College Folk Club party on Washington's Birthday. Sitting left at the table is Mrs. Dubach. Standing in back: Blanche Hammel, Lura Keiser, Mrs. J. B. Horner, Mrs. Ida Callahan, Mrs. R. H. Dearborn, Miss Helen Holgate. Middle row sitting: Mrs. Ida Kidder, Mrs. Gertrude McElfresh, Mrs. J. A. Bexell, Mrs W. F. Gaskins, Mrs. H. Scudder, Mrs. Springer, Mrs. W. J. Gilmore, unidentified person. At urn is Mrs. W. T. Johnson. Sitting on the floor on far right is Mrs. R. R. Moore.
The building was originally built as Snell Hall, a women's dorm. It later became Extension Hall around 1958. Today it is known as Ballard Extension Hall.
Harding School was an elementary school located on Harrison Avenue in northwest Corvallis. Photograph was taken by Ball Studio in Corvallis and is hand colored.
William Jasper Kerr was chosen as the sixth president of Oregon Agricultural College in 1907 and led the college through a twenty-five-year period of tremendous growth in numbers of students and faculty, academic and research programs, and physical facilities.
William Jasper Kerr was chosen as the sixth president of Oregon Agricultural College in 1907 and led the college through a twenty-five-year period of tremendous growth in numbers of students and faculty, academic and research programs, and physical facilities.
William Jasper Kerr was chosen as the sixth president of Oregon Agricultural College in 1907 and led the college through a twenty-five-year period of tremendous growth in numbers of students and faculty, academic and research programs, and physical facilities.
Dignitaries at the 1924 Civil War / Homecoming game include Governor Walter Pierce (center, arms on rail) and OAC President William Jasper Kerr (to Pierce's right in picture)
Left to right: Cora M. Stone of Frster; Annie Blacklaw of Lebanon; Myrie Connet of Lebanon; Mrs. A. H. Parrish of Sodaville, and Mrs. M. S. Bellinger of Berlin; Mrs. Nevin McCormick of Waterloo; and Mrs W. C. Skelton of Tennessee.
The Lady of the Fountain was a gift of the class of 1902 and constructed shortly after graduation. It was the second class gift presented to OSU in school history and was located on lower campus, just to the west of the intersection of where Madison Street today crosses 9th Street. On January 21, 1929, the statue was found destroyed.
During Military Tournaments in Pendleton Rodeo contest. At the far left is Mrs. Batcheller. The fourth person from the left is Helen Moore. Lula May Brandtl is the seventh person from the left.
The chicken was known as Lady McDuff. She laid 105 eggs in 106 days. Frank Knowlton was a faculty member in the Poultry Department and Agricultural Experiment Station.
Poultry Building with Marys Peak in background. The building was located across from Kidder Hall on the corner where the men's dormitory was later built.