Fonds consists of a series of letters addressed to Francis L. Walsh from authors such as W. H. Draper, J.H. Dunn and W. W. Baldwin a year before his death. Also includes a "Blue Book Department" circular dated December 30th, 1843.
Fonds consists of correspondence sent from Europe by Francis Edward Wootton to family during WWI, as well as field manuals and other handbooks for officers. Also includes letters to Ada Scharman (Mrs. Wootton) upon her move to New Zealand, and a box of assorted pins, buttons, shell casings, and a trench knife.
Fonds consists of correspondence, including Andre Beiler and Richard Finnie; manuscripts, including "Andre Bieler: An Artists's Life and Times', and 'History of Art', as published in "County of a Thousand Lakes", photographs; news clippings; and art exhibition catalogues.
The fonds consists of correspondence from the first half of the nineteenth century with many well-known figures, including Sir Allan Macnab, Peter McGill, John Solomon Cartwright, Robert David Cartwright, John Macaulay and James Bell Forsyth. These papers provide valuable information about the political and religious life for the period from 1878 to 1853. In addition there is a good deal of information about Cartwright business affairs. The papers are arranged chronologically in twenty-two files. While most of the letters are original, there are transcripts of a few letters in the files.
The fonds consists of photographs of F.P. Boyce, his brother, Herbert Frank Boyce, a photograph possibly of the interior of the Kingston Branch of the CIBC (1918), ration books from the 1940s and invitations to events surrounding the royal visit in 1973. Also includes files relating to the switching depot for the Canadian National Railways and a natural gas contract.
Fonds consists of letters written by a Tamil girl, living at the Guild of Service Seva Samajam Girls Home, located in Coimbatore, South India, to her foster parents in Kingston, Ontario.
This collection contains material pertinent to the Fort as museum and consists of thirty-three scrapbooks of printed clippings covering Fort Henry and local activities from opening of Fort as museum in 1936, ( v.1) to 1982 (v.33).