${vImageAlt}
University Archives & Special Collections, A-1538. (Patrick Hayes)

Better Farming Train

From 1914 to 1922 a Better Farming Train (BFT) toured the province providing lectures and demonstrations and presenting exhibits on matters pertaining to agriculture.

“But whether the work of the University be conducted within the boundaries of the college campus, or throughout the length and breadth of the province, there should be ever present the consciousness that this is the University of the people, established by the people, devoted by the people to the advancement of learning and the promotion of happiness and virtue.” — President Walter Murray, 1908.

From 1914 to 1922 a Better Farming Train (BFT) toured the province providing lectures and demonstrations and presenting exhibits on matters pertaining to agriculture.

Funded by the Agricultural Instruction Act, equipped jointly by the Department of Agriculture and College of Agriculture, and staffed by the University of Saskatchewan, the BFTs were operated free of charge by the railways. Consisting of between 14 to 17 cars they toured the province for several weeks each summer.

During part of one summer two trains operated. The train was divided into five sections: Livestock; Field Husbandry; Boys' and Girls; Household Science; Poultry; and Farm Mechanics.

A converted flat car acted as a platform for the display and demonstration of the "well-selected" horses, cattle, sheep, swine and poultry. Each section usually contained a lecture car accompanied by one or more demonstration cars.

Share this story