Circus of Books

Circus of Books is a documentary (available on Netflix as of 2020) about a straight Jewish couple who ran the iconic LA book store, Circus of Books, a “place where people could peruse gay erotica or meet other gay people, hanging out in a place free from homophobia.”  Circus of Books sold gay pornography, but also “obscure novels from LGBTQ authors, as well as science fiction books, foreign newspapers, even Bibles.” (Branson-Potts)

While the documentary discusses a range of LGBTQ issues such as gay rights, the AIDS crisis, and coming out, as a documentary about a gay book store it also features a lot of gay publications, of all sorts.

Spotted on the shelves of Circus of Books were many titles that sit on our very own shelves in the Neil Richards Collection of Sexual and Gender Diversity.

Following is a list of just some of the publications that you can find in Circus of Books and the Neil Richards Collection. Follow the links to see their catalogue records. The images are screen captures from the documentary, and their time stamps are included.

Uncommon calling : a gay man’s struggle to serve the ChurchBeyond Acceptance is available in the main stacks of the Murray Library. The Neil Richards Collection also carries an extensive non-fiction selection on topics such as religion, history, politics, art, self-help, health, and more.

Curious Wine: A novel by Katherine V. Forrest   (8:00)The Neil Richards Collection is also home to a wide variety of fiction  – from classics, to contemporary, erotic and non-erotic, popular fiction, pulp fiction, and everything in between – as long it is has ties to LGBTQ issues, whether in it’s themes, characters, or authorship.

Physique Pictorial and Drum   (8:18)Physique magazines were the precursor to modern gay magazines, popular around 1940-1960. Styled as magazines about bodybuilding, health, and fitness, they were a way to try to get around censorship and the cultural taboo of homosexuality.

The Neil Richards Collection has more examples of this type of magazine which has been collected into a kit. Examples of titles include Grecian Guild Pictorial, Male Figure Studies, Iron Boys, and Stallion.

Blueboy (21:30)“Blueboy was one of the first really successful gay publications that was not underground” says Larry Flynt (interviewed in the documentary). Flynt was the publisher of Hustler Magazine, who also took on the distribution of gay publications such as Blueboy, Honcho, and Mandate.

Mandate and Honcho (21:35)

 

All these and many more books, magazines, and movies are available for viewing in the Neil Richards Collection of Sexual and Gender Diversity.

_________________________________________________________________________

Branson-Potts, Hailey. “These grandparents sold gay porn for decades and almost went to prison. Now, they are calling it quits.” Los Angeles Times, 8 Feb. 2019. https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-west-hollywood-porn-shop-circus-of-books-20190208-story.html. Accessed June 2, 2020.

Screen captures from Circus of Books, Netflix, accessed May 2020.

12 Days of Archives 2018

The new year means the newest edition of the 12 Days of Archives, where we share via social media some of the neat things we have in our archives in a lead up to the holidays. This years’ tune goes a little something like this…

12 Playing Cards

MG 586, “White Pass and Yukon Route” playing cards. These cards come from the Raymond Yochim fonds, a collection which contains many interesting collectables.

11 Tiny Pins

These pins come from the Sylvia Fedoruk fonds, MG 435. There are pins for the College of Arts and Science, Penta Kai Deka, the Sheaf, as well as many others!

10 Silhouettes

MG 410, Courtney Milne fonds, 165-506. One of many of the beautiful images from the Milne Photograph collection. You can find more images here:

9 Alpha Flights

These are the first 9 issues of a comic book series featuring a team of Canadian superheroes, set in the same universe as X-Men. From our Shortt Collection of Canadiana.

8 Sporty Postcards

These come from the “Views of Canadian Sports” postcard collection. For more postcards check out our “Wish You Were Here” digital project

7 Inuit Wall Hangings

These come from the R.G. Williamson fonds, which contains a lot of material collected during Williamson’s work for and with the Inuit of Northern Canada.

6 Women Wrestlers

The Neil Richards collection, MG 355, is more well known for its LGBT material but it also has an extensive collection of material on professional (& amateur) wrestling!

5 Fishing Flies

These come from one of our newer acquisitions, the Logan-Wickendon Collection. They were created by artist Horace Wickendon and sent to his friends Ivan and Marjorie Logan.

4 USask Ceramics

In 1921-1958 College of Engineering had a Ceramics Department. We have many examples of the pieces they made in our Duff Spafford fonds

3 Student Floats

These images come from the University Photograph Collection, which contains thousands of images of University of Saskatchewan throughout it’s history. These are from the late 1950’s/early 1960’s when the University of Saskatchewan’s homecoming included a parade! (A-2549, A-4357, A-4298)

2 Baby Booties

What the finding aid says is that these were knit in 1987 with the wool from the family’s own flock of sheep. What do I say? ADORABLE. (MG 271 – Cooper, Hunter, and Anderson fonds)

1 Brass Blood Leaching Tool

This beautiful but slightly terrifying artifact comes from the College of Nursing fonds, RG 2096.

 

More about our new hours

From Tim Hutchinson, Head of University Archives and Special Collections:

Starting today, we have adjusted our hours. The new hours are Monday – Friday, 10 am – 4 pm.

In the spirit of the “University Archives and Special Collections unboxed” theme of this blog, we thought some of you might be interested to hear a bit more about what’s behind the change.

When you visit UASC, in addition to being assisted by a staff member on the reference desk, there is always more going on: sometimes in the reading room, but often behind the scenes. Staff are processing archival collections, digitizing items, preparing exhibitions, and responding to in-depth research requests, to name some of the more prominent activities.

With the previous hours and service model, on any given day, just over half the staff was assigned to the reference desk in some capacity; reference services were available for the whole time staff members were working; and retrieval services were available at all times. You can appreciate that this had an impact on our ability to undertake our full range of functions. Especially since some activities, like processing large archival collections, can be difficult to do on the reference desk.

We are making these changes after several iterations of possible configurations, staff consultations, and compilation of practices at peer institutions. Slightly shorter hours than regular business hours are not uncommon for archives and special collections. Our new hours are comparable to several Canadian universities with archives and special collections.

Retrievals from closed stacks in the Murray Library will be available daily:

  • 10 – 10:30 am
  • 11 am – noon
  • 1 – 2:30 pm
  • 3 – 4 pm

The limitations on retrievals reflect a shift from having two people on morning and afternoon shifts, to having two people on daily shifts, so retrievals will not be available during lunches and breaks.

For in-depth research needs, especially use of the archival collection, we continue to encourage you to contact UASC in advance of a visit, either to request material for retrieval or to discuss your research interests. Staff members are in a much better position to assist researchers if they have lead time to pull together potential sources and clarify research interests; and you will be able to make better use of your time at UASC.

Everyone in UASC takes great pride in the reference service we provide. But we also want to make sure we are able to properly undertake our many other activities, which have the ultimate aim of making our collections accessible. We have adjusted our hours to try to achieve a better balance for those activities, but we look forward to continuing to offer the timely service, dedication and expertise available from the UASC team.

Man reading in library
University of Saskatchewan, University Archives and Special Collections, Photograph Collection, A-2598

Featuring: Patricia Monture

Patricia Monture (later Monture-Angus), a member of the Mohawk Nation from the Six Nations Grand River Territory, was an incredible force for change in the realm of Aboriginal women’s rights during her lifetime. She obtained her BA in sociology from the University of Western Ontario (1983), her law degree from Queen’s University (1988) and her Masters in law from Osgoode Hall Law School (Toronto) in 1998.  In 1988 she filed a suit in Ontario’s Supreme Court arguing that as a member of a sovereign nation, she should not be required to take an oath of allegiance to the Queen in order to join the Ontario Bar. In response, the Law Society made the oath-taking optional. Monture taught law at both Dalhousie University and the University of Ottawa before being offered a position in the Department of Native Studies at the University of Saskatchewan in 1994. She was granted tenure in 1998 and obtained full professorship in 1999, and was during this period one of very few Indigenous women in a faculty position on campus—at one point being the only Indigenous person in the Department of Native Studies. In 2004 she joined the sociology department and became the academic coordinator of the Aboriginal Justice and Criminology Program (also known as the Indigenous People and Justice Program). Her work on Indigenous and women’s rights stretched far beyond her activities on campus, and she served on a number of major inquiries including the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, the task force on federally sentenced women, and the task force on the use of solitary confinement in federal prisons. In 2009 she was given an Honorary Doctor of Laws from Queen’s University, and she was also a recipient of the Sarah Shorten Award for the advancement of women. She passed away at the age of 52 in 2010. A center for student success was opened posthumously in her name at the University of Saskatchewan.

Links:

For links to further Indigenous Resources accessible through the University Library and Archives and Special Collections, check out this post!

New in UASC – 2017 edition

The following is a list of some of the most recent collections to be processed at the University of Saskatchewan’s Archives and Special Collections. Note that this list is not comprehensive, but is meant to give a taste of some of the materials we are currently collecting, and which provide new research opportunities for our patrons. Subjects of interest are: Printed media personalities and literary figures; University history; John Diefenbaker; women’s histories; the Fabian Society; Northern studies (in co-operation with Russia); the performing and visual arts; AIDS, same-sex marriage and other LGBTQ+ issues; Indigenous justice; early rural life in Saskatchewan (particularly the Borden area); World War II; plant sciences. Also a fascinating array of rare signatures from historical figures have turned up this year, well worth checking out. E-mail ua.sc@usask.ca if you would like to explore any of these collections!

Art and Advertising Collection – MG 623: – 1926-2005 (inclusive); 1967-1998 (predominant). – 1.5 m of textual records (exhibition catalogues, posters, ephemera, and books), including oversize.

This collection consists of exhibition catalogues, posters, invitations and promotional ephemera, primarily (but not exclusively) from Canadian art galleries.  The catalogues predominantly feature the work of Canadian artists, with some European and American artists (and minimal representation from Asian artists).  The collection provides interesting documentation of the development of Canadian art across the country, including regional focus and to some extent, the development of interest in Indigenous art.  In addition, the collection includes some auction catalogues, as well as items relating to advertising; art and design used in industry promotion; and industrial design.

Donna Bronson Scrapbook – MG 581 – 1926-1930 – textual records and ephemera, 14 photographs.

This scrapbook, “College Days,” contains materials collected by Donna during the years she attended university.  Much of the material relates to student events, including initiation; banquets (“The New Girls’ Banquet given in honour of The Old Girls”); dances sponsored by Pente Kai Deka, Arts and Science, the Engineering Society, and the Literary Society.  It also include various clippings about University faculty and students; some material relating to student elections (Sexton, Culliton, Mackenzie); the 1927 program for Varsity Follies; the 1926 commemoration service on November 11; class timetables, etc.  Also included are original ink drawings, of a couple dancing, and of “Study Hour at Varsity,” as well as photographs of Donna and classmates “Mac” [Mary McLeary],  Eleanor Knox, Winona Yager, and Hazel [?], as well as a group known as the “Swift Current gang.”  Also included are samples of University stationery, a letter, song lyrics and college yells, various ads, including one for the Halfway House, etc.

Nils Clausson and Guy Michaud Collection- MG 620 – 1989-2017 (inclusive); 1989-1997 (predominant). – 5 cm of textual records; 2 o/s posters.

Nils Clausson served as Executive Director of AIDS Regina from 1987-1993. In 1989, he produced William Hoffman’s As Is, both as a fundraiser and to raise awareness of the AIDS epidemic, then often thought of as a “big city” problem.  He continued with four other benefits over the next five years, with Guy Michaud directing the productions.  Michaud had considerable experience as an actor, director, and playwright, in addition to working for CBC Radio-Canada. In October 1993, Clausson and Michaud co-founded Oscar Wilde & Company, a theatre group in Regina, the only gay theatre company on the Canadian prairies.  Its primary mandate was to produce plays about AIDS and gay issues, as well as other important social and political issues. This collection contains materials related to AIDS Regina and the dramatic productions initiated by them as fundraisers / education.  An outreach of that work was the formation of Oscar Wilde & Company.  This collection includes scripts, posters, and programmes; and by extension documents the collaboration between Nils Clausson and Guy Michaud, who established the first gay theatre company in Saskatchewan.

Douglas and Novia Cole collection (additionals) – MG 369. – 1743-1994 (inclusive). – 20 cm of books and textual records.

Douglas and Novia Cole are residents of Saskatoon.   This accrual adds to their collection of materials created by, or about, Canadian author Robertson Davies (1913-1995).  Davies was editor of Saturday Night and the Peterborough Examiner prior to joining Trinity College, University of Toronto as professor of literature.  The author of numerous plays and books, Davies is perhaps best known for The Salterton trilogy and the Deptford trilogy.  He received both the Stephen Leacock medal for humour and the Governor General’s Award for fiction.  Specifically, these items were from Davies’ personal library.  Some of the items included correspondence or other material laid in, including a letter from Edmund Wilson (1895-1972; American writer, editor and critic), and a postcard from Thornton Wilder (1897-1975; American playwright and novelist).

Robert Cole fonds. – MG 368 (additionals) – 1919-2016 (inclusive); 2004-2016 (predominant). – 5 cm. of textual records.

Robert Cole earned his BA and MA from St. Thomas More College and the University of Saskatchewan, and his PhD from the University of Alberta.  He currently works as Peel Bibliographer and Digital Content Coordinator at the University of Alberta Library. Previously, he served as a researcher and copy-editor for Chinook Multimedia in Edmonton. This accrual contains materials received primarily as a result of Bob Cole’s student days at the University of Saskatchewan and STM.

 Lorne and Mabel Connell Family fonds – MG 600 – –1942-1979 (inclusive); 1951-1965 (predominant) – 45.72 cm of textual records, 19 photographs, 1 audio cassette, library, memorabilia and artifacts; plus oversize.

James Lorne Connell (1894-1965) was born in Manitoba; he enlisted in the CEF on 24 November 1915 (he was a dental student at the time).  He married fellow dental student Mabel Gertrude Killins (1894-1963); they settled in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan where they both continued to practice dentistry.  Mabel Connell served for a time on the Board of Broadcast Governors. This fonds contains materials relating to John Diefenbaker’s political career and personal friendship with the Connells; and in particular, reflects Diefenbaker’s career following his election as leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, and his constituency of Prince Albert.

Sophia Dixon– MG 224 – (2016 accession) – 1901-2012 (inclusive); 1940-1990 (predominant) -1.62 metres of textual records, 146 postcards, 79 photographs, 25 audio cassettes.

Sophia Rossander was born in 1900 in Denmark; her family immigrated to Saskatchewan in 1911. Despite a lack of formal schooling, in 1916 Sophia took her Grade 10 examinations, winning the Governor General’s Award.  By 1917 she had completed Grade 11 and had taken three months of Normal School training in Saskatoon.  Sophia worked as a teacher in rural schools for two years, then took courses in Business College in Regina prior to returning to teaching in 1920.  At her school near Tramping Lake she met Charles Dixon, whom she married in 1921.  Sophia was active in the early Grain Growers’ Association and other co-operative movements in Saskatchewan; and played an early and influential role in the Farmer-Labor Group, the CCF, the Saskatchewan Farmers’ Union, and co-operative marketing associations.    This fonds contains materials created or accumulated by Sophia Dixon, and to a lesser extent, by her daughter, Jean Dixon Pettifor.  It includes materials for memoir -biography project initiated by Sophia and later worked on by Jean, with help from other feminist academics.  It contains much of Sophia’s writing (original documents and transcriptions); but also includes considerable material relating to her family.

Fabian Society Tracts Collection – MG 347 – nd, 1889-1935 (inclusive); 1889-1925 (predominant). – 15 cm of textual records.

The Fabian Society was founded in Britain in 1884, as a progressive movement characterised by a commitment to social justice, and increased equality in society.  Many notable left-wing thinkers wrote tracts published by the Society, on topics relating to child labour, women’s suffrage, old age pension (1897), and working conditions; as well as encouraging democratic socialism and change through local government and trade unionism.  Fabian pamphlets first proposed a national health service (1911), minimum wage (1906), and the Society is credited with helping to establish the modern welfare state.  It’s members played a role in the formation of the British Labour Party in 1900; and were also involved in the creation of The New Statesman, and the London School of Economics, founded initially as a “research institute to provide proof positive of the collectivist ideal.” This collection contains 147 pamphlets, including some revised editions, organized by tract number; together with some annual reports.

Robert Finch fonds – MG590 – 10 cm textual materials; 40 black and white photos ; 51 negatives 1901-1946 (1933-1946 predominantly)

Correspondence from British emigrants describing their lives in Canada and concern over the war. The collection includes letters, photographs, negatives, manuscript drawings, maps, greeting cards, newsclippings, and one small watercolor.

Harald Finker fonds – MG 621 – Dates: 1986-2010 (inclusive). – Extent: 1.14 m: 4,940 photographs, 185 reprints/enlargements, 4 polaroids, 4,128 negatives, 3 internegs, 659 slides, 49 CDs

Harald Finkler formerly headed the Circumpolar Affairs Directorate of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada. Harald played a pivotal role in the Directorate’s longstanding contribution to Canada-USSR/Russia arctic cooperation achieved through technical assistance initiatives in building the capacity of the Indigenous Peoples of the Russian North. Since his retirement, he continues his polar engagement as consultant on northern and indigenous issues. This collection of images by H. W. Finkler, were taken of activities within the framework of Canada – USSR / Russia cooperation on the arctic.  The subject matter follows the development of international relations, with an emphasis on the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug and particularly, Indigenous peoples of the north.  The collection contains images of cities, towns, and herding camps; various officials from Canada and Russia; and numerous images of local people.  It is an exceptionally comprehensive glimpse into the architecture, landscape, and daily lives of people in the Russian federation, over a period of roughly 20 years.

T.Y. and Judith Rice Henderson collection.- 2017-082 – [ca. 1994]-2017. – 0.6 m of textual records, 2 cds, 1 dvd

Judith Rice Henderson is a Professor of English and former associate dean at the University of Saskatchewan. T.Y. Henderson is a retired Professor of Philosophy at the University of Saskatchewan. Collection consists of programs from theater productions, but also music and dance and some special events. The collection primarily documents the performing arts in Saskatoon and area – notably Persephone Theater, Saskatoon Gateway Players and the Saskatoon Symphony – and includes representation from a number of independent theater companies, some no longer in operation. Internationally, there is an extensive set of programs from the United Kingdom, most extensively from London, Cambridge, and the Royal Shakespeare Company.

Mona Holmlund fonds. – MG 417 – 1996-1997 (inclusive). -20.32 cm of textual records; 60 audio cassettes.

Mona Holmlund earned her BA at St. Thomas More College, University of Saskatchewan; her MA at Reading University, and her PhD from Cambridge.  She taught Art History at the University of Saskatchewan; and various courses on visual culture at Dalhousie University, where she holds appointments with the departments of History and Gender and Women’s Studies, and the Fountain School of Performing Arts; and is coordinator for the Certificate program in Art History and Visual Culture. This fonds contains materials relating to the publication of Women Together : Portraits of Love, Commitment, and Life ( essays by Mona Holmlund, photographs by Cyndy Warwick, foreword by Candace Gingrich. Philadelphia, Pa.: Running Press, 1999. In University library:  HQ75.5 .H655 1999).  The book was based on interviews with couples throughout North America, including those involved at the time with changes to legislation regarding same-sex marriages, etc.

The Hinde-Horn-Wake family fonds- MG604 – 1888-1998 (inclusive); 1910-1950 (predominant). – 0.4 m textual records; 6 photographs; 53 photographic negatives; memorabilia.

This fonds consists of records of the Joseph Hinde and Henry Wake families, members of an English Quaker community in Birmingham who immigrated to Canada in 1912. The records reflect their daily lives and the operation of the Hinde family’s Valley Springs Ranch near Borden, Saskatchewan. Materials relating to the Horn family farm at Spring Valley Saskatchewan during the Depression comprise the second series of records in this fonds. The types of records included are diaries, correspondence, photographs, financial records, publications, artifacts and clippings.

Reverend Joseph Holmes fonds – MG584 –  1875- 1967, Pre-1800 predom – 10 cm textual material

Reverend Joseph Holmes a Methodist minister in Exeter, Ontario. He was married to Lucretia (Cretia) Burke. He and his family travelled between churches in Ontario, and ultimately retired in Saskatoon around 1918. Two of his sons worked as dentists in Saskatoon, and his daughter worked for the Star Phoenix. This substantive family archive of Canadiana consists of multi-page correspondence for southern and south-central Ontario beginning in 1875 through 1929, but mostly pre-20th century, and comprises of several different threads of personal/familial writings with letters received between Saskatoon Saskatchewan, and many other locations across Canada. Along with the over 85 letters are some loose covers, an account book, one check book with stubs and perhaps another 20 pieces of ephemera.

C. Stuart Houston fonds-  MG 164 –  1817 – 2017 (inclusive); 1950-2015 (predominant). – 7 m textual records; 1.4 m books;  456 photographs; 105 negatives; 15 35mm slides; 6 CD-R.

This accrual includes personal information on Stuart Houston, relating to his childhood in Yorkton, his secondary and postsecondary studies in the field of Medicine, and his family. Also included are his collected research and articles on birds, the environment, medicine, and history. A set of research files on persons related to all of these fields of interest is also included. Finally, materials related to Houston’s books in his Arctic Trilogy, 18th Century Naturalists of the Hudson’s Bay Area, Tommy’s Team, and 36 Steps on the Road to Medicare are included. Of particular note are an 1831 letter written by John Richardson, still with original wax seal, and hand painted drawings of birds of Chile.

Ian Innes fonds – MG 597 – n.d., 1915-1984 (inclusive); 1958-1984 (predominant). – 500 35 mm colour slides.

Ian Innes was hired by Colb McEown and Jim Wedgewood in July, 1958 and worked as a Planner and Architect for the University of Saskatchewan from 1958-1992. This fonds contains images depicting many of the building projects that were done during Innes’ years working on campus. They are not limited to buildings, but include available building sites, roads and walks, landscaping and some graphics. In addition, it includes images of other university campuses from around North America, and some from Europe.

Donald Cameron Kerr fonds – MG169- 1908 – 2017 (inclusive), 1940-2017 (predominant). -8.85 m, 786 photographs, 651 negatives, 15 35mm slides, 1 31/2” floppy, 5 CD-R, 23 cassette tapes, ephemera.

Donald Cameron Kerr was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan in 1936 and educated at St. Joseph’s School, Nutana Collegiate and the University of Saskatchewan where he received an Honours B.A. in English in 1958. He earned an M.A. in English at the University of Toronto in 1960. Kerr taught at the U of S from 1960 to 1962 and, after two years in London, U.K., from 1964 to his retirement. In addition to serving as acting chair of the department of English in 1985-86, Kerr has served on a number of departmental, college and university committees.  This fonds reflects Kerr’s vocational and avocational interests. His academic activities include not only his own writing in a variety of genres but also his editing, assessment and review of the contributions of others to prose, poetry, drama and film. His service to the community  external to the university  is primarily evident in the political, arts  and heritage fields.

Edward Alexander Maginnes-MG 611- 1903-1995 (inclusive); 1965-1983 (predominant). – 50 cm of textual records; 8 VHS tapes; 2 audio cassettes; 3118 35mm slides; 52 photographs.

Edward Alexander Maginnes was a Professor of Horticulture Science at the University of Saskatchewan. He remained there teaching and conducting research for 36 years, retiring in 2000. Areas that were of particular interest to him included Waste Heat Greenhouse Management, turf grass growth and maintenance as well as hydroponics growing methods. Ed was an honorary member of the Saskatchewan Turf Grass Association and the North American Lily Society. He was married to Beverly Maginnes in 1964, and the couple had three children (Elizabeth, Susan, and Sean). In his retirement, Edward was instrumental in the development and construction of an Abbeyfield House in Saskatoon. Edward passed away in 2010. The fonds is comprised of small press gardening publications and offprints collected by Maginnes, as well as videos on his subjects of interest. The largest segment of the fonds is Maginnes’ collection of 35mm slides, which feature lecture slides and images related to his greenhouse work, images of his sabbatical trips to Denmark, Sweden, and Japan, and personal family images.

R.N.G.  Marken fonds -MG 187 –  1972-2017 (inclusive). –  20 cm of textual records.

Ronald Norman George Marken joined the English department at the University of Saskatchewan in 1966 as an instructor and was granted tenure as professor in 1980.  He has served as Head of the department as well as acting head of the department of Native Studies.  Marken has received a number of awards in recognition of his teaching prowess. In addition to literature and composition courses, Marken has taught modern drama and British poetry.  He has published a number of poems, including collections entitled Cycles of Youth & Age and Dark Honey, articles and reviews pertaining to drama productions and monographs, edited The Easterner’s Guide to Western Canada and co-authored 1919: The Love Letters of George and Adelaide, which was subsequently presented by Regina’s Globe Theatre as “Dancing in Poppies” and “Flights of Angels” presented by Saskatoon’s 25th Street Theatre.  Marken has also presented a number of academic papers and popular addresses to audiences at home and abroad.As part of his academic duties, Marken has served on a variety of committees at the departmental, college and university level.  He is an active member of a number of professional organizations is involved with several community groups. These two additional accessions contains correspondence, teaching and research material and fiction and non-fiction writings by Marken.

Don McGuire fonds – MG 613 – nd, 1981-2015 (inclusive) -5 cm of textual records, memorabilia.

Don McGuire has been an advocate for the LGBTQ community in Regina, and nationally.  As a practicing Catholic, McGuire has been particularly strong advocating within the Catholic church; and has also been active within Dignity Canada Dignité, “an organization of Gay Catholic men and women and other concerned people” providing a “positive communal ministry to gay people.” This fonds contains materials relating to the history and work of Dignity Canada Dignité, McGuire’s published letters and other correspondence, together with articles and materials outlining the debate within the Catholic church (echoed within other Christian denominations) regarding homosexuality.

Patricia Monture fonds – MG 539 – 1960-2010 (inclusive); 1980-2005 (predominant). – 5.6 m of textual records; 8 color photographs; 10 35mm slides; 2 CD-ROM; 16 VHS tapes; 2 DVD; 1 artifact.

Patricia Monture (later Monture-Angus) was a member of the Mohawk Nation from the Six Nations Grand River Territory.  In 1988 she filed a suit in Ontario’s Supreme Court arguing that as a member of a sovereign nation, she should not be required to take an oath of allegiance to the Queen in order to join the Ontario Bar. In response, the Law Society made the oath-taking optional. Monture taught law at both Dalhousie University and the University of Ottawa before being offered a position in the Department of Native Studies at the University of Saskatchewan in 1994. She was granted tenure in 1998 and obtained full professorship in 1999, and was during this period one of very few Indigenous women in a faculty position on campus—at one point being the only Indigenous person in the Department of Native Studies. In 2004 she joined the sociology department and became the academic coordinator of the Aboriginal Justice and Criminology Program (also known as the Indigenous People and Justice Program). Her work on Indigenous and women’s rights stretched far beyond her activities on campus, and she served on a number of major inquiries including the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, the task force on federally sentenced women, and the task force on the use of solitary confinement in federal prisons. She passed away at the age of 52 in 2010.This fonds includes materials relating to Patricia Monture’s teaching, research, and professional activities on campus, as well as an extensive collection of materials relating to Indigenous rights, women’s rights, Indigenous women’s rights, the Canadian justice system, and how the Canadian justice system interacts with Aboriginal, female, and Aboriginal female offenders. The papers also explore issues of child welfare and domestic violence. A number of legal documents are included, as are materials relating to Indigenous self-governance, treaties, and the Indian Act. Also included are materials relating to Monture’s involvement in a number of national commissions including the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, the task force on federally sentenced women, and the task force on the use of solitary confinement in federal prisons. Through Monture’s correspondence, it is possible to get a sense of what it was like working as an Indigenous woman in academia during this period.

Maude Palmer fonds – MG588 – 1924-1933 – 5 cm textual records

Mrs. Maude Palmer of Aylmer Ontario had landholdings in Griffiths and Colgate Saskatchewan, managed from afar by her agent John Leonard. A number of letters dealing with the management of Mrs. Palmer’s landholdings and agricultural operations there during the early years of the Great Depression.

E. Priest fonds – MG587 –1881-1885-1 journal

 E. Priest of Carnarvon, England was a teacher and governess until her marriage to Mr. Edward Jones, whereupon the couple immigrated to Canada, beginning their own homestead in Moosomin Saskatchewan. Her sister opened the first school in Moosomin.  This diary spans four eventful years of Ms. Priest’s life, touching on her activities as a teacher, her wedding, holiday trips to England and Wales, and early years homesteading in Canada. Personal and philosophical thoughts are also explored within the diary. Many flowers are pressed in the diary.

Jack Quinlan fonds. – MG 593. – nd, 1935-1953 (inclusive); 1938-1944 (predominant). – 3 cm of textual records, 31 photographs, memorabilia.

John Michael (“Jack”) Quinlan was born on 28 July 1915, in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan.  His father, a bank accountant and manager, moved the family frequently: Jack’s elementary education was taken in Melfort, Winnipeg and “points west;” but in the 1930s the family moved to Prince Albert, where they remained.  Quinlan worked for the Bank of Nova Scotia and in 1935, passed his examinations to become an Associate of the Canadian Bankers’ Association (Queen’s University), and worked for the PA Herald prior to attending the University of Saskatchewan, where he obtained both a BA and LL.B (1941).  Upon graduating, he immediately joined the Royal Canadian Air Force.  After a training course in PEI Quinlan was stationed in England; in early 1944 he was sent to North Africa.  He died on 4 March 1944. This fonds contains materials relating to the life of Jack Quinlan.  It includes photographs of his years as a student at the University of Saskatchewan, but predominantly reflects his time with the RCAF.  It is notable for the letters of condolence sent to his family following his death, which provide clear evidence of the extent to which one family’s loss was felt throughout the community.

Bruce Reeder fonds – MG576 – 20 cm textual records; 46 35mm slides (glass and cardboard); 12 8x10cm glass slides; 275 negatives –1956-2001

Bruce Reeder spent many years working for the School of Public Health at the University of Saskatchewan. He is now a Professor Emeritus of Community Health and Epidemiology. His areas of research are Global Health, infectious disease, the prevention of obesity and cardiovascular disease, and complex adaptive systems and systems thinking. In the 1990’s, he worked for Health Canada, and was involved in the Canadian Heart Health Initiative. He has also been a leader in the One Health initiative.

 

Clarence White Rife fonds – 1872, 1910, [ca. 1940s]. – 3 cm of textual records, 1 photograph.

Clarence White Rife graduated from the University of Saskatchewan with a BA in history and political science (1914), and spent 1915-1917 as a teacher in Swift Current, Saskatchewan before pursuing his MA from the University of Toronto (1918). He spent 1918-1919 as a sessional lecturer at Queen’s University prior to enrolling at Yale, from which he earned his PhD in 1922.  He then began his career as professor of history at Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota.  By 1927 he became chair of the department, a role he continued for nearly thirty years.  He retired in 1956 and was named professor emeritus. Rife co-founded the Hamline University Institute of World Affairs, served as financial director for the Minnesota Student Project for Amity Among Nations (SPAN), was an active member of the Ramsey County Historical Society, and was active in the Hamline Methodist Church, serving as chair of its Historical Committee. This fonds contains Rife’s diary for 1910, the year he decided to lease his homestead and pursue a degree at the University of Saskatchewan.  A book owned by his father, George Rife, documents the area of Pennsylvania where Rife family were before they emigrated to Canada.  Notes by Rife’s daughter provide context and additional information.

Ross Family Autograph Album – MG 598 –  [ca. 187-?] – 1981 (inclusive); [187-?]-1915 (predominant). – 5 cm of textual records.  Album: 110 pages, approximately 362 autographs; 5 letters; clippings and ephemera.

This album contains over 360 autographs from prominent individuals of the time, including six Prime Ministers (all those who served between 1878-1911); eight Governors-General; 25 cabinet ministers; and over 100 members of parliament, predominantly those who served in the first 10 parliaments between 1867 and 1905.  Other individuals of achievement and/or fame in various fields are also represented: scientists; public officials from other countries; diplomats; religious leaders; those in the performing arts.  Uniquely, the album also contains several signatures from members of the Royal Family: extremely rare in an album of this kind.  This album was initiated by Jessie Flora Ross (1839-1937) and maintained by three generations of the Ross family.  Some of the entries have specific references to Donald, her son; it is his name in the frontispiece.  Donald’s son, Arthur Dwight Ross (1907-1981) and his wife Marguerite Wynn (1908-2003) also encouraged prominent people of their day to sign.

Vipen Sawhney fonds – MG 509– 2017-081. – 1979-2016. 0.80 m. of textual records.

Vipen Sawhney came to the University of Saskatchewan in 1975.  Dr. Sawhney rose through the ranks serving as the Rawson Professor of Biology and Department Head from 2003-2007.  In addition to his U of S appointment, he has been a visiting Professor and Fellow several times.  Dr. Sawhney maintained a first rate research program throughout his career, co-editing a book and authoring more than a hundred refereed papers. He is an internationally recognized plant geneticist focusing on understanding the processes and mechanisms controlling flower and pollen development in angiosperms using floral and male-sterile mutants in tomato, canola  and Arabidopsis.  By using microscopic, physiological and proteomic approaches, Dr. Sawhney has investigated the various factors, and their possible interactions, in plant developmental processes. His research on male sterility in tomato has been applied in the hybrid seed industry.  He has received many awards and honours including the Master Teacher 2007, Earned Doctor of Science 2010 and the Award of Innovation from the University of Saskatchewan.  He served as the President, Canadian Botanical Association, 2004-2006, President, International Association of Sexual Plant Reproduction and Research, 1998-2002 and Vice-President, Canadian Botanical Association, 1998-1999.

Jason Schoonover fonds – MG 583 –  1975 (predominant); 1957-1977 (inclusive). – 10 m of textual material; 25 photographs; 4 audio reels; 3 film reels; 1 audio cassette; 1 45 rpm record.

“Writer, adventurer, expedition leader, ethnologist, archaeologist, paleontologist, canoeist, naturalist, photographer and Fellow Emeritus, Stefansson Medalist, Citation of Merit awardee, and on the Honor Roll of the prestigious Explorers Club—was brought up on farms, and in villages and small towns in Saskatchewan, Canada, and cities like Saskatoon and Vancouver. This explains why he feels equally at home canoeing in the remote north of his homeland, one of his passions, and living in mega-cities like Bangkok. Following university, he launched a multi-media career as a disk jockey, and expanded into writing, directing and producing in radio, TV, stage, newspapers and magazines, including stints as a columnist. His largest stage production was writing, directing and producing Prime Minister John Diefenbaker’s 80th birthday party gala in 1975, an extravaganza involving over 300 performers and personnel”:  (from Jason Schoonover’s website ) This fonds contains textual materials and audiovisual materials pertaining to the writing and planning of Diefenbaker’s 80th Birthday Party in 1975. Specifically it includes handwritten and typed notes, correspondence, photographs, audio visual reels, and some clippings.

Shirley Serviss fonds-MG 617 – nd, 1975-1992 (inclusive). – 2 cm of textual records; 1 photograph.

Shirley Serviss is an author and poet.  She was raised on a farm near Ethelton, Saskatchewan attended the University of Saskatchewan in 1971-1972, and took art classes from Reta Cowley.   While working as a journalist for the Prince Albert Daily Herald, Serviss met John Hicks.    Serviss earned her BA in creative writing from the University of Alberta, and her MA in theology from St. Stephen’s College (1997).  She and Alice Majors started Roland Books; and she taught at MacEwan University.  Serviss was a founding member of the Writers Guild of Alberta.  This fonds contains correspondence from Reta Cowley, and John Hicks.  The Cowley correspondence in part, discusses her painting process; and the Hicks correspondence discusses the Saskatchewan writing scene (particularly Prince Albert); his publications and awards, and his ideas about writing.

Joseph and Stella Skwara Farming History fonds. – MG 596- 1911-2012 (inclusive); 1950-2012 (predominant).- 40 cm of textual records.

Joe and Stella married in 1945, and together they farmed in the Borden area from 1945 to 1983.  They had two daughters.  Joe and Stella retired to Borden in 1983, where Joe died in 2005. Stella died in 2012.  The Skwara farm near Borden, Saskatchewan, has remained in the hands of a single family for over 70 years.  The majority of that period – over 60 years – is documented in this fonds.  In particular, as farmers such as the Skwaras are self-employed, details in income tax and Canadian Wheat Board permit books provide considerable insight into the changing nature of farming practices and the economic reality of farming over time.  Blacksmithing costs; beekeeping; the nature of the crops being grown; diversification through livestock; cost (and availability) of transient help; and the number of acres under cultivation all combine to tell not only the personal story of one farm family, but also farming as a business.

The Walter Slipchenko fonds.- MG 599 – 1930-2010 (inclusive); 1970-1995 (predominant)-  5.28 m of textual records, library, 1,304 slides, 231 photographs, 10 internegs, 1 disc; website

  Walter Slipchenko was born in Winnipeg in 1934 and grew up in that city. He attended the Canadian Military College at Royal Roads, Victoria, BC, and the Royal Military College (RMC), Kingston, ON, becoming an officer in the Royal Canadian Engineers. Upon leaving the military, he graduated from the University of Manitoba with a Masters in Arts in 1966 before joining the federal public service in Ottawa. Walter had a distinguished 35-year career in the public service within the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and the Government of Northwest Territories, focused on Aboriginal affairs and Canada’s circumpolar relations. He was instrumental in developing Canada’s cooperation with other circumpolar states, and nurturing agreements with Russia on the Arctic. He was unwavering in his support of Indigenous peoples throughout the circumpolar world. [Sources: obituary, and material supplied by Andrew Slipchenko and Harald Finkler]. This fonds contains materials created or accumulated by Walter Slipchenko during his career and during research for his definitive report, Canada’s Arctic Cooperation with the Soviet Union and Russia, 1965-2000.   The documentation is comprehensive, covering a number of subjects and organizations, and provides a valuable record of circumpolar life across several nations.  In addition to the physical items, it includes a website, www.walterslipchenko.com which provides further information on the scope of the report and the development of international, circumpolar relationships.

Duff Spafford- MG 281. – 1908-2015. – 2015-098; 2017-045. – 3.4 m.

Duff was a member of faculty at the University of Saskatchewan for over 40 years. He started in the Department of Economics and Political Science, where he taught both economics and political science. When the department separated in 1985, he took the option of joining the new Department of Political Studies. His research interests included public finance, economic development, and Saskatchewan history. After shifting to political studies, his primary interests were election systems, representation, and the mathematical relationship between seats and votes. After Duff retired in 2002, he was active in the University of Saskatchewan Retirees Association and the College and University Retirees Association. He was passionate about the university and scoured primary sources to record the achievements of its alumni, in the process discovering forgotten students of critical importance to the history of the institution. This fonds includes material relating to Duff’s University of Saskatchewan research interests, including Frank Anderson, the Ceramics Department, books written by alumni, teaching and department files, consulting and The Sheaf.

David Williams – MG 453 

David Larry Williams was born 22 June 1945 at Souris-Glenwood, Manitoba.  He earned and Pastor’s Diploma from Briercrest Bible Institute in 1965, a BA from the University of Saskatchewan in 1968 and a MA and PhD from the University of Massachusetts in 1970 and 1973.  He joined the faculty of the University of Manitoba in 1972 where he has taught classes in the Canadian Novel, Seventeenth-Century British Literature, Literature Since 1900, Media and Memory, Media and Nation, Milton, Milton & the Levellers and Contemporary Critical Theory.  His major works include. Media, Memory, and the First World War; Imagined Nations: Reflections on Media in Canadian Fiction; Confessional Fictions: A Portrait of the Artist in the Canadian Novel; The River Horsemen; Eye of the Father; and The Burning Wood. Williams’ novels recreate the world of his childhood in rural Saskatchewan exploring the competing mythologies of the people who came to settle the region.  His literary criticisms explore the place of Canadian literature within the wider field of modern literature written in English.

MG 216 – RG Williamson – 2017 accessions. – 1952-2009 (inclusive); 1977-2002 (predominant). – 0.81 metres of textual records.

While wintering at Ft. Simpson, Northwest Territories, Robert Gordon Williamson began recording Dené folklore as an independent initiative. Williamson’s extensive record of scholarship in cultural anthropology and ethnology can be dated from this period forward.  Between July 1953 and October 1954 while based at Pangnirtung, Baffin Island, he learned Inuktitut and extended his ethnological experience by travelling throughout Cumberland Sound. During the summers while working toward his first degree, Williamson was employed with the Department of Northern Affairs.  In 1958 he joined the Department of Northern Affairs on a full-time basis, where he established their Eskimology section, founded the first Eskimo language journal, and became Welfare and Rehabilitation Superintendent for the district of Keewatin, dealing primarily with social issues.  His career with the University of Saskatchewan began at the Centre for Community Studies, with a study of Fringe Saulteaux near Kamsack, Saskatchewan; by 1964 he had joined the department of Anthropology as a lecturer and was an associate director with the Institute for Northern Studies.  In addition, Williamson served for over a decade as the director of the University’s Arctic Research and Training Centre.   In 1966 he was elected by acclamation in the first of his two terms as member for Keewatin to the Legislative Council of the NWT.   Williamson has worked on behalf of numerous organizations, including the Inuit Tapirisat of Canada, the Canadian Eskimo Arts Council, the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, and the CBC Northern Service.  He was invested into the Order of Canada in 1983.  Upon his retirement from the University in 1999 Williamson was named Professor Emeritus, and at the fall 2000 convocation ceremony, was recognized with the JWG Ivany Internationalization Award. This final accrual to the Williamson fonds documents Dr. Williamson’s work relating to the Canadian north and other circumpolar regions.  It includes his memoirs; and in particular documents some of his later research work, notably that relating to the Distant Early Warning (DEW) Line.

Grant Wood fonds – MG 609 – 1956-2005 inclusive – 20 cm textual

Grant Wood worked for many years in Agricultural Extension at the University of Saskatchewan, and upon the closure of that Department became an Assistant Professor in the College of Agriculture and Bioresources in the Department of Plant Sciences. Wood has been a driving force behind the University’s rooftop gardens and other urban agricultural initiatives, and specializes in teaching urban agriculture, a course he developed to help students understand why we should be growing more food locally. He has acted as faculty advisor to the U of S horticulture club, and is also involved in various food-growing initiatives off-campus, frequently working with new Canadians, and sharing his love of urban farming. He has also been involved with “The Gardener for the Prairies” magazine, and donated many copies to our Special Collections. This fonds contains materials relating to the professional activities of Grant Wood, including papers he has presented at conferences, and his work in the Canada Mongolia Training for Rural Development Project. Also included are some of his early teaching materials, and materials collected on subjects related to his field.

Woolsey Family Collection MG585 – 1943 – 1944 1 file

Two of the letters in this grouping were written by V-10860 Telegrapher Leonard R. Woolsey, who was an original member of the crew of the HMCS Athabaskan, which was disabled by German air attack in August 1943. He later served at sea in H.M.C.S. Chaudiere, and finally received a commission, ending the war attached to the Royal Navy as a Fleet Air Arm fighter controller. The other correspondence was written by his mother, and include content about the early service of the Athabaskan, and about her sinking in 1944. The letters were written to Leonard’s brother L.A.C. Eldon Woolsey, R-120650, who served overseas in the R.C.A.F. from 1943 to 1945, much of the time with 422 Squadron. [Two other brothers, Donald, served in the Canadian Parachute Corps late in the war and Able Seaman Boyd H. Woolsey, who served at sea on anti-submarine duties in Fairmile motor launches.]

 

Remembering Our Dear Friend

From around the time of his retirement in 2005 to his passing in 2018, Neil Richards made the University of Saskatchewan Archives and Special Collections his home away from home. He had chosen to spend his retirement years doing what he loved: collecting rare or locally relevant materials related to LGBT+ lifestyles. Every morning he would enter with his distinctive shuffling step. A few jokes, a cheeky grin, a cup of coffee, and then he would settle down at his desk and begin a day of catching up on the latest in Queer news and chasing down the unique treasures that sang to his collector’s heart. These treasures would arrive in stacks of enticing packages, colorfully stamped. But Neil would always wait to open them until the afternoon — he enjoyed the anticipation. His desk was always piled high with these treasures–everything from sardonically witty postcards to comic books to a handwritten letter by iconic lesbian author Radcliffe Hall. Often, on my journeys back and forth across the archives, he would excitedly gesture me over, show me his latest E-Bay find, explain to me the fascinating history of the unassuming lavender pamphlet he held in a hand that had leafed through books by the thousands. His hands seemed to have an intelligence to them, as though he was able to gauge the value of anything he picked up just by touch. The joy Neil found in hunting down something rare, something unique, something one-of-a-kind was always present and often contagious. He inspired me to begin my own collections, showed me that collecting was not just about accumulating but about sharing, learning, and loving.

The Neil Richards Collection of Sexual and Gender Diversity, and all of Neil’s collection work was very much a labour of love, and in this post, I would like to share with you some of that work. Over the past thirteen years, numerous exhibitions, digital displays, blog posts and articles have been created around Neil’s collections. What follows is a (not nearly comprehensive) list of links to some of these byproducts of Neil’s devoted collecting work.

Digital Resources: 

Blog Posts and Articles:

In the News: 

Exhibitions and Events: 

The 12 Days of Archives

One of my favourite times of year has come again! That time of year when we get to dig through our new arrivals and old favourite and showcase some of the neat things we have in these archives of ours. Everyone take a deep breath and sing along…

On the 12th Day of Christmas my Archives gave to me…

12 LGBT Buttons

Neil Richard Collection of Sexual and Gender Diversity,  HQ76.96 B88

 

11 Ceramic Ashtrays

Duff Spafford fonds, MG 281

 

10 Sask Artist Greeting Cards

Mac and Beth Hone fonds, MG 183

 

9 Vintage Matchbooks

Don Kerr fonds, MG 169

 

8 Sledders Sledding (poorly)

Pamphlet Collection, Postcards, Views of Canadian Sports, LXXVII-134

 

7 U of S Patches

Sylvia Fedoruk fonds, MG 435

 

6  Frosh Week Students

University Photograph Collection, A-2976

 

5 Beer Labels

R.L. Sweet fonds, MG 401

 

4 Chilean Birds

C.S. Houston fonds, MG 164

 

3 Antique Keys

Allan Cushon fonds, MG 545 & Artifacts Collections, RG 2000

 

2 Charging Caribou

                                             Zepp/Varga Collection, PV1014.                                                        Jacob Irkok (1937-2009), Arviat Charging Caribou, antler.

 

1 Explorer’s Letter

Stuart Houston fonds, MG164.

 

If you would like to experience the 12 Days of Archives in real-time next year, follow us on twitter and facebook! And if you want to see what we featured in our previous years, check out these posts from 2016, 2015, and 2014!

Archival Playlist

Ever feel like working to a beat? Well, have we got the album for you. This is our Songs of the Archives playlist, featuring all the hits that speak to archivists and their day to day struggles and joys. We promise after listening to this playlist, you will find your self humming along to your day-to-day tasks!

Who Are You?

Classic song of the 70’s, now commonly associated with that TV hit, CSI (or is that just me?), but anyone who has ever tried to describe a photograph’s scope and contents can appreciate this song. Who among us hasn’t looked at an archival photo and muttered, “Who are you? Who, who? Who, who?”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PdLIerfXuZ4

Can’t Always Get What you Want

It’s hard to admit defeat, but sometimes a researcher comes in looking for something that you just don’t have in your archives. And as much as you want to find it for them, if its not there, its not there. Or they come in with a specific question, but after a reference interview you get to the real crux of their query and “well, you might find you get what you need.”

U Can’t Touch This

Everyone who has handled a research question in an archives and felt that sinking feeling when the item that that patron really wants to see has a big ol’ RESTRICTED label on it. And you have to turn to that patron and say, “I’m sorry, but due to privacy laws U Can’t Touch This”.

A Little Less Conversation

This particular ditty touches the hearts of everyone who works in a library setting. There are some areas that are designated as group study areas, but many libraries still have quiet zones. I’m sure there is not a library professional in the world who hasn’t had to, at one time or other, walk up to patron’s and say, with a stern look, “A Little Less Conversation” please.

Celebration

You’ve conquered that chunk of backlog that’s been on your list for two years. You’ve found that obscure piece of information for your researcher, in that file that was labelled not-the-greatest. A new order of archival quality folders came in just in time to complete processing that collection for appraisal. Any win, big or small, is worthy of celebration!

We want to hear from you! What would you put on your Library or Archives playlist? Comment down below, or send us a tweet at @sask_uasc

Celebrating Saskatoon Pride

The Saskatoon Pride Festival is celebrating its 25th anniversary this June with its biggest, longest and most varied program with events running June 9th to June 21st. The University Library congratulates all connected to the Festival and to the many other organizations whose efforts are making Saskatoon and the University more equitable, supportive and exciting places.

The University Archives and the Special Collections Unit’s Neil Richards Collection for Sexual and Gender Diversity share the Festival’s goal of fostering community pride and raising awareness of queer culture as well as facilitating research into LGBTQ history. The understandings and goals of those working towards greater freedom  have changed often and profoundly since the first printed appearance of the term ‘homosexual’ in an obscure 1869 German legal pamphlet. Uniting most of these efforts are courage, determination, and a desire to live and love visibly.  As a salute to Saskatoon Pride and its work, we highlight here a handful of our recent library acquisitions.

Radclyffe Hall letter:

To mark the acquisition of its 6,000th title the Neil Richards Collection has purchased a short autographed note from the celebrated Lesbian novelist Radclyffe Hall (1880-1943). Dated March 28th 1925 and  addressed to Arthur St John Adcock, editor of The Bookman,  the note seeks a review for her new novel A Saturday Life.

 

“As you were kind enough to take an interest in “The Unlit Lamp” (1924) I am undertaking to send you my new book…it is in a lighter vein this time, and if you like it at all, it should be an enormous help if you would give it a few  kind words in “The Bookman”. The book is to be published next Wednesday-   April 1st!”  

In 1928 Hall gave up her role as a comfortable and respected society novelist to publish her most well-known work, The Well of Loneliness. The Well was a lengthy plea for tolerance for its main character, a masculine lesbian named Stephen Gordon, who described herself as did Hall as a “congenital invert.”

Hall received harsh abuse and only a modicum of support for her temerity in raising the issue of lesbianism. The book was the subject of a much publicized obscenity trial in the UK, which resulted in an order that all copies of the novel be destroyed. Despite efforts at censorship, including in Canada, the book became so widely read by lesbians that it was known as the Lesbian Bible.

Rudi van Dantzig : For a Lost Soldier

London: Gay Men’s Press, 1996

Rainbow Link, the Toronto based organization that redistributes LGBT title across Canada, is the most generous donor to the  Neil Richards Collection. Among the hundreds of titles received last year is this exceptionally hard to find title. For a Lost Soldier is a wartime memoir of the relationship between  a lonesome Dutch boy named Jeroen sent for safety to the marshlands of Friesland,  and Walt Cook, a young Canadian  soldier attached to the allied liberation effort in that area of the Netherlands.  Separated completely from his family and desperate for attention and understanding Jeroen mistakes Walt’s interest and sexual abuse as love and falls into anguish when Walt’s unit marches on leaving him behind.

The author is the acclaimed Dutch choreographer Rudy van Dantzig (1933-2012), one of the giants of late 20th century modern dance.  Voor een Verloren SoldaatFor a Lost Soldier was published in the Netherlands in 1986, filmed in 1992, and translated into English editions that sold out almost immediately. It is among the most sought of modern gay literature titles by collectors.

Chevalier Publications :

Fated for Femininity

Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, 1965. First printing, no date (ca. 1965)

I Am A Male Actress

Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, 1963. First printing, 1963,

Chevalier Publications was established in California in1963 by American transgender activist Virginia Prince (1912-2009) to publisher her magazine Transvestia and other publications promoting self-acceptance by male crossdressers.  These were sold by subscription and in adult bookstores. The intention was that readers would provide the articles and stories. For twenty years the magazine offered stories and letters, personal and business ads, and listings of upcoming events. The goal was threefold –education, entertainment and expression. The Library has recently acquired four titles from this pioneering press.

According to Prince’s Wikipedia entry, Transvestia’s audience consisted largely of white men who were interested in feminine apparel. In other works, Prince helped popularize the term ‘transgender’, and erroneously asserted that she coined transgenderist and transgenderism, words that she meant to be understood as describing people who live as full-time women, but do not intend to have genital surgery.  Prince’s idea of a “true transvestite “was clearly distinguished from both the homosexual and the transsexual, claiming that true transvestites are “exclusively heterosexual.”.

OutSaskatoon’s Rainbow Family Series : 

 Saskatoon: OutSaskatoon, 2016.

Since the early 1970s in LGBT circles Saskatoon has been known as a city that in terms of activism punches far above its own weight. OutSaskatoon, known previously as the Avenue Community Centre for Gender and Sexual Diversity, has addressed the community’s social needs for over 26 years. In 2016, it published a series of four illustrated booklets dealing with the sexual and gender diversity of local families including aboriginal families. With texts  by Brent Beatty, Natasha King, Helen Thunderchild  and   Melody Wood and photography by Priscila Silva.

Now at University Archives and Special Collections

The following is a list of some of the most recent collections to be processed at the University of Saskatchewan’s Archives and Special Collections. Note that this list is not comprehensive, but is meant to give a taste of some of the materials we are currently collecting, and which provide new research opportunities for our patrons.

MG454 – Sharon Bakker fonds

Sharon Bakker was born in 1952 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Her contributions to the Saskatchewan and Canadian drama scene have been extensive. Paper Wheat, which first opened in Sintaluta SK in 1977, stands as a highlight on Bakker’s CV as she at various times both acted in and directed the play. . She was herself a founder of a number of theater co-operatives, including the Fully Dressed Ladies Co-op and Bakkery Products Co-op. In the early seventies, Bakker was a founding member of the 25th Street Theater group, and in the early eighties established VIEW, a group for female performing artists in Vancouver.

The material in this fonds consists largely of scripts, clippings, photographs and ephemera pertaining to Bakker’s involvement in theater in the province of Saskatchewan, and Canada at large. Materials highlighting Bakker’s career are included, as are materials pertaining to her involvement in various theatrical professional organizations. Some personal materials have also been retained.

MG557 – Gordon Barnhart fonds

Gordon Leslie Barnhart was born in Saltcoats, Saskatchewan on January 22, 1945. He earned a BA in History from the University of Saskatchewan (Regina Campus) in 1967, a MA from the University of Regina in 1977 and Ph.D from the University of Saskatchewan in 1998.  He briefly taught at North Battleford Collegiate Institute before accepting an appointment as Clerk of the Saskatchewan Legislative Assembly. In 1989, he was appointed Clerk of the Senate.  From 2000 to 2005, he served as University Secretary, University of Saskatchewan before retiring to teach political studies classes, specializing in Canadian politics, government and the Canadian Senate.  In 2006, Dr. Barnhart replaced Lynda Haverstock as Lieutenant-Governor of Saskatchewan. In 2012, he returned to the U of S as an Adjunct Professor in the Department of History and on May 21, 2014, Barnhart was appointed interim President of the University of Saskatchewan.  He held the post until October 24, 2015. On June 24, 2014, Barnhart was named a Member of the Order of Canada. Barnhart’s book Peace, Progress and Prosperity detailed the life of Saskatchewan’s first premier, Thomas Walter Scott. Other works include E. H. Oliver : a study of Protestant progressivism in Saskatchewan, 1909-1935; Saskatchewan’s Premiers of the Twentieth Century, Building for the Future; a photo journal of Saskatchewan’s Legislative Building and Parliamentary Committees: Enhancing Democratic Governance. The material in this fonds documents the career, interests and writing of Gordon Barnhart.

MG418 – Robert Calder fonds

Born in Moose Jaw on 3 April 1941 and raised in Saskatoon, Robert Lorin Calder is a lifelong resident of Saskatchewan. Having taken a BA (1964) and MA (1965) at the University of Saskatchewan and a PhD at the University of Leeds (1970), he was the longest-serving (45 ½ years) member of the Department of English at the University of Saskatchewan, and at 38, was also the youngest Department Head in its history. Additionally, he served as the Acting Head of the Music Department and as the first Associate Dean of Fine Arts and Humanities in the College of Arts and Science.

Calder is the author or editor of eleven books, most of which have been published internationally.  He was the first writer in the history of Saskatchewan to have a book published by an international trade publisher while residing in the province. His Willie: the Life of W. Somerset Maugham, for which he was awarded the Governor General’s Literary Award, made him recognized as the leading authority in the world on Somerset Maugham. In 2005 he was given the University of Saskatchewan’s Distinguished Researcher Award, and in 2011 he was selected among the first hundred College of Arts and Science Alumni of Influence.

Throughout his career, Calder has been an active member of the Saskatchewan writing community, serving as President of the Sage Hill Writing Experience, the Saskatchewan Writers’ Guild, and The Word on the Street Saskatoon (of which he is a founding member). He was instrumental in the creation of the Kloppenburg Award for Literary Excellence, and the innovative Master of Fine Arts in Writing at the University of Saskatchewan. In addition to the Governor General’s Literary Award, he has won two Saskatchewan Book Awards, and has twice won the John V. Hicks Manuscript Award.

This fonds is a record of Calder’s activities in three areas: personal life and career as student and faculty member, career as an internationally published author, and contributions to the Saskatchewan writing community.

MG513 – Christopher Chapman fonds

Born in Toronto in 1927, Christopher Chapman was an innovative Canadian filmmaker and documentarian. He was best known for A Place to Stand, produced for the Ontario Pavilion at Expo 67 and for which he won an Academy Award. A Place to Stand represented the beginning of IMAX technology, and Chapman pioneered the “multiple dynamic images” technique.

The fonds includes film footage and audio recordings created during Christopher Chapman’s film project relating to Richard St. Barbe Baker; photographs of the film shoot in British Columbia; correspondence, drafts, proposals, notes, etc. documenting the film project, including correspondence between Chapman and St. Barbe and between Chapman and others; photographs taken and collected by St. Barbe; letters sent to St. Barbe care of Chapman during his extended visit to Canada; articles and other resource material compiled by both Chapman and St. Barbe, especially relating to forestry and the environment, and about St. Barbe; and related material including slides of the Findhorn Community in Scotland.

MG545 – Allan Cushon Collection

Owner of Saskatoon’s most recognizable locksmithing shop, Burnett’s keys. Allan was a graduate of the University of Saskatchewan, and an avid collector of books, magazines, and other materials with particular focus on mysteries, Sherlockian works, and anything to do with locks and keys. Allan passed away in 2015.

This collection contains books, magazines, and a variety of ephemera. Much of the material consists of advertising (dating from the Victorian era to the present), and Canadiana. Other themes include socialism, sex and gender, science fiction, western living, and adventure. In line with Cushon’s interests as a locksmith, there are also a variety of materials relating to locks, keys, and locked room mysteries.

MG580 – D. W. (Zach) Hauser fonds

Donald William (Zach) Hauser earned his BFA from the University of Saskatchewan in 1979 and did post-graduate studies in Gesamthoschschule Kassel (the Consolodated University of Kassel), Germany.  He has taught photography for Camosun College, Victoria, and for the University of Saskatchewan, both through Art and Art History and the Extension Division.   A photographer since his first photograph was published in 1962, Hauser also began furniture making; and in 1998 became a blacksmith.  He has had individual and group exhibitions in Germany and western Canada. Hauser is a member of the Saskatchewan Craft Council and has served on the Board of Directors of the Mendel Art Gallery, and on the board of CARFAC.

This series contains original images of arctic flora found on Axel Heiberg and Ellesmere Islands, and to a lesser extent, from Cornwallis Island (specifically, Resolute Bay).  The photographs were taken by Hauser over the course of two separate research trips with James Basinger, a professor of geology with an interest in fossil plants, the evolution of land plants, and tertiary plants and climate change.  The images taken by Hauser document both common and rare plants, together with detailed records on the location and date of each photograph.  As such, these images provide excellent documentation of one aspect of the northern Canadian environment at a specific point in time, and may well provide evidence of change over time as the climate (and human impact) may alter the northern landscape.

MG548 – Cecil King fonds

Cecil King is an Odawa from Wikwemikong, and a residential school survivor. He obtained his BEd (1973), and his MEd (1975) through the INEP program. He received a PhD in 1983 from the University of Calgary through the Department of Policy and Administrative studies. He has spent fifty years in education as a teacher, professor, researcher, and consultant. He was one of the founders of the Indian Teacher Education Program, and served as it’s first director. He was Head of the Indian and Northern Education Program at the University of Saskatchewan, as well as Dean of the Saskatchewan Campus of the First Nations University of Canada. For many years, King also served as the first Director of the Aboriginal Teacher Education Program at Queen’s University, and is a Professor Emeritus of that school.

This fonds contains materials related to Cecil King’s work in Aboriginal Education. Important documents surrounding the aboriginal education work done by the University of Saskatchewan, Queens University, the Indian and Northern Education Program, the Indian Teachers Education Program, the Northern Teachers Education Program, the Saskatchewan Urban Native Teachers Education Program, the First Nations University of Canada (formerly SIFC), the Gabriel Dumont Institute, and the Saskatchewan Indigenous Cultural Center form the core of these materials. The history of troubles at the First Nations University of Canada is tracked through nearly-daily news reports collected by King from 2005-2010. King also extensively collected materials on Aboriginal Education, language, and general matters of indigenous interest.

MG364 – Edgar Mapletoft

Edgar Mapletoft was born October 7, 1920 in Lloydminster, Saskatchewan.  His father, John, and uncle, Charlie, homesteaded in the Fort Pitt District, just north of Lloydminster, on the north side of the North Saskatchewan River in 1911.  His parents, John & Martha Mapletoft, had one son, Edgar, and a daughter, Mary Margaret.  Edgar grew up and remained in the Fort Pitt District all his life.  He attended the School of Agriculture in Saskatoon and in 1941 received his Diploma.  Edgar married Florence Patricia Chapman on July 2, 1942 and they raised three sons on the Little Pipestone Ranch just a couple miles from their childhood homes.  He died on April 1, 2006. Mr. Mapletoft was an authority on Simmental cattle.  He first imported the breed to Canada in 1969 and was a successful breeder for several years.  In 1983, he was given the Golden Book Award by the World Simmental Federation.  Included in this accrual are materials regarding the local history of Frenchman Butte, and slides of celebrations in the area.

MG551 – Reuben Mapletoft fonds

Reuben Mapletoft was born on Little Pipestone Ranch near Fort Pitt, Saskatchewan. His father, Edgar Mapletoft was among the earliest importers of Simmental cattle in Canada.  Reuben received his DVM from the University of Guelph before interning at the University of Saskatchewan in 1967-1968—the first student to intern at the college. After obtaining his PhD, Mapletoft returned to the WCVM as a professor in the Department of Clinical Studies. He became the Head of the Department of Herd Medicine and Theriogeneology in 1998, and in 2002 he became a consultant to the pharmaceutical industry (Bioniche). His main area of research and innovation is in bovine reproduction, and more specifically, embryo transfer, superovulation, and in-vitro fertilization. Through the course of his career, he has been involved in many collaborative efforts with universities around the world, most notably in South America, and Japan. Dr. Reuben J. Mapletoft is now a professor emeritus in the Western College of Veterinary Medicine’s Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences.

This accrual includes a broad array of teaching slides on the subject of large animal reproduction, conference and workshop proceedings from around the world, information on international courses taught by Mapletoft, an array of papers written by Mapletoft, and a small selection of relevant ephemera.

MG568 – McConnell Family fonds

John McConnell attended the University of Saskatchewan, earning a degree in Agricultural Economics (1951).  He began a 21-year career with the Saskatchewan public service, working for the departments of Co-operation and Co-operative Development, and Agriculture.  During this period, he hosted a radio show, “Good Listening for Good Farming,” and a television show, “Rural Route Saskatchewan.”

Doreen Muriel Ratcliffe was born in Regina on 17 July 1927.  She earned a BA from the University of Saskatchewan, and worked as an executive secretary and advertising copywriter in Vancouver and Regina. She married John McConnell in 1957. Doreen was active as pianist for her church, with the CGIT, and with the Canadian Institute of International Affairs and the World Food Program.

This fonds documents McConnell’s work in communications, his work for the Canadian and Saskatchewan governments, together with materials relating to his interest in the environment and social and international development issues.  It also includes materials relating to the interests and activities of Doreen.

MG561 – Carol Morrell fonds

Carol Morrell received her BA (1966) from the University of New Brunswick, and earned her MA from the University of Toronto (1968).  She taught part-time at UNB while completing her dissertation; and joined the faculty at the University of Saskatchewan in 1985, as assistant professor of English.  She served as co-chair of the Dean of Arts and Science’s Special Committee on Women’s Studies (1989-1990) and was one of three members of the Ad Hoc Committee of Academic Affairs looking into Women’s Studies at the University of Saskatchewan.

This fonds focuses on the initial proposals for courses relating to women’s studies at the University of Saskatchewan, leading eventually to the development of the department of Women’s and Gender Studies.  The organization reflects the description of materials provided by the donor.

MG223 – R. H. D. Phillips fonds

In 1948, Robert Howard Daniel Phillips began his lifelong career as a journalist, working variously for the Canadian Press, the Regina Leader Post, and the United Press.  In 1960 he joined the staff of the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool, becoming its first research analyst and subsequently, director of their Research Division.  In 1973 he was named editor and publisher of the Western Producer, as well as general manager of Western Producer Publications.  Phillips was active in the Presbyterian Church as well as with both the University of Saskatchewan and the University of Regina.

Tanyss Phillips, wife of R. H. D. Phillips,  was one of the earliest female economists in Canada, and worked with the research department at the Bank of Canada in Ottawa, with the Saskatchewan Royal Commission of Agriculture and Rural Life, and was an instructor at the University of Regina from 1960-1973. She also served many years as a member of the University of Regina’s Senate.

This fonds contains materials created or collected by RHD Phillips relating to the establishment and demise of St. Stephen’s Church in Regina, photographs and textual materials relating to Phillips’ work with the SWP and Western Producer Publications. Also included are a variety of (primarily Scottish and Irish) genealogies compiled by Phillips, documents pertaining to Tanyss’ work with the Royal Commission on Agricultural and Rural Life, and documents relating to post-secondary education in Saskatchewan.

MG579 – Roger Pierson fonds

Roger A. Pierson joined the faculty of the University of Saskatchewan in 1988 as a professor in the department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, and director of the Reproductive Biology Research Unit (College of Medicine).  His research is multi-disciplinary: he is an associate member of the department of Herd Medicine and Theriogenology (Western College of Veterinary Medicine), and a member of the department of Biomedical Engineering (College of Engineering).  This fonds contains materials relating to Pierson’s research interests, and his collaborative work with graduate students and faculty from medicine, nursing, veterinary medicine, and computational science.  Pierson and the reproductive biology research unit made medical history when they were the first to capture natural human ovulation, witnessed with the use of an intra-vaginal probe to produce ultrasound waves.  Those original images, on video tape, form part of this fonds; as do other images and data relating to Pierson’s research in reproductive technologies.

MG355 – Neil Richards Collection

Born and educated in Ontario, but based in Saskatchewan since 1971, Neil Richards (1949 – ) has been an active participant in local, provincial and national gay organizations since the early 1970s. His activist work included participation in the Committee to Defend Doug Wilson in 1975, the organization of the 1976 convention of the National Gay Rights Coalition in Saskatoon, and many of the earliest AIDS awareness efforts in Saskatchewan. In conjunction with his work at the University of Saskatchewan Library, he produced many exhibitions and public events concerning AIDS and gay history and life. This accrual extends the existing series relating to cross-dressing; and adds a series relating to “beefcake,” physique or body-building magazines; articles from popular magazines, as well as a collection of serious magazines relating to the LGBT community; and works from artist and fellow activist, Duncan Campbell.

MG572 – Ron Steer fonds

Ron Steer received his B.Sc. (1963), Ph.D. (1968) and D.Sc. (1995) degrees from the University of Saskatchewan. He did postdoctoral research at the University of California, Riverside, concentrating on the chemistry and relaxation dynamics of electronically excited molecules. After returning to the University of Saskatchewan as an assistant professor in 1960, he was promoted to full professor in 1978. Steer served a term as department head from 2002 to 2005, and served as the elected representative of the faculty on the University of Saskatchewan’s Board of Governors from 2001 to 2004. Steer received the Master Teacher award in 1996; was awarded the title of distinguished professor by the University in 2011; and received the John C. Polanyi award (from Canadian Society for Chemistry) in 2013.  This fonds contains materials relating to Steer’s education at the University of Saskatchewan and his career: including his research and publications; teaching material; and various presentations and addresses.

MG 169 – Bill Waiser fonds

The most recent materials donated to the University of Saskatchewan Archives and Special Collections by historian and professor Bill Waiser include material relating to his academic and writing career, such as instructional material; assessments and referential material; and research and publication activities. Specifically, the accrual contains material collected by Waiser relating to the 1906 census and his research on Canadian National Parks, and working papers relating to his Governor General Literary Award winning book A World We Have Lost: Saskatchewan Before 1905. More information on the Bill Waiser fonds.

MG305 – Sam Wynn fonds

S.N. Wynn began his career at the West Toronto Tribune where he learned to operate the Monoline, a forerunner of the linotype machine.  This skill provided him with the opportunity to move west, and in 1904 he accepted a printer’s job in Yorkton, Saskatchewan.  In 1928 he became the publisher of the Yorkton Enterprise.  Under his direction, the paper won numerous honours in provincial and national weekly newspapers competitions.  He served as a director of the Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association; was first vice-president of the Western Canada Press Association; director of the Yorkton Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition Association; president of the Saskatchewan Hospital Association; chairman of the Yorkton Hospital Board; a member of the advisory committee to the health services planning commission; trustee of the Anti-Tuberculosis League; served on the school board and was a member of Yorkton city council for six years.  In 1955, the University of Saskatchewan awarded him an honorary degree.  This fonds contains materials relating to the Yorkton Enterprise and the newspaper business in Canada, correspondence with various individuals (usually in relation to Wynn’s career), as well as material relating to his family and volunteer community organizations.

MG586 – Raymond Yochim Collection

Raymond Pius George Yochim was born on August 17, 1935, and died July 25, 2016. He was married sixty years to wife Irene, and had three sons. He was, for much of his career, a travelling salesman, and his collecting was partially a result of his ongoing travels as well as his multitude of interests. Ray was a member of the Air Force Club, Royal Canadian Legion, Army Navy & Air Force Veterans, and Knights of Columbus. He was an avid collector of coins and stamps, books and ephemera.

Yochim’s collecting ranged over a variety of topics and medium. Often, he would take interest in a specific subject and collect everything from articles and clippings to books on the subject, interleaving the former with the latter. He also gathered collectible items such as trading cards and magnets on a variety of subjects.