Students in costume are shown standing on the lawn in front of College Hall. This photograph shows the cast of the play Every Woman's Road, which was performed in the spring of 1917. The West and North sides of Derham Hall can be seen in the upper left of the picture.
The College of St. Scholastica Bulletin is a booklet 21 pages in length published by the College which is conducted by the Sisters of Saint Benedict of Duluth, MN for young women and girls explaining the College's foundation; location; communication; purpose; faculty; standardization; library; laboratories; gymnasium; private rooms; accommodations for day students; general information on such aspects as admission, references, registration, absences, correspondence, visitors, spending money, health of the students, mending and pressing, scholarship, suspension or dismissal from the school, regulations for wardrobe, and measurements of room; student organizations; courses of study; and expenses. Photographs of the exterior and interior of the Gymnasium, lounges and laboratories in Tower Hall, and the campus grounds are at the end.
The student nurses' orchestra performs for an appreciative crowd in the lobby of St. Mary's Hospital in 1928. Left to right, Helen Sparling, Cecile Cousineau, Arlene Peterman, Eloise LaLiberte, Lillian Eno, Clair Smith, Lucille McMahon, Adeline Belanger, Esther Flynn
The College of St. Thomas Marching Band performing on the parade grounds. In the background, the Administration Building and the old Science Building can be seen.
Members of the 1917 baseball team for the College of St. Thomas. Front row (left to right): Alexander Dumas, Harry Turgeon (mascot), Joseph Donlin. Second row (left to right): Paul Madigan, Robert McMenemy, Arthur Barret, Lawrence Loney, Alfred Donaghue, William Dwyer. Back row (left to right): Fr. John Dunphy, Henry Mooney, Thomas Quinn, Arthur Coleman (manager), Lloyd Lynch, Earl Goheen, Fr. Edmund O'Connor (coach).
The College of St. Thomas baseball team for 1902. Front row (left to right): James Doyle, John Peschges, Joe Tomek, Mike Sheeran, Maurice Ryan, Emmit Halpenny, T. Kerins, Bernard Hoppenyan. Back row (left to right): Harry Conway (coach), William Fleming, Martin Cullen (manager), Steve Dowd, Charles McDermott, Mike Healy (assistant manager), Martin Griffin.
Members of the 1917 - 1918 basketball team for the College of St, Thomas. Front row (left to right): Reginald Goette, Oscar Swanson, William Meagher (captain), Thomas Dondelet, D. Martin Coughlin. Back row (left to right); Fr. John Dunphy, Earl Goheen, Caldwell Kenney (manager), Thomas Quinn, George Keogan (coach).
College of St. Thomas student playing a violin while surrounded by classmates. The photograph was taken inside the old Administration Building. Title supplied by cataloger.
The College of St. Thomas Corps of Cadets on the parade grounds at the annual military inspection. The Gleason House, Infirmary, old Administration Building and old Science Building are seen in the background.
The College of St. Thomas Debating Team for 1908 - 1909. Clockwise from the top of the image are Professor William D. Jamieson (coach), Louise B. Kucera, Frederick McCarthy and Raymond Caverly.
The College of St. Thomas football team of 1901 in front of the old Classroom Building. In front: unknown mascot. First Row: T. Merritt Coughlan, James Griffin, Edward Scallon, Edward Costello, Michael Powers. Second Row: James Curran, James O'Hara, John Gleason, James O'Reilly, Thomas Kane. Third Row: Charles White, Laureat Martineau, Harry Conway, Maurice Ryan, Edward Casey. Back Row: Joseph Ryan, James Meehan, Martin Cullen, Paul O'Gorman.
The College of St. Thomas football team for 1906. Front row: Two mascots, unknown. Second row (left to right): Unknown, Robert Wirth, Serenus Skahen, Fred Sandborn, Robert Mulloy, Joseph O'Neill (assistant manger), Louis Pepin, Louis Laughlin, unknown, unknown, unknown, Herbert Huebel. Third row (left to right): Frank Kelly, Clete Mulick, John Foley, Joseph Hannan, Leo O'Rourke (captain), unknown, unknown, Earnest Carr, unknown, John Kent. Back row (left to right): unknown, unknown, Charles McKusker, Thomas Canty (manager), unknown, unknown, John Donahoe, Ed Rogers (coach).
Members of the football team for the College of St. Thomas for 1919. Fr. John Dunphy (Director of Athletic) stands at the far right of the back row. The Classroom Building, old Administration Building, old Science Building and the Shooting Gallery can be seen in the background.
Members of the football team for the College of St. Thomas. Front row (left to right): Thomas Walsh (manager), Charles Bellinger, Joseph Roach (mascot), Raymond Wiper, Daniel Coughlin. Second row (left to right) Elbert Fischer, Earl Goheen, Reginald Goette, Oscar Swanson, John Ashbaugh, Thomas Dondelet (captain), Howard Moriarty, Charles Harrington, Thomas Quinn, Horace La Bissionere. Back row (left to right): Fr. John Dunphy (Director of Athletics), Stanley Murphy, William Reitmeyer, John Madigan, Arthur Egan, Arnold Wallerius, Eugene Bowe, Gregory Flattley, George Boylan, George Keogh (coach). The Gleason House, Infirmary, Classroom Building and the old Administration Building can be seen in the background.
Members of the 1905 football team for the College of St. Thomas. Front row (left to right) : Fred Sanborn, unknown mascot, Louis Pepin. Second Row (left to right): John Quinlan, John Duggan, Ignatius O'Shaughnessy (captain), Leo O'Rourke, unknown. Third row (left to right): Fr. James Doyle, Joseph Hannan, Howard Pennington, Leo Nemzek, William Harrington, William Donahoe (manager). Back row (l-r); Edward Conmy, Henry Schurch.
Members of the hockey team of the College of St. Thomas for 1922 - 1923. Front row (left to right): Robert Stebbing, William Houle, Albert Corboy (captain). Back row (left to right): Roland Bork (manager), George Conroy, John Sterret, Donald De Courcey, ""Ed"" Gibbs, Fr. Francis Gillen (Director of Athletics).
St. Thomas Literary and Debating Society in front of the old Administration Building. Seated in the front are the officers of the society: William O'Malley, Vice President; Reverend Terence Moore, President; Reverend William Lunner; James Doyle, Secretary.
Members of the Philomathic Literary and Debating Society of the College of St. Thomas in front of the old Administration Building. The Reverend Terence Moore stands at the end of the second row.
Students of the Class of 1908 at the College of St. Thomas on the shore of Lake Mennith with the old Administration Building and the original St . Thomas Chapel in the background. First row (left to right): William O'Reilly, Anthony Logar, Dan Foley, Joe Freyselven. Middle Row: John Doherty, Bill Carroll, Tom Canty, Joe O'Neill, Will Dohahoe. Back Row: Ambrose Sullivan, John Donahoe, Ed Fitzgerald, Joe Bouska, Martin Kennedy, Joe Hannon, Walter Lally, Louis Pepin, Philip Gordon. Title supplied by cataloger. Negative Number: C82-150-199.
College of St. Thomas track team members traveling to a meet. From left to right: Mallick Schaffer, George Desmond, Francis Murray, Marcus Maher, Edwin Okeniski, Joseph Lapinski.
Members of the track team of the College of St. Thomas and the St. Thomas Military Academy. Back row (left to right) : Ignatius Donnelly, Joseph Sullivan, Beaupre Eldrige, M. T. Caine (Coach), Clement McCarthy, Chester Graus, Thomas Dandalet. Middle row (left to right); Arthur Tavis, Stanley Murphy, Francis McCue, Homer Gruenther, Leo Mudd, Lawrence Wolf. Sitting in front row (left to right): John Buckley, Herman Brown.
1904 photo of the dam on Chester Creek forming a stock pond on the Benedictine Sisters' farm. In 1900, the Duluth Benedictine sisters purchased the first 80 acres of what would be their Kenwood campus. This parcel had been used as a farm for a number of years. Chester Creek, which runs through the property had been dammed to produce a stock pond. This photograph faces north, with what is now Niagara Street in the background.
Construction of Sacred Heart Chapel, St. Benedict's Monastery. This photo seems to point to a previous taking down of the south cloister walk which connected the chapel to Teresa Hall (See photo SBM.11b21). The pile of bricks to the right seem to have come from the dismantled cloister walk, while there is a pile of new bricks to the left. There are marks on both Teresa Hall and the chapel from which the cloister walk bricks may have been removed. Note that the pillars on which the cloister walk rested are still in place. Presumably, the cloister walks were added immediately upon the completion of construction of the chapel.
Construction of Sacred Heart Chapel, St. Benedict's Monastery. The brick used for the chapel and cloister walks is white sandlime with terra-cotta trimmings and the foundation is Buff Kansas Brick. Other than the Cathedral in St. Paul and the Pro-Cathedral (Basilica) in Minneapolis, there are probably no other churches in Minnesota with large domes, although many have large and costly steeples. There is no wood in the entire structure, except the floors under the pews and choir stalls (which are lying on concrete). There are 10 exits on the chapel main floor and one in the choir loft (Chronicles, pages 142-143).
The faculty and students of the College of St. Thomas in front of the old Administration Building. Fr. John Dolphin, president of the College of St. Thomas, is seated in the middle of the front row. Title supplied by cataloger.
Some of the lay faculty members of the College of St. Thomas. From left to right: Clay Pardo, unknown, Christian Heintzman, Fred Taylor, unknown, William Jamieson, John Norton, unknown.
The first Crack Drill Squad at the College of St. Thomas. The officers in the front row are from left to right: Cadet 1st Lt. E. J. Carr, Cadet Major Louis Pepin, and Cadet 1st Lt. August Rhode. The original Chapel of St. Thomas Aquinas is seen in the background.
Football game between the College of St. Thomas and the Minnesota University All-Stars played on Thanksgiving Day in 1907 at Nicollet Park in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
In 1921, an addition was made to the 1909 building: the tower from the original plan was constructed, the north lateral wing was extended and a gymnasium was built. Thomas Ellerbe of St. Paul was the architect. This view from the northeast shows the gymnasium, often mistaken for a chapel, and what was still the main entrance to Tower Hall.