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Archival description
Rare Books and Special Collections Series
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Menu templates

  • CA RBD MSG 1269-4
  • Series
  • between approximately 1870 and 1930
  • Part of Menu Collection

Series contains lithographic menu templates.

R.C. Parsons and Peggy Parsons correspondence

Correspondence from Robert C. Parsons to his wife, Peggy Parsons, living in Vancouver. Also includes 6 letters from Peggy to Robert. Contents of the letters chiefly concern news from home, daily life as a soldier, thanks for care packages, and thoughts of one another. The letters are very affectionate and often erotic.

J. Mills and C.I. Mills correspondence

Correspondence from Jack Mills to his mother, C.I. Mills, living in Vancouver. Also includes one letter from Jack Mills to his brother, Bob Mills. Contents of the letters chiefly concern news from home, care packages that have arrived, and the daily life of soldiers, including food and cigarettes, and entertainment.

A.V. Cormack and F.M. Graham correspondence

Correspondence from A.V. Cormack ("Mac") to Florence Morgan Graham, his sweetheart, living in Vancouver. Also includes one letter from G.D. Royds ("Jerry"), A.V. Cormack's roommate, to F.M. Graham. Contents of the letters chiefly concern news from home, anecdotes about daily life, and thanks for care packages.

Diaries

This series contains personal diaries kept by Christina Barbara Hall, Benjamin Hall, and Charlotte Hall between 18 October 1795 and 8 May 1886. Christina Barbara Hall's diaries were written while she lived in Andover, Massachusetts, and in Montreal, Quebec. Benjamin Hall's diaries were written from Montreal and during a trip to London, England. Charlotte Hall's diary was written while she lived in Montreal. The diaries chiefly concern weather, news of family and community members, as well as occasional remarks about politics.

Each diary (or set of loose pages) was allocated a separate file because of the size and/or fragility of the volumes, and to maintain consistency within the series. Files in the series are arranged in chronological order. Diaries are mostly bound volumes, though Benjamin Hall's diaries are loose pages.

Correspondence

This series contains correspondence between members of the Hall family and their extended family members from approximately 1742 to 1899. Letters were written predominately from New England (especially Philadelphia and Andover), Quebec City, and Montreal. The contents of the letters chiefly concern family news (including deaths and births), with some letters related to business, political and military events, and genealogy.

The correspondence in the series is grouped into a file for each family member represented - usually the creation of the letters, though some files also contain letters they received. There is also a file of correspondence related to family legacies and genealogy, as well as a file of miscellaneous letters, created by senders who were unidentified or who only appeared once in this series. The files in this series are arranged in approximate chronological order.

Financial and legal documents

  • CA RBD MSG 1299-3
  • Series
  • 21 January 1719 - approximately 1912
  • Part of Hall family fonds

This series contains financial and legal documents created by or on behalf of members of the Hall family between approximately 1719 and 1912. The documents in the series were predominately created in Montreal, Hinchinbrooke, and Quebec City, with some documents created in New England. Documents include accounts, receipts and invoices, loans, power of attorney, land surveys, wills, inventories of estates, a marriage contract, and other documents.

Other family papers

  • CA RBD MSG 1299-4
  • Series
  • Approximately 1739 - 16 April 1859
  • Part of Hall family fonds

This series contains documents related to the Hall family's public and private life. The documents date from approximately 1739 to 16 April 1859 and were created while members of the Hall family were living in Germany, the United States, and Canada. The documents in the series reflect the Hall family's participation in religious, masonic, and military organizations and includes certificates, official correspondence, a manuscript and a recipe.

The documents in this series were those that did not fit easily into the other series of the fonds. Files in this series are grouped by activity and are arranged in rough chronological order.

Journals

This series consists of a journal kept by Morrison during two trading journeys from Montreal through the Great Lakes to Toronto, Niagara, Detroit, and Michilimackinac in 1767 and 1769. The journal is a record of Morrison's business transactions conducted during these trips, as well as his day-to-day management of the journey and his team.

The journal was placed in a separate series as it is distinct in form and content from other material in this collection. The journal is a bound volume that contains daily entries with information about weather and travel, as well as accounts, invoices, lists of goods exchanged, and some other notes, including a list of Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe) vocabulary. Entries in the journal are in rough chronological order.

Correspondence

This series consists of business and personal correspondence created by and received by James Morrison in his capacity as a trader and merchant. Most of the correspondence is between Morrison and his business contacts in Quebec, Ontario, the Northern United States, and England. Some letters are from family members and contain both business and personal news, including Morrison's nephew, Samuel Morrison, in Baltimore, Morrison's brother-in-law, Charles LePallieur, who worked as a fur trader in Ontario and the United States, and Morrison's son, Charles Morrison, who travelled to Jamaica in search of work. Many of the letters in this series contain interesting information about the price and availability of various goods, especially wheat, rum, sugar, and molasses.

The letters in the series are grouped by intervals of 5 or 10 years into files of roughly similar size: 1770s (Correspondence, 1771-1776), 1780s (Correspondence, 1781-1789), the first half of the 1790s (Correspondence, 1790-1795), and the second half of the 1790s (Correspondence, 1795-1800). The letters are arranged in chronological order.

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