoba Pool Elevator Library collection

http://archives.brandonu.ca/en/permalink/specialcollections1407
Part Of
RG 4 Manitoba Pool Elevator fonds
Description Level
Series
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1888-1998
Part Of
RG 4 Manitoba Pool Elevator fonds
Collection
Manitoba Pool Elevator Library collection
Description Level
Series
Series Number
MPE E
GMD
textual records
Date Range
1888-1998
Physical Description
13.7 m
History / Biographical
The importance of knowledge and education to the Manitoba Wheat Pool is made clear in the The Scoop Shovel, the official organ of the Manitoba Wheat Pool and other co-operatives in Manitoba. Established in the 1920s, The Scoop Shovel owed its existence to a decision by the directors of the Pool to set aside small percentage of income per bushel for educational purposes. R.A. Hoey began to hold meetings to discuss the idea that the Pool was about more than just marketing grain, and in 1926 a Department of Education and Publicity was organized within the Pool. It was directed by J.T. Hull and advised by R.A. Hoey; they expanded and supervised The Scoop Shovel. They also began to accumulate the educational volumes that would become the Pool library. Hull announced in November of 1926 that the library would be open by the end of the month and reported that: "We have a good representation of works on sociology... On co-operation we have about every book that we can find published in the English language. We have also a good selection of books on economics, history, science, general literature, and rural life. In a word, we have tried to make the library one of usefulness to people whose life is on the land." He also encouraged Pool members--who were the only ones allowed to use the library at this time--to utilize the library to educate themselves, saying “Use it, for knowledge is power”. Once the library was open to all Pool members, Hull wrote a regular column for The Scoop Shovel called “In the Library”, in which he would review books and recommend reading in response to frequent questions from members. When the library gained new books, which was almost continually, he would list them and sometimes discuss them. The library service was a mailing one; the main collection was kept at the Manitoba Wheat Pool central office in Winnipeg and members could request a catalogue of all the library holdings. If they wanted to borrow a book or books on a specific topic, they could write to Hull and the books would be mailed out to the member and returned by mail, all postage costs covered by the Pool Library. During the crisis of the early 1930s, the library was saved because the Manitoba Co-operative Conference believed it was vital to the success of the Pools and the co-operative movement. The Conference took over administration of the Pool library in 1931, leasing the books and equipment from the Wheat Pool. The library was formally incorporated under a charter after it changed hands, the other charters members being the Co-operative Marketing Board and the United Farmers of Manitoba. In 1935 the service was made available free of charge to all rural Manitobans with the financial support of the Co-op Marketing Board. By 1939, Manitoba Pool Elevators had begun to prosper again, and took back responsibility for the administration and housing of the library. The traveling library was also established around this time, and hundreds of boxes were distributed to all MPE points. The boxes were rotated and refreshed twice a year. In 1942 Hull estimated that there were approximately 4,700 books in the Pool Library with an annual circulation of 4,000 to 5,000 books. Operating the library cost around two thousand dollars per year, although the cost was split between the members of the Manitoba Co-operative Conference, at least it was in theory. The Pool library ran as a free service to all rural Manitobans, regardless of whether they were members of the Pool, and the federal government census in 1941 indicates that over half of Manitoba’s population (56%) still lived in rural areas. In 1948, the majority of the Pool Library’s services were rendered unnecessary by an act called the “Public Libraries Act” that had been passed by the Manitoba legislature on April 22, 1948, and would go into effect July 1, 1948. The act provided for the establishing of a provincial “Public Library Advisory Board” that would be appointed by the government. Once the board had been established, the act allowed for the establishment of municipal and regional libraries that would be the administrative responsibility of the municipality or region they served and would be supported by a land tax levied on the population that would have access to the library. All employees of the central provincial library would be considered civil servants. When the Provincial Library was being established in 1949, the Minister in charge of education--Ivan Shultz--actively sought both the advice of those who operated the Pool Library and the physical resources of the Library. In a letter to W.J. Parker, the President of Manitoba Pool Elevators, Shultz wrote that: "We find that in looking at the province as a whole that the box library service of the Manitoba Pool Elevators is the best developed and the best distributed within the province... We would feel that to a considerable extent you had pioneered in this field and we would be using your accomplishments as a springboard for a wider coverage of the province and an enlargement of the service." He also requested that Miss E.L. Shields—the Pool Librarian--be released from Pool employment so that the Provincial Library could hire her for a year to aid in setting up the new library system. An agreement was reached between MPE and the Provincial Library, and the bulk of the Pool Library was transferred to the province. The Pool retained the volumes it wished to keep as reference for its employees, and donated the rest of the open shelf library to the province. The traveling library service was sold at a discount to the province, with the caveat that service not be interrupted during the transfer and that the quality of service to rural Manitoba not diminish once the Library had been entirely transferred to the government. In a letter to Ivan Shultz after the agreement to sell the traveling library had been reached, W.J. Parker wrote that: "...Manitoba Pool Elevators has maintained an open shelf library for a period of some twenty years. These books have been made available to anyone in Manitoba, outside the City of Winnipeg, and the postage both ways was paid by the Pool. We feel it has served a very useful purpose, but that it is not primarily our function and if the government proposes to offer a more complete and universal service we are prepared to retire from the field and avoid what might be considered unnecessary duplication."
Scope and Content
Series contains items once held as part of the Manitoba Pool Library. It has been divided into the following four sub-series: (1) MPE E 1 Manitoba Pool Library publications; (2) MPE E 2 The Scoop Shovel; (3) MPE E 3 The Manitoba Cooperator; and (4) MPE E 4 Pamphlet collection.
Notes
Description by Jill Sutherland and Christy Henry
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9 records – page 1 of 1.