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05-014 · Fonds · 1930-1992

Fonds consists of notes, manuscripts, papers and articles by Professor Kenneth Kidd; research materials in the form of photographs, maps, and copies of articles and diaries; family correspondence; genealogical information relating to the Kidd and Jebb families, and 2 numbered Fred Saggashi prints.

Kidd, Kenneth E.
90-001/001(06e) · File · [18--?]
Part of David Macmillan fonds

File includes printed maps, advertisements, and other information about various travel options, including trains, boats, .

Includes the following

  • Willard's New Map, Hudson River. Published by H.A. Willard of the Steam-Boat Empire
  • Michigan Central and Great Western Railways
  • Map of the Erie Railway
  • The only route via suspension bridge and Niagara Falls
Miscelleaneous galleries
97-003/003(09) · File · 1979
Part of Gilbert and Stewart Bagnani fonds. 1997 additions

File includes correspondence, brochures, receipts, and other records relating to Peterborough Centennial Museum & Archives, The Art Museum (Princeton University), Art Gallery of Northumberland, The Art Gallery of Peterborough, The Robert McLaughlin Gallery (attached is a photo of Ray Mead, Robert Fulford, and Stewart Bagnani, 1979), The Winnipeg Art Gallery, Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, Edmonton Art Gallery, Royal Ontario Museum, History of Medicine Museum, and others.

Correspondence to Gilbert
97-003/001(22) · File · 1960s
Part of Gilbert and Stewart Bagnani fonds. 1997 additions

File includes the following letters:

  • letters to Gilbert re book donations, manuscript evaluations, etc.;
  • letter to Gilbert from possible relatives, Bagnani Brothers Hauling, 1962;
  • letters to Stewart from friends;
  • letter from antique store regarding two antiques the Bagnani purchased from them, 1967 (two photographs of the antiques attached);
  • letter to Gilbert from John Ecclestone, 1967;
  • plus other miscellaneous letters
97-003/001(11) · File · 1926
Part of Gilbert and Stewart Bagnani fonds. 1997 additions

File includes letters from Gilbert to Stewart. The letters dated January to March are from Gilbert while he is doing a lecture tour in the U.S. and Canada at 26 years old, and Stewart is in Rome. The letters dated June to October are from Gilbert in Rome, while Stewart is in Europe.

86-027 · Fonds · 1769-1962

This addition to the fonds consists of newspaper clippings, correspondence, photographs, music books, notes and memorabilia concerning various parts of Peterborough County.

Choate family
86-027/003(08) · File · 1769-1960, n.d.
Part of Choate family fonds. 1986 additions

File includes the following:

  • Newspaper clippings
  • List of prize money for Peterborough Exhibition: Peterborough Horticultural Society
  • Bureau of Municipal research - White Paper No. 247 January 1940: re number of people in Houses of Industry and in single men's hostels in Toronto during the 1930s
  • "The Unbridled Frontier" by Merril Dension, clipped from Harpers Monthly Magazine
  • "Public Affairs" (2 copies) The Eternal Problems of Crime and Criminals by J. Alex Edmison, letter and clipping (R.F. Choate) about Senator Buchanan
  • Letter to R. Choate from G. Craw about writing an article about Warsaw for the Examiner
75-1007 · Item · 1970-1975

This item consists of a photocopy of the municipal Board of Health returns, from 1847, RG 5 B 16 from the Library and Archives Canada. It is a report on the hospital and a request for money to help pay salaries and other costs that are usually incurred by the sick. This item was sent by the Mayor of Cornwall to the Government of Britain.

Cornwall Municipal Board of Health
24-004 · Collection · 1970

Fonds consists of indexes and other material compiled by Joan Murray in 1970, in her capacity as art editor for The Canadian Forum. Contains two three-ring binders of textual and graphic records, one print copy of The Canadian Forum from April-May 1970, and a 1-page handwritten note [in Murray's hand?]. The first binder (7 cm) contains an index of all illustrations by artists in The Canadian Forum until 1970, organized alphabetically by artist. The second binder (4 cm) contains an index of select articles in The Canadian Forum between 1930 and 1950, organized alphabetically by subject matter. The print copy of the magazine is the 50th anniversary edition, dated April-May 1970. The handwritten note is titled "Themes of the time."

Murray, Joan
IMC-028 · File · 1919
Part of Isolated manuscripts collection

Item is an indenture between Garnet Lawrence Galley and Stella Galley of Toronto and J.C. Budreo of Toronto, for land "in the Township of Smith in the County of Peterborough and Province of Ontario, and being Lot Number Two according to a plan of Part of the Township Lots Forty-Four and Forty-Five in the Fourteenth Concession of the said Township of Smith, said Plan being known as a Plan of Kawatha [sic] Park made by Alfred J. Cameron, Ontario Land Surveyor, and Registered in the Registry Office for the County of Peterborough as Plan Number Forty-One."

Atwood family fonds
14-011 · Fonds · 1865-1968

Fonds consists of photographs, correspondence, and miscellaneous documents pertaining to the Atwood family of Lakefield, Ontario. Also included are materials pertaining to Anne Atwood's family, the Traills; a sketch identified through an accompanying note as Ernest Shackleton; and correspondence between Edwin Guillet and explorer George M. Douglas.

Atwood family
Paul Wilson fonds
03-007 · Fonds · 1966-2001

Fonds consists of correspondence, photographs, compact disks, publications, and other materials related to Paul Wilson's association with Trent University as athletic director, and as municipal politician in the City of Peterborough, Ontario.

Wilson, Paul S.B.
91-1005 · Fonds · October 28, 1967

This item is a printed program for the opening ceremony of the Peterborough Centennial Museum on October 28, 1967. Participants in the opening ceremonies were Lt. Col. R.J. Bolton, Rev. D.E. Tansley, Mayor Jos. Behan, Carmen Metcalfe, Hugh Faulkner M.P., Walter Pitman, Magistrate W.R. Philp, A. Kraetzer-museum contractor, E.B. Zeidler-museum architect and Col. Hugh Wallis as the guest speaker.

Peterborough Museum and Archives
23-005 · Collection · [197-]-2023

Fonds consists of research materials and notes, modern correspondence, photocopies of historical documentation, and genealogical resources for the Need family as well as other people living in both England and Newcastle District. The historical documentation includes wills, gravesite information, lot and concession records, military records, correspondence. As well as the Need family, there is also biographical information on other families, including the Dunsfords, Langtons, Campbells, and Sawers.

These research materials were accumulated by Dawn Bell Logan and used to write books, articles, and biographical entries about Thomas Need, including Thomas Need : settler in the backwoods of Upper Canada (self published, 2022), and the Dictionary of Canadian Biography entry for Thomas Need (V. 12). Photographs are of some sites in Lincolnshire, U.K, Peterborough, Canada, the Trent Severn Waterway, Thomas Need’s descendants, and gravestones of Need family members.

Fonds is organized into four series: Thomas Need journals and correspondence; Research materials and manuscripts; Dawn Logan correspondence; and Files on Dawn Logan’s publications.

Thomas Need Biography

Thomas Need (1808-1895) emigrated from Nottingham, England to Upper Canada in May 1832 and settled in Verulam Township in Victoria County in 1833 around Sturgeon Lake. He had graduated from University College, London, in 1830 and rejected the idea of becoming a member of the clergy. This contributed to his decision to leave England.

While in Upper Canada, Need was a member of the government commission that oversaw the construction of what became the first lock of the Trent-Severn Waterway, founded the Village of Bobcaygeon in 1834, and served as a magistrate for the Court of Requests from 1835 to 1837.

Need anonymously published his book Six years in the bush or extracts from the journal of a settler in Upper Canada (London, 1838) on his experiences in Upper Canada. The book was based on his journal entries he made in his personal journal which he called the “Woodhouse Journal.” Need returned to Nottingham, England permanently in 1847 and died in 1895. His authorship was confirmed with the publication of John Langton’s letters in 1926 and he was subsequently recognized as a contributor to early Canadian literature.

Source: Biography – NEED, THOMAS – Volume XII (1891-1900) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography. http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/need_thomas_12E.html. Accessed 11 Jan. 2024.

Logan, Dawn Bell
23-013/002(02) · File · 23 October, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

This following folder includes

  • Film hits sensitive nerve in native community - Toronto
  • Prize means a lot to all native artists - Toronto
  • Cadieux to meet band chief - Toronto
  • Native groups urged to bolster blockade - Ottawa
  • Native students' Catch 22 - Toronto
  • Trappers to cull wolves under bounty program - Edmonton
  • NWT makes native new speaker - Norman Wells , NWT
  • Three hunters killed in tent fire - Marathon
  • Animal rights group assails museum fur trade exhibit - Winnipeg
  • Indians fight clear-cutting of Quebec wildlife reserve - Maniwaki
    -Mohawks ' showdown delayed at Cornwall
  • Buddy, 8, loves hiking, exploring - Toronto Today 's Child
  • Temagami road construction halted pending court case
  • Whitedog gets S2.4 million for flooding
  • Freed Mohawk casino owner must stay off Cornwall reserve - Syracuse, NY -
  • Ojibway model proud to be native - Toronto
  • More about Six Nations and New Credit schools
  • More about Whitedog settlement
  • Native awareness focus of week - Fort Frances
  • Probation for former housing manager - Thunder Bay
  • Chief arrested at blockade - Toronto
  • More about Cape Croker fishing fines I I
  • Pottawatomi take battle over land to US congress - Washington , DC
  • Micmacs claim first moose under new NS hunting rights - Hunter ' s Mountain, NS
  • Robert Jamieson gets rave reviews as new ombudsman - Toronto
  • Giving Canada's Indians provincial status would salve many wounds - Ottawa commentary
  • Aboriginal peoples' quest for justice - letter to Ottawa editor
  • Non-native hunters protest .Micmac agreement - Halifax
  • Chief wants OPP to quit border post -Cornwall
  • Absence in natives of Alzheimer's probed - Winnipeg
  • Mohawk reserve battles over bingo - Montreal
  • Buses turned back in Mohawk bingo dispute - Hogansburg
  • Law and order a target in Mohawk feud - St. Regis
  • Tax (cigarettes) dollars go up in smoke - Montreal
  • 51% say courts unfair to natives - Ottawa
  • Natives fear violence over unlicensed bingo - Montreal
  • Indians paid dearly for benefits - letter to Thunder Bay editor
  • More about fines for blocking traffic - Marathon
  • Homes opened - Fort Frances
  • AFN supports Six Nations in attack on Indian Affairs minister - Ottawa
  • Native education rights supported - Calgary
  • Most feel natives get unequal treatment - Ottawa
  • Copps offers support to halt river dredging - ·Walpole Is. 33
  • Profits tucked away out of taxman's reach•- Montreal
  • Environment No. l issue, says chief - Walpole Island
  • Stored toxic wastes seeping in river area - London
  • Natives right to mistrust dredging - letter to London editor
  • Native reliance on govt. over, Treaty 3 chief says
  • Misunderstanding - Thunder Bay editorial about medical treatment residence
  • Supports multiple use for crown land - letter to Elliot Lake editor
  • Metis send invoice to government - Sault Ste. Marie
  • Weekend elders' conference - Ohsweken
  • More about Six Nations and New Credit schools
  • Blockade is becoming a pain in neck - Decaen - North Bay
  • Skeletal remains handed over to Caldwell band - London
23-013/002(05) · File · 18 December, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Indians suffer ill treatment, 35% tell poll - Toronto
  • Province must help natives, NOP insists - Toronto
  • Ottawa's S1.4 billion restraint package - Toronto
  • Rules issued for talks on native self-govt. - Toronto
  • Ontario willing to negotiate native self-rule - Toronto
  • Munro trial may not start until '91 - Ottawa
  • Ojibwa model finds native look may lead to success in Paris - Toronto
  • Civil service urged to hire low-paid groups - Toronto
  • More than one way to grow a new forest - Thunder Bay
  • Lakehead university president named fund administrator
  • Lubicon braced for RCMP action - Calgary
  • Passion of the Metis people remembered - Edmonton
  • Many trials, tribulations in Munro's life - Toronto commentary
  • Lake Helen band office closed in 'coup' attempt - Thunder Bay
  • Mediation in Little Jackfish hydro project - Thunder Bay
  • Temagami braces for next round in road war - Toronto
  • Stalled negotiations with Ottawa provoke more Lubicon threats - Edmonton
  • Decision Feb. 28 in night hunting case - Thunder Bay
  • Micmac agreement unfair, unsafe - Halifax commentary
  • Pulling images out of the bear - Vancouver art review
  • Suzuki meets with native people - Sarnia
  • Race relations workshop held - Wallaceburg
  • Two area native groups receive grants - Sioux Lookout
  • It's another fine mess - Brantford editorial about Six Nations education
  • Study of programs may bring education changes - Sioux Lookout
  • Province urged to follow multi-use Crown land policy - Sudbury
  • Expansion of federal building - Sioux Lookout
  • Dispute sparked by removal of principal - London