Showing 16373 results

Archival description
Rare Books and Special Collections
Print preview View:

2513 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Photograph

File contains one black and white photograph featuring two oval portraits, one of Maude Bremner and one likely of her husband, Major J. de Castilla. Accompanied by an envelope addressed to Bremner's father, Benjamin Bremner.

Francis Okely Fonds

  • CA RBD MSG 131
  • Fonds
  • 1778

This collection consists of "Hiel's letters. Thirty letters on theological subtleties". Upton, 1778. A note by E. Dowden ascribes the authorship of this work to Okely.

Okely, Francis, active 1778

James Morrison papers

  • CA RBD MSG 1310
  • Collection
  • 18 September 1651 - approximately 1912

The James Morrison papers are a collection of documents chiefly related to James Morrison's activities as a trader and merchant in Montreal. The papers also include some material related to Morrison's family, including legal documents and genealogical research conducted by his descendents. The documents in the James Morrison papers cover a period beginning 18 September 1651 and ending in approximately 1912, but focusing primarily on 1767 through 1800. The fonds represents Morrison's business dealings in Quebec, Ontario, the northern United States, and England, as well as his family life in Montreal and connections with relatives in Baltimore, Ontario, and Jamaica.

The papers are arranged into three series: 1 - Journals, 2 - Correspondence, and 3 - Financial and legal records. Documents in these series include a bound journal, correspondence, contracts, deeds of ownership, power of attorney, birth and marriage certificates, bills of sale, invoices, accounts, descriptions of political and military events, and genealogical notes.

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.

Journal, 1767-1769

This file contains a journal containing entries related to two voyages undertaken by James Morrison, with some accounts, lists of goods and furs, contracts, and other notes and transactions. The first voyage is titled "Journal of a voyage in a large cannoe by Jas Morrison from Montreal to Toranto [sic]," and took place between 13 April 1767 and 1 August 1767, during which they also visited Michilimackinac. The second voyage, "Journal for voyage 11 April 1769 1 canoe to Detroit," also set out from Montreal and visited Michilimackinac, returning on approximately 20 or 21 September 1769. Other notable entries include "A Dictionary of Indian words in the Missisage" with 49 words of Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe) vocabulary and a directive from Benjamin Roberts, Commissary of Indian Affairs, to Jean-Baptiste de Couagne, Interpreter for Indian Affairs, written in Morrison's hand from Fort Niagara, 21 May 1767.

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.

Correspondence, 1771-1776

This file contains business correspondence between James Morrison and other merchants and traders in Quebec and England, for the period of 1711-1776. Contents of letters mostly concern the fur trade, with one letter that discusses the price of wheat. Also includes a letter related to Morrison's marriage to Suzanne LePallieur and a letter from a pay master of the British Army. Letters are arranged in chronological order.

Letter from Jean-Olivier Briand, 24 July 1771

Letter signed J:O B, likely Jean-Olivier Briand, Bishop of Quebec. The "messieurs" to whom the letter is addressed are likely Sieur de Lepallieur and James Morrison. Contents of the letter concern Briand's refusal to reduce the solemnity fees (100 piastres) associated with James Morrison's impending marriage to Suzanne Lepallieur. The couple was married between March and May 1772 at Christ Church Cathedral in Montreal.

Results 5171 to 5180 of 16373