Fonds consists of correspondence; minutes of Annual, General, and Executive meetings; legal and financial records; membership lists; records relating to various events, workshops, and fairs sponsored by the club; newsletters; photographs; and press clippings.
Correspondence, original contributions, edited typescripts, copyright assignments, publicity material and financial records of Kingston 300-a Social Snapshot, produced as a tercentenary project by a small editorial committee. Also included in an index to the publication which was not reproduced in the book.
The fonds consists of correspondence, minutes, by-laws, reports, petitions, invoices, financial records, assessment rolls, collector's roll and voter's list. there is also a fair amount of material created by the Kingston Township Bicentennial Committee regarding the celebrations in 1984. Also includes a letter sent to Isabel Turner by Clint Eastwood, then Mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA (1987).
The fonds consists of nearly 1200 drawings, blueprints, and specifications spanning the career of Kingston architect William Newlands, from 1882 until his death in 1926. The subject matter of most of the material is specific to Kingston and all facets of enterprise in Kingston are represented - dwellings, businesses, schools, hospitals, churches, charitable institutions and government institutions.
Consists of views of United Church of Canada churches in the Kingston area including Collins Bay, Brockville, Elgin, Gananoque, Sydenham and Sharbot Lake and portraits of Rev. W.T. McKenzie and Rev. and Mrs. W.P. Fletcher.
The collections includes images of posters relating to recruitment for the Red Cross, Women at war, French Canadians, civilians home front, war bonds (American, British and Canadian), exhibitions and posters in French by Germany Army of Occupation, German election posters, 1947-1949.
Consists of reports from Divisional Inspectors and best reflects the development of the post office service as a mirror of the settlement of Canada. The reports frequently contain useful descriptions of communities requesting new postal services. Included are maps and site plans for housing postal facilities, petitions, biographical information about persons recommended for or seeking postmastership positions, patronage correspondence, recommendations or suggestions for names or name changes or for a change of site and notices of post office closings. The reports are numbered and are in chronological order. The records for the years 1875-1902 are the residue of original dossiers that have not survived. Only correspondence for the years 1875-1902 has been microfilmed. The early `reports' can be applications to establish post offices, copies of correspondence received from community representatives, P.O.D memorandums and the like. Later reports were filed by the Inspectors and include inspection forms, one or two main files per post office, along with related correspondence, memorandums, etc. The original register to the reports for the years 1875-1902 has not survived.