Basic Image Collection
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John Wallace (1847-1872)
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John Wallace (l847-1872)
Son of Robert Wallace and Ann(Park)
Further information is available at the Knock Heritage Site, IHS3451
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John and Agnes Allan
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John Allan and Agnes Barclay Allan, Uncle and Aunt to Gordon and Andrew Cowan., IHS4122
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John and Frances Srigley
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Golden Wedding Anniversary of John and Frances (Stephenson) Srigley
Back row: (l to r): John R. Sinton, Bertha F. Srigley, Herbert S. Srigley, Annie (Broley) and J. George Srigley, Annie I. and Dr. John A. Johnston
Front row: Zelma L. Sinton, John and Frances Srigley, Clarence M. Srigley
Srigley, Frances (Stephenson)
Social Events - Golden Wedding Anniversary
Costumes and clothing, IHS2687
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John and Frances Srigley
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John and Frances (Stephenson) of Holly on their wedding day.
John was born May 17, 1839 and died November 30, 1919
Frances was born November 17, 1846 in Ireland and died February 1930
Owned NH Lot 4, Conc. 12
Costumes and clothing
Social events - Weddings, IHS2693
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John and Marjorie Cowan
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John and Marjorie Cowan showing John's Certificate for forty years of service to the Ontario Good Roads Association.
From the Stroud Tweedsmuir Histories, Vol. 5., IHS3385-34
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Johnston, Benjamin
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Benjamin and Eliza (nee Leonard) Johnston
Further information is available at the Knock Heritage Site, IHS3287
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Jonathan Bateman And Jennie Neilly
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Jonathan Bateman and Jennie Neilly on their wedding day.
George Bateman (left) and Amy Sawyer (right)
Costumes
Social events
Weddings, IHS1072
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Jones Garage
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Jones' Garage - owned and operated by Frank and Ed Jones
NE corner of Conc. 8 and Hwy.11
Pictured - the paving of the 8th line in 1955
Roads - maintenance
Garages
Frank Jones, Ed Jones
Automobiles, IHS1618
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Joseph And Jane Todd
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Joseph and Jane Ann (McLeod) Todd. Taken at their Second Line farm. around 1920., IHS1341
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Joseph Cochrane
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Joseph Cochrane (of RR #2, Allandale), was the son of David Cochrane and Elizabeth Cochrane (née Gauley). He was later the long time Reeve of Innisfil., IHS721
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Joseph and Jane Gordon
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Portrait of Mr. Joseph Gordon and his wife Jane (née Clapham), family of Mrs. Norma Webb (née Gordon). Jane was from Buckinghamshire, England and Joseph from County Tyrone, Ireland. He emigrated to Innisfil when he was 14 years old, taking six weeks to cross the ocean. Joseph and Jane's children were: Emma Tula (died at 4 years old), Amelia Jane (m. John Simpson), Charles Edward, Samuel Joseph, Lewis James, Florence (m. Thomas Gordon), Garfield, Elizabeth (m. Charles Robertson), and Tula Irene Bramley. Their home was located on at the 9th Concession and the railway tracks where the Craigvale C.N.R. Station originally stood., IHS1568
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Josie Reive
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Josie Reive, the daughter of Gilmour Reive and Lily (Allan) Reive standing beside a car belonging to R.L. Davidson, whom she later married., IHS1520
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Joyce Ross
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Doug's wife Joyce at log frame home where Doug and Joyce lived near Orillia.
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Kate Aitken
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Beeton frequent guest speaker at Cookstown W.I.
Radio commentator and Cook Book Editor.
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Kate Aitken
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Photograph of Kate Aitken (b. 6 April 1891, d. 11 December 1971), who was a Canadian radio and television broadcaster in the 1930s to the 1950s. As "Mrs. A" she was one of the most famous hosts on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in her era. She was born Kate May Scott in Beeton, Ontario, and married local businessman Henry Aitken. As a journalist, she once interviewed Benito Mussolini. She retired in 1957 but continued to work for UNICEF, and served on the CBC's board of directors.
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Keast, George-Thornton Old Boys Reunion
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George Keast of Knock Community at the Old Boys Reunion, Thornton, Ont. with dummy dressed as a woman.
Further information is available at the Knock Heritage Site, IHS3218
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Kell, William and Family
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Family of William Kell and his wife Lavinia (Sawyer) Kell
Back row from left: John, Robert, Ida (Mrs. H. Hussey, Seymour, Ethel, Frank
Front row: William Kell, Clifton, Clarence, Mrs. Kell, Theodore
Kell, William, IHS3392
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Kenneth Earl Kidd
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Kenneth Earl Kidd was born in Barrie, Ontario, on July 21, 1906, the elder son of Daniel Ferguson Kidd and Florence May (Jebb) Kidd of Cookstown, Ontario. The first four years of his life were spent in the hamlet of Egbert, before his parents moved to the ancestral Kidd farm in West Gwillimbury Township. He grew up in Cookstown, attended Public and Continuation School there, and completed his secondary school education at Barrie Collegiate Institute. He attended the University of Toronto (Victoria College), graduating in Honours English and History in 1931, followed by a year at the Ontario College of Education.
After a short interval of teaching at the Brantford Collegiate and the Mohawk Institute in Brantford, Kidd accepted an appointment in the Department of Ethnology at the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, where he remained for the next thirty years. Simultaneously, he obtained an M.A. degree from the University of Toronto in Anthropology and History. He then took leave to attend summer school in archaeology at the University of New Mexico, and a scholarship enabled him to continue his anthropological studies for a year at the University of Chicago, where he met Martha Ann Maurer, a Master of Fine Arts Graduate from the School of Art Institute of Chicago. They were married in 1943. Biography by Martha Ann Kidd.
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Kenneth Earl Kidd
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"Professor Kenneth E. Kidd was born July 21, 1906 at Barrie, Ontario as the son of D. Ferguson Kidd and Florence May Jebb. He was educated at Victoria College at the University of Toronto (B.A. 1931 and M.A. 1937). He also attended the University of Chicago from 1939 to 1940. He married Martha Ann Maurer in October, 1943. In 1935 he joined the Ethnology Department of the Royal Ontario Museum where he worked until 1981 in various positions, starting as an assistant and ending as Curator of Ethnology. He directed the excavation at Ste. Marie I, the site of a 17th century Jesuit Mission near Midland, Ontario, which was the first excavation of a historical site using modern techniques, in North America. In 1964, Kidd joined Trent University as a professor of Anthropology and in the following year he established and chaired the Native Studies Program which was the first of its kind in Canada. He retired from Trent University in 1972, and in 1973, Professor Kidd was named Professor Emeritus of Anthropology. Throughout his career, Professor Kidd was honoured with many awards. Some of these awards include the Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, 1951-52; the Cornplanter Medal, 1970; Award for Eminent Service, Trent University, 1983 (See the Trent Fortnightly Volume 13, Number 21, Thursday, May 19, 1983. Trent University Archives Reading Room); J.C. Harrington Medal, Society for Historical Archaeology, 1985; and an Honorary Degree from Trent University, 1990. He published "Canadians Long Ago" and with Selwyn Dewdney published "Indian Rockpaintings of the Great Lakes". Professor Kenneth E. Kidd died February 26, 1994, at the age of eighty-eight in Peterborough, Ontario."
- Description from Trent University Library, http://www.trentu.ca/library/archives/05-014.htm
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Kenneth Earl Kidd
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"Professor Kenneth E. Kidd was born July 21, 1906 at Barrie, Ontario as the son of D. Ferguson Kidd and Florence May Jebb. He was educated at Victoria College at the University of Toronto (B.A. 1931 and M.A. 1937). He also attended the University of Chicago from 1939 to 1940. He married Martha Ann Maurer in October, 1943. In 1935 he joined the Ethnology Department of the Royal Ontario Museum where he worked until 1981 in various positions, starting as an assistant and ending as Curator of Ethnology. He directed the excavation at Ste. Marie I, the site of a 17th century Jesuit Mission near Midland, Ontario, which was the first excavation of a historical site using modern techniques, in North America. In 1964, Kidd joined Trent University as a professor of Anthropology and in the following year he established and chaired the Native Studies Program which was the first of its kind in Canada. He retired from Trent University in 1972, and in 1973, Professor Kidd was named Professor Emeritus of Anthropology. Throughout his career, Professor Kidd was honoured with many awards. Some of these awards include the Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, 1951-52; the Cornplanter Medal, 1970; Award for Eminent Service, Trent University, 1983 (See the Trent Fortnightly Volume 13, Number 21, Thursday, May 19, 1983. Trent University Archives Reading Room); J.C. Harrington Medal, Society for Historical Archaeology, 1985; and an Honorary Degree from Trent University, 1990. He published "Canadians Long Ago" and with Selwyn Dewdney published "Indian Rockpaintings of the Great Lakes". Professor Kenneth E. Kidd died February 26, 1994, at the age of eighty-eight in Peterborough, Ontario."
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Kenneth Mcdonald
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Kenneth McDonald son of Mr. and Mrs. Cyril McDonald (nee Carrie Black), IHS1469
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