The collection consists of copies of drawings for Twin Oaks on Schooner Island, built circa 1920 for E.H. Morris, collected as part of the "Ah, Wilderness" exhibition at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre.
The collection consists of liquor permits issued by the LCBO (1926-1961) and a passport office ledger of permits to leave the colony of British Guiana (1940).
The collection is comprised of sixty letters written during the years of 1843 to 1872 to George Copeman in England.Fifty-three are original letters, four are copies of the originals which are housed in the Dr. Albert E Senkler, (EJS’s son) collection at the Minnesota Historical Museum in St Paul, and three that were transcribed by hand by his grandson Edmund J Reynolds ( EJR) but the whereabouts of the originals is no longer known.
Transcriptions of the original letters are also available and appear to have been transcribed by EJR, perhaps in the 1920s.
This collection consists of recordings of Robert W. Service reading a selection of his poetry, as recorded by Radio Station CFUN, Vancouver, British Columbia (1948); and at a Sourdough Convention in Vancouver, British Columbia (1953).
Collection consists of a photograph of "Honours Chemistry, Queen's University 1961"; various Queen's-related printed material inlcuding dance card for "Levana Midsummer-Night's Dream" (1961), Graduation Dinner programme (1961), Baccalaureate Service (1961), Housing Bureau list (1959), Arts Society information pamphlet (1959), "A Letter from the Principal" (1961); Snowball buttons (1960-1962); Kingston General Hospital School of Nursing Graduation programme (1960). It also includes a conference brochure (1960's) with a colourful hand-drawn campus map as its cover, and Ban Righ residence rules.
Four architects' sketches of Fleming and Carruthers Hall (School of Mining), Ontario Hall (Physics) Kingston and Grant Hall (Convocation Hall) from east and west.
Collection consists of thesis data and a scrapbook, compiled by Elizabeth (Bess or Bessie) Sinclair following the death of her husband, R. Gordon Sinclair, who drowned in Collins Bay; correspondence, speeches, and photographs relating to Huntly M. Sinclair, as well as a certificate recognizing him as a Baden-Powell Fellow for his generous support of world scouting; and a file relating to the Sinclair Cemetery (a.k.a. the Scotch Corners Cemetery), located in Beckwith Township, Ontario.