?Father Ruh standing midway on the stairs, and ?Father Wasyly Ladyka, superior of the Basilians in Canada between 1922 and 1929 when he was named the second bishop of the Ukrainian Catholics in Canada. They stand before the Basilian Monastery designed and built by Father Ruh (1921-1923).
Early stages in construction of St. Josaphat’s Ukrainian Catholic Church, later to be designated a cathedral and eventually a heritage site, was designed and built by Father Ruh. It was built between 1939-1944.
?Mike Yanchynski surveys the floor level during early stages in construction of St. Josaphat’s Ukrainian Catholic Church, designed and built by Father Ruh between 1939-1944. Mike directed construction through much of that time. The church was later declared a cathedral, and eventually was designated a local heritage site.
St. Josaphat’s Ukrainian Catholic Church was designed and built by Father Ruh, from 1939-1944. Mike Yanchynski supervised much of the time. The church was declared a cathedral in 1951, and eventually was designated a local heritage site.
Father Ruh on his knees at the entrance of ? St. Josaphat’s Ukrainian Catholic Church, designed and built by Father Ruh between 1939-1944. In 1951, it was declared a cathedral, and eventually it was designated a local heritage site.
Sts. Peter and Paul Ukrainian Catholic Church, the seat of Basilian missionary work among the Ukrainian Catholic settlers in northern Alberta in the first two decades of settlement.