Fonds consist of research and lecture notes, correspondence, manuscripts, and other material related to the study and teaching of art at Queen's University and Concordia, as well as records relating to Canada Council grants, and the management of FUSE Magazine.
The fonds consists of bound financial records and bound guest books. The bound financial records include Sunday school, donation, missionary, and maintenance records. The financial records predominantly list amounts of monies received from parishioners, monies spent, and information about Church staff. The guest books list the names and addresses of visitors from other churches. The arrangement of this fonds has been established by the archivist.
This collection reflects the undertakings and activities of three distinct, yet overlapping, Ukrainian groups in Kingston, Ontario: St. Michael's Ukrainian Catholic Parish, the Ukrainian Canadian Club of Kingston (a secular offshoot of the Church) and the Canadian League for the Liberation of Ukraine. The collection primarily consists of financial information but also includes newsletters, correspondence, receipts and some membership information for each of the groups identified.
The collection is comprised of letters written to Howard and Daisy Gerring by Alan and Ruth Collier during their summer sketching trips from 1956 to 1987. The letters are very detailed and were often created in a diary-type format with each letter containing daily accounts of the Colliers' travels. The letters reference people met on the journey, issues pertaining to the maintence of the their vehicle, and events that happened along the way. The material was arranged chronologically in binders by the Gerrings.
The fonds consists of the administrative and operational records of Kingston Summer Theatre, including the minutes of the Board of Directors and Annual General Meetings, financial statements, Staff records and production records from 1979 - 1984.
Fonds includes records and publications of The Ethnicity and Democratic Governance Project which was an international Canadian-based five year SSHRC research initiative led by Bruce Berman of Queen's University, the team of thirty-nine international researchers and additional associated organizations examined one of the most complex and challenging issues of the world today: governing ethnic diversity.
Also consists of a submission to the Canada National History Society in relation to the "Pierre Berton Award".