GrainsWest Fall 2018

Fall 2018 Grains West 50 AGAINST GRAIN THE An agricultural college is born In 1912, Alberta agriculture minister Duncan Marshall announced the prov- ince would construct three agricultural colleges. The Vermilion School of Ag- riculture, later rechristened Lakeland College, opened first. Olds College re- main in operation, while the Claresholm School of Agriculture was shut down in the early 1920s. The neatly dressed first class of the Vermilion school and their instructors are pictured here in the spring of 1914 on the building’s steps, a few months after its doors opened on Nov. 17, 1913. This first class shrunk considerably be- fore graduation as students enlisted for military service in the First World War. The school offered two programs: women studied home economics, while the men received a broad agricultural education, studying animal husbandry, crop production and agronomy as well as English, mathematics, agricultural mechanics and even carpentry, knot typing and chicken plucking. Here, poultry and dairy instructor J.W. Scott reviews the key parts of a chicken with students in 1919. The original school building featured large walk-out basement doors that allowed livestock such as cattle and heavy horses to be brought in. It served until it was torn down in 1960 with its classroom space replaced by the Bent- ley Building. Tuition was free in the early days, but students had to locate and pay for accommodation. Many found room and board in the town of Vermilion and one or two even lived in haylofts. The first on-campus student housing was a large multi-purpose building built in 1928 that featured dorms, cafeteria, gym and administration offices. It was destroyed by a fire in 1985. The college has operated continuously since 1913, with three exceptions. It served as a hospital during the post-war flu epidemic of 1918, closed during the winter of 1933/34, and was shut down at the outbreak of the Second World War until again reopening as a Canadian Women’s Army Corps training centre. Today, approximately 7,000 full- and part-time students attend the Vermil- ion and Lloydminster Lakeland College campuses. The first class to attend the Vermilion School of Agriculture joins instructors on the front steps of themain school building. Photo:ProvincialArchivesofAlberta

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