The McKee Archives is the copyright holder for the Stuckey materials.
Storage Location
Lawrence Stuckey collection
Arrangement
[Mr. Stuckey put a negative in the envelope and taped the print to the outside. We have separated them and numbered the negative D13(1) and the print D13(1a).]
The McKee Archives is the copyright holder for the Stuckey materials.
Storage Location
Lawrence Stuckey collection
Arrangement
[Mr. Stuckey put a negative in the envelope and taped the print to the outside. We have separated them and numbered the negative D13(1) and the print D13(1a).]
The construction of the Western Manitoba Centennial Auditorium was considered first during a meeting of the Brandon City Council in 1953. In 1962, the City of Brandon was given permission by Manitoba Premier Duff Roblin to proceed with the construction of the auditorium as a centennial project to celebrate Canada's centennial in 1967. Constructed on the Brandon University campus, the auditorium was completed in early 1969.
Custodial History
This collection was accessioned by the McKee Archives in 1998. Previous custodial history is unknown.
Scope and Content
Collection consists of one scrapbook with newspaper clippings and pamphlets about the Western Manitoba Centennial Auditorium and its construction.
See RG 6 Brandon University fonds, Series 7 Faculties and Schools, Sub-series 7.1 Faculty of Arts, Sub sub series 7.1.1 Dean of Arts for biographical information for Michael Blanar.
Custodial History
Collection was in the possession of Dr. Michael Blanar until he donated the records to the S.J. McKee Archives in May 2002.
Scope and Content
Collection consists of textual records and five microfilm reels related to Dr. Blanarās post-graduate research. It is assumed that the records were collected during the course of Blanarās research for his dissertation entitled āEarly British Travellers in French Canada (1960).ā
Textual records include three Dominion of Canada notebooks containing handwritten Saulteaux verbs, and animate nouns. Included is a dark red booklet titled āOjibwe.ā The book contains Ojibwa translations of English words. The book comes from St. Peter Clavers Industrial School in Spanish, Ontario, and may have acted as an instructional book as it also contains French and English. Collection also contains a transcript of an Ojibwa dictionary and three file folders titled āManuscripts,ā āJohn Long Research,ā and āMapsā which contain additional research material. Contents of āManuscriptā folder are original typed manuscripts. āJohn Longā and āMapsā file folders contain copies of materials held at Library and Archives Canada, as well as hand drawn documents and hand written documents detailing contents of folders.
In addition to the textual records there are five microfilm reels. Three microfilm cases are labeled āThe British Reference Division,ā one case labeled āPublic Archives Canada, central microfilm operations,ā and the last case is from an unidentified source labeled āLongs voyages and travelsā. Four of the five microfilm cases are also numbered. The British Reference Division microfilm case numbered ā1346 i 43ā contains a copy of a book titled āThe Cacique of Ontario.ā British Reference Division microfilm case numbered ā104706640ā contains a copy of a book titled āThe Four Kings of Canada.ā British Reference Division microfilm case numbered ā9073279ā contains a copy of a book titled āThe Indians.ā The Public Archives Canada microfilm case numbered āc-3006ā contains copies of original documents in French and English. Documents include letters, diary pages, maps, and business ledgers. Microfilm case labeled āLongs voyages and travelsā contains a copy of a book written by John Long titled āVoyages and Travels of Indian Interpreter and Trader.ā
Notes
Description by Aaron McKay (October 2013). The Ojibwa language dictionary and notebook make references to Fredric Baraga (1797-1868), a missionary priest from Slovenia who recorded the Lake Superior Ojibwa language dialect. Baragaās findings were published into an Ojibwa language dictionary.
For custodial history see the collection level description of the Lawrence Stuckey collection.
Scope and Content
Katherine Stinson & aircraft with Indigenous peoples
Notes
Photo taken in Brandon, Manitoba
Miss Stinson was half Indigenous
See Lawrence Stuckey file (Finding Aids) for biography of Katherine Stinson.
[Please note that in the title we have chosen to maintain the original terminology used by Mr. Stuckey in order to maintain the original context and order of the record. P.E. 08/07/09.]