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Archival description
15 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
IMC-112 · File · 1853-1953
Part of Isolated manuscripts collection

File consists of two copies of Katherine E. Wallis: Canadian Sculptor by A. Roger Collins. One copy is inscribed "Dear Aunt Elise with much love from 'Alas!' and 'Alack!,' Happy Memories, 1949". Elise may refer to Elise Roux (1853-1953), wife of Thomas Alexander Stewart Hay (son of Dr. Thomas Hay and Anna Maria Stewart). Loosely inserted is an unidentified photograph of a woman.
The second copy is inscribed "Helen Dear for the new house, Love from Alice, 1953". Helen may refer to the donor's aunt, Helen Frances Mathias who married Rod Stuart; Alice may refer to the author, Alice Roger Collins.

File also includes two removable flash memory devices containing Dr. Mathias' PhD dissertation as well as digital images, slides, and photographs linked to archaeology work conducted by Mathias in Newfoundland, Qatar and Afghanistan. The dissertation provides context for the images.

Boyd family photographs
IMC-110 · File · 2006
Part of Isolated manuscripts collection

File consists of scanned historical photographs, one each of W.T.C. Boyd and Meta Boyd of Bobcaygeon, Ontario (photographs located on a removable flash memory device); also photographs of Edgewood, the W.T.C. Boyd family home, and the "Barn", taken in approximately 2006 by Barbara McFadzen and Brian McFadzen

Boyd family
IMC-109 · File · 1925
Part of Isolated manuscripts collection

File includes a scenic panoramic titled "Camp Tanamakoon, Summer Camp for Girls, Operated by Miss Mary Hamilton, Algonquin Park Station, Ontario Can." (photographer: P.E. McDonald, ca. 1925). Also includes a photograph album dated 1925 containing approximately 75 photographs of Camp Tanamkoon. The photographs were taken or gathered by Sheila Playfair McGillivray, a senior camper in 1925; a few pertain to logging in Algonquin Park.

INC/011 · File · 1972-1982
Part of Indigenous newspaper collection

This newspaper was published by the Indian and Inuit Affairs Program, Ottawa, Ontario [Indian and Northern Affairs]. Articles are published in English and French; the newspaper was distributed free to "Indians and other interested persons and organizations."

INC/001(05) · File · 1982-1985
Part of Indigenous newspaper collection

This newspaper is published in Naugatuck, Connecticut. It includes articles on cooking and the use of herbs, recipes, gardening, crafts, poetry, Indigenous genealogy, fishing rights, archaeological finds, and Sun Bear.

INC/003-/005 · File · 1969-1982
Part of Indigenous newspaper collection

This newspaper was first published in 1963 in Fort Smith. Most issues were published from Hay River, N.W.T. when the paper relocated in the fall of 1963. From March 1981, the paper was published by MacWeston Press. It ceased publication in July 1982. The newspaper reported both local events, Indigenous interests and national news.

The Hub, scattered issues
INC/009-/010 · File · Jan. 1983 - March 1986
Part of Indigenous newspaper collection

This newspaper was published in Hay River, N.W.T. succeeding Tapwe. The Hub covered local Indigenous events and national news but no particular emphasis on Indigenous issues; the emphasis is rather on general northern issues.

Tekawennake, v.11 - 18
INC/014-/015 · File · 1985-1991
Part of Indigenous newspaper collection

This newspaper was published weekly at Ohsweken, Ontario and was a Six Nations publication. Local Mohawk issues plus general community events and politics were reported.

The First Citizen, no. 1 -19
INC/016(03) · File · 1969-[1972?]
Part of Indigenous newspaper collection

This newspaper was published at Williams Lake, British Columbia. It deals with racism against Indigenous peoples, inequalities of the justice system; early explorations of the damaging effects of non-Indigenous teachers or empathy with Indigenous culture; and relationships between Jean Chretien, Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, and Indigenous peoples.