File consists of folder of correspondence.
Item consists of a home movie from a Huron-Wendat family documenting winter in Wendake.
Project and donor(s) contributed description follows: "There is a heavy snow storm on Alexander Gros-Louis’ veranda sometime in the 1950s. The Gros-Louis family are Huron Wendat, and the footage is shot on the reserve in Wendake, Quebec, which is twenty-five minutes from Quebec City. Snow storms are quite commonplace in Wendake. Every surface is covered in white, and the shot on Super 8 film looks very dreamy. Seen in the shot is a snowmobile that looks to be from the fifties era. At the time there were no street lights or paved roads, and they weren’t plowed regularly. People in Wendake were quite poor. Although it’s a bit different now, it’s still very working class. Seen briefly in the shot, are Alexander’s son and grandson, both named Paul.
Ron Gros-Louis is Alexander’s grandson. He and his wife, Patricia retired to Wendake from Montreal. They don’t see Wendake any differently than any other small town.
There are currently 2,134 people of Huron-Wendat ancestry. Most of whom are descended from the 300 ancestors who came from Huronia in what is now part of Northern Ontario's Simcoe and Grey counties. Wendake has been an Indigenous reserve since 1697. On the reserve are some Cree, Inuit, and Montagnais peoples from the northern parts of Quebec, there to attend high school and university as some schools in the north do not go past elementary. There are therefore a lot of Indigenous languages being spoken.
Life was very restrictive for Indigenous people at the time that Alexander Gros-Louis grew up. You had to sign in and out of the reserve with an Indian agent, and there was a lot of marginalization, surveillance, and policing by keeping track of who was entering and leaving the reserve.
Alexander couldn’t join the army, because he was labelled as a "savage," in official documentation. A childhood lack of Vitamin D caused rickets, which left him with bowed legs throughout his life. He left the reserve at the age of fourteen to work as a lumberjack in Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, and eventually as a taxi driver in Montreal. He worked shovelling coal for Canadian National Railways on steam locomotives, and afterward became one of the first Indigenous engineers for the CNR."
File consists of notes, correspondence with, and other material related to the West Toronto Green Communities Initiative.
File consists of material received from West Toronto Community Legal Services.
File consists of correspondence and promotional material.
File consists of clippings of Grossman's announcement in West Nippising of a BILD (Board of Industrial Leadership and Development) project to promote industry and tourism in the region.
File consists of the master pages of a publication on West Indian society, file also includes poems, and articles. The master pages contain photographic prints.
File consists of conference material from the West Indian Society, on multiculturalism, West Indian parents of teenagers, and the Jamaican-Canadian Association.
File includes : WISCS Newsletter vol. 1 no. 2 1987; reports from Scarborough Board of Education; Join Hands and Hearts : a school twinning calypso; A Place to Stand Ontario Theme/Expo 67 (45 rec. removed).
File consists of miscellaneous material on the West Indian Social and Cultural Society. It includes correspondence, raffle information and support for student travel to conferences. File also includes an address by Marcel Masse for the Annual Conference of the Society for Intercultural Education, Training and Research.
A betamax video cassette labelled, “West Indian Showcase: Ken Shah.”
File consists of material relating to the development of the West Indian Resource Kit, including workshop notices and objectives, and original cover art for the reader’s guide.
File consists of copies of articles, reports, and notes related to West Indians and issues affecting the community.
File consists of a project proposal for West Indian Learning Resources written by the Organization for Caribbean Canadian Initiatives (OCCI) and notes and material relating to multiculturalism and race relations.
File consists of miscellaneous printed material on curriculum and West Indian immigrants in the education system.
File consists of an invoice and a list of members' contact information.
File consists of meeting minutes of the West End Working Group.
File consists of meeting minutes and agendas of the West End Working Group of St. Christopher House, and draft and final project proposals submitted to the "Better Beginnings, Better Futures," project funded by the Ministry of Community and Social Services.
File consists of records pertaining to a project undertaken by Rahder, Doyle and Associates for West Central Community Health Centres to conduct a needs assessment for community health in its catchment area. Records include a project summary, a detailed work plan, a summary of relevant notes from interviews with service providers, focus group data, a questionnaire, a summary of discussion with contact people, a question form for staff interviews, and a brief history of West Central Community Health Centres.
File consists of folder of handwritten and typed letters between Welby and Charles A Werner. Topics include: efforts to coordinate a meeting to discuss philosophy; reaction to each other's writing and the discipline of significs; and Welby introducing Werner to Dr. Slaughter. Werner writes from Harrow on the Hill.
Fonds consists of research material created and collected by Wenona Giles as part of her anthropological studies of Portuguese migrant women in London, United Kingdom, and Toronto, Canada. Fonds includes, field notes, interview transcripts, questionnaires, reports and other collected research material.
Giles, WenonaFile contains an entry form for the 2004 Canadian Aboriginal Music Awards.