Fonds consists of letters, with typescript copies, received from student "pen pals" living in Holland and Germany, following World War Two, and a German POW who had been interred in Lethbridge, Alberta.
The minute book dates from the incorporation of the town on March 6th, 1834 and concludes at the end of 1850 and includes minutes from the meeting of the Police Board.
Fonds consists of correspondence; subject files; writings; course and grant material; and records relating to conferences, workshops, and seminars Dr. Rutenberg attended.
Collection consists of photographs of Kingston area buildings including Bajus Brewery; Cartwright House; Sir John A. Macdonald's house on Rideau Street; Bellevue House; the Macdonald Monument in City Park; the Church of the Good Thief, Portsmouth; Fort Frontenac; the Martello and Point Frederick Towers; and the Old Mill at Collins Bay.
Fonds consists of a photograph taken of Geroge Muirhead, City [of Kingston] Planning Officer, Ken Grace, Deputy Planning Officer, and Ted Whittaker, City Industrial Commissioner, standing on the ice of Kingston's Inner Harbour in the late 1950s, as well as photographs taken from the ice showing industrial uses, especially coal piles, along the Kingston waterfront; slides of various Kingston buildings, some of which no longer exist; line drawing, by Ken Grace, of the front door of Cartwright House.
Fonds consists of an unpblished work by David Rigsby entitled, "Coal"; a Certificate of Appreciation to David Rigsby, from the Queen's Alumni Association folliwng the completion of his Presidency in 1971; photographs of the Science '38 Formal, held at Grant Hall, and the 1987 Distinguished Service Award recipients, including Dorothy (Manderson) Rigsby.
Fonds consists of correspondence relating to the publication of the first issue of the Queen's Health Sciences bulletin entitled, "NEXUS"; and numerous speeches and addresses.