Fonds consists of correspondence relating to an application to the Intercollegiate Department of The League for Industrial Democracy to charter the Radical Club at Queen's University at Kingston, and an application to the Board of Home Missions of the United Church of Canada for a summer mission field placement.
Fonds consists of circulars, memoranda, regulations, and notices put out by the Department's Education Office. Also includes a notice of "Revised conditions of aiding Public Schools in New and Poor Townships" (1876).
Fonds consists of correspondence and "Certificates of Standing at Examination"; photographs of various buildings on the campus of Queen's University at Kingston, garden in front the Principal's Residence (Summerhill), picnics and skating parties, University Avenue, Kingston Mills, Royal Military College, Fort Henry and the Isolation Hospital, Macdonald Park, military parade on 24 May, and a river steamer.
Fonds consists of accounts; land deeds including one referring to the McMichael property, located at the corner of Princess Street and Portsmouth Avenue, in the City of Kingston, Ontario; and Commissions appointing Albert McMichael to be a Lieutenant in the Second Regiment of Frontenac Militia in the Midland District.
The material in the collection consists of twenty-one binders of material prepared for use by the official biographers of Mackenzie King. In addition to a chronological guide to King's career, two volumes of transcripts of Sir Robert Borden correspondence, there are eighteen binders of memoranda that were prepared by several well-known historians and researchers who were experts on the life and career of Mackenzie King, including James Eayrs, Frederick Gibson and A.W.A. Lane.
Fonds consists of a copy of "An Informal History of the Department of Psychiatry, Queen's University Faculty of Medicine," authored by Drs. William E. Powles, Paul C.S. Hosken, and Donald H. Braden.
The collection consists of approximately 128 posters that were created by Larry Rossignol during his time at Queen's University. A large majority of the posters were produced through his company Teddy Tin Can Graphics. The subject matter of the posters pertains to Queen's University events, such as concerts, theatrical productions, academic issues and public lectures.