Dr. Schroeter
Dr. Schroeter
This file contains a postcard from the restaurant "Alfredo" in Rome, a menu from the restaurant which lists all items in Italian and English and a map of Rome on the back, and a small article from Newsweek (December 1st, 1952) titled "King of the Fettuccine" featuring a photo of Clark Gable at the restaurant.
These files include correspondence pertaining to the search for a building, the legal paperwork surrounding the acquisition of the building, how they financed it, the renovations that were planned and renovations that actually occurred, and insurance information. Includes floor plans and drawings of the building of the Algoma building. Older material on the initial purchase of building is found with historical material.
This file contains photocopies of newspaper clippings from 1878-1879 about Chief Buhkwujjenene and his trip to England, alongside re-typed copies. Chief Buhkwujjenene, which signifies "a man of the Desert", was Chippewa and was from Garden River, Canada. He had been converted to Christianity and had been brought over to England under the auspices of the Church of England Missionary Society, to train as a religious leader and teacher serving his people.
This file contains a copy of the "Algonkians of Lake Nipigon: An Archaeological Survey" from the National Museum of Man Mercury Series by K. C. A. Dawson, dated Ottawa 1976. The report describes the artifacts from a reconnaissance of the Lake Nipigon shore. It provides evidence-based on thirty-five sites that there has been a continuous but fluctuating population from the Archaic Period through the Woodland and Historic Periods. The Shield, Laurel and Algonkian cultures respectively are represented. All are considered ancestral Algonkians.
This file contains photocopies from the book The Algonquin Legends of New England by Charles G. Leland (1898) and accounts relating to a collection of Traditional Stories of the Wabanaki, of the Passamaquoddies and Penobscot of Maine, and the Mi'kmaq of New Brunswick. Also contains an article on the Algonkins of Golden Lake from a 1983 edition of The Beaver.
This file contains photocopies of a variety of Traditional Stories of tribes composing the Algonkian nation. There is an article from the Journal of American Folk-lore that talks about "The Fall of Hochelaga: A study of popular tradition". This article talks about Jacques Cartier and his voyage, two distinct ethnic groups - the Algonquin Anishinaabe and the Huron-Iroquois families.
This file contains a Lakehead University request for an interlibrary loan for the "Midnight Sun Newsletter dated January 19, 1973. A photocopy of a typewritten article titled "The First Kabloona" by L. Alianakuluk is included. Also, this file contains a photocopied document titled "Alareak's (E5-414) Story as Told to Louis Alianakuluk (E5-428).
This file contains multiple letters sent with submissions to the Sauna Writing Competition that ask to be published under an alias
Dr. Schroeter
This file contains a short handwritten note by Penny Petrone on Moses Aligak who "opened the Anglican Church at Whale Cove."
This file contains a photocopy of pages 66-73 from an article titled "Simonie Alinga" from "Inuit Today" Vol. VI #6 July-August 1977. The article details a story "told by Simonie Alinga of Frobisher Bay to Leah d' Argencourt. The events Simonie relates took place late this past winter."
Manuscript, by A.T. Hill entitled "All People Should Accept the Truth and Reject Lies and Misrepresentation" (3 copies)
This file has a copy of the "First All Canada Indian Cultural Conference" Tawow 1(2), 1970.
Correspondence with David Allen, 1962
This file contains a newspaper article in Toronto's Weekly News and Entertainment Voice from 1990, titled "Native Women's Anthology, Paula Gunn Allen - Weaving tales of Spirit Survival". Paula Gunn Allen, a poet, novelist, and academic chronicler of American Indigenous literature published a collection of her own essays.
This file contains a photocopy of an article titled "The Snow Goose and the Mosquito--a Question of Development" by Victor Allen, as published in a 1968 edition of The North.
General Sociology, Notes on the Lectures (In German) by Theodor Geiger
A biography on Albert Ellis Allin, collection reports from Allin from 1964 and1965, correspondence between Allin and J.H. Soper of University of Toronto, as well as W.K.W. (Bill) Baldwin of Natural Museums of Canada.
This file has a photocopy of a news article titled "Almighty Voice made brave stand in bluff at Batoche". "Kisse-Manito Wayo" or Almighty Voice, was the son of Sounding Sky, a member of One Arrow Cree First Nation, whose reserve lay a little east of Batoche, Saskatchewan. In 1895, while only a youth, Almighty Voice was arrested on a charge for stealing a steer. He got away at night and was found dead on Sunday - been killed by a shell.
Correspondence with Louella Almond
Correspondence with Mr. and Mrs. Almos, 1964