The fonds consists of the professional and private records of Bob Fleming from 1952 to 2005. It includes all aspects of his professional life [excluding PACE Magazine years - see KRH holdings] from his work with Moral Re-Armament in the 1950s-1960s, his consultancy as R.J. Fleming & Associates (1970s) and Robert J. Fleming International Research (1980s-1990s), his work with Robert L. Stanfield, his twelve-year term as Director of Administration of Ontario's Legislative Assembly, his work on the publication "Canadian Legislatures", and the creation and administration of YES Canada. The fonds also includes personal records including an unpublished memoir, correspondence with family, friends and colleagues, legal papers, notes and memos, and other material. The fonds has been divided into 13 series: Moral Re-Armament series (1952-1965); PACE Magazine series (1967-1969); Arctic & Mid-Canada Corridor series (1968-1971, 2009); R.J. Fleming & Associates series (1970-1984); Royal Commission on Book Publishing (1972-1983); Rt. Hon. Robert Stanfield series (1970-1980); Ontario Legislature series (1971-1997); Canadian Legislatures series (1971-1999); Robert Fleming International Research series (1980-1994); Government/Political persons & miscellaneous personalities series (1976-1992); Organizations series (1978-1994); YES Canada series (1985-1995); Personal series (1967-2006).
Fonds consists of several poems, in manuscript form, by Bliss Carman, containing additions and deleltions; copies of several 'broadsheets' announcing a "Garden Fete", with 'Ballads to Sell', composed by Carman; and photographs of the poet himself, taken in different locations and time periods.
Fonds consists of photographs of the family of James Lester Willis Gill; and an article published by A. Zimmerman entitled, "Professor Gill's Flying Machine." Also includes audio recordings from performances in Kingston as recorded by CKWS and CFRC.
The fonds consists of various collected copies of family trees and other genealogical information for the Acheson, Robertson and Kenyon families from the Tay Valley/North Burgess geographic area. Of particular note is the information pertaining to Grace Kenyon, a cousin of Campbell's, who did missionary work in India in the 1940's. There is a small amount of original material in the fonds including 5 photographs of various Robertson family members. Also includes class exams written by Emma Campbell (nee Acheson) in the early 1940's from her nursing courses in a variety of subjects such as Anatomy and Physiology, Preventative Medicine, Pharmacology, Psychiatry and Psychiatric Nursing, Communicable Diseases, etc.
Fonds consists an unpublished manuscript entitled "And No Birds Sing: Patrons, Myth, and Imagery in the Poetry of Ovid's Exile" written by Dr. Janet Patricia Bews.
The fonds consists of black and white photographs, colour slides, black and white negatives, and contact sheets of examples of early Upper Canadian and Ontario furniture from a number of European and North American traditions including Anglo-American, German, Polish, French-Canadian, and others. These images were taken during the course of research for the author's book, 'The Heritage of Upper Canadian Furniture: A Study in the Survival of Formal and Vernacular Styles from Britain, America and Europe, 1780-1900', first published in 1978.