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Description archivistique
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Administrative and Financial Records
CDA D-3.A · Série · 1863-1965
Fait partie de Spanish Residential School Fonds

The series contains records that relate to the administrative and financial functions of the Spanish Residential School. It includes reports and notes on the moving of the Jesuit administered schools at Wiikwemkoong to Spanish, Indian Affairs inspection reports of the schools, annual reports, dietary reports, fundraising documents, account books, and financial statements. It also contains correspondence, school diaries, and the diaries of ministers and prefects at the school. A student registry of all the students who attended the Wiikwemkoong and Spanish residential schools from 1863 to 1957 is also included in the series. Finally, it contains correspondence that deals with the closing of the school.

Arthur E. Jones, S.J. Fonds
GLC BO-35 · Fonds · [1853?]-1918

The Arthur E. Jones, S.J. fonds reflects Father Jones personal life and his roles as historian, researcher, editor, and writer during his tenure as archivist at the Archives du Collège Sainte-Marie in Montreal from 1882 to 1918. The fund, dating from 1853 to 1918, consists largely of textual documents, including correspondence, postcards, memorabilia, clippings, bound writings, diplomas, publications, and other related printed material. Arthur E. Jones’s personal records encompass his religious education during his novitiate in Angers, France, including his personal passport, devotion vows, and letters to his mother Lucy Catherine Macdonell. They also include records such as his priesthood ordination certificate, travel permits provided by members of the Jesuits, and letters attesting to his affiliation with various associations. The fonds also contains biographical notes on Arthur E. Jones’s obituary written by F. Melançon, funeral arrangements for him at the Gesù Church in 1918 and letters pertaining to genealogical research on his family.

In addition, the fonds documents Father Jones’s active involvement in supplying documentation and publications on the Jesuits Estates Act, as well as debates between 1888 and 1889. Correspondence to Father Jones from Reuben Gold Thwaites and the Burrows publishers confirm his contribution to the publication of the Jesuits Relations and Allied Documents. Other records within the fonds relate to Father Jones’s inquiries, transcriptions, documentation and publications about the history of the Jesuits in New France and during the suppression of the Society of Jesus. The fonds also includes ephemera and certificates related to the Jesuit exhibit prepared by Arthur E. Jones for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis in 1904. Finally, the fonds comprises documents such as letters, copies, fieldwork journals, notes and other records reflecting his studies on the Jesuit missions among the Huron-Wendat nation, as well as the sites of the Jesuit martyrs which served for his publication in the 1902 Annual Archaeological Report. The fonds also contains material related to the research, publication, and reception of his work, “8endake Ehen or Old Huronia” in 1908-1909. An unpublished manuscript written by Arthur E. Jones, S.J. on the Wyandots is also included.

Various materials scattered throughout Arthur E. Jones’s fonds include photographs, blueprints, maps, technical and artistic drawings, sketches, and Father Jones’s personal objects, along with four printing plates. Photographs depict Arthur E. Jones’s portraits taken at different moments in his life, including those of his LLD graduation ceremony at the University of Toronto in 1913. Other photos are related to Arthur E. Jones’s family portraits, landscapes sites, as well as one photo of Father Jones’s life as a professor at St. Francis Xavier College in New York, between 1874 and 1875. Arthur E. Jones’s drawings showcase his artistic skills developed during his lifetime.

Jones, Arthur E.
Cape Croker Mission Fonds
0700-0017 · Fonds · 1902-[1985]

This fonds provides information on the history of the St. Mary’s Parish in Cape Croker, and on the Waubaushene St. John’s Parish. It contains diaries of the Cape Croker Mission, from 1902 to 1943, in addition to correspondence and announcements pertaining to the Waubaushene St. John’s Parish. It also contains financial records about the Waubaushene community.

The fonds includes graphic material and photographic records on the Waubaushene St. John’s church, before and after the fire of 1914. It also includes photographs of Edward J. Devine, S. J.’s visit to the area in the early 1920s. In addition, the fonds comprises maps and plans of the First Shrine to Canadian Martyrs as well as a map of the Cape Croker mission circa 1930.

Mission Cape Crocker
Q-1 · Collection · 1762-1944, prédominant 1844-1944

La collection comprend des documents associés aux activités des jésuites du Canada en Nouvelle-France. La grande majorité de ces documents sont des transcriptions effectués par Félix Martin, s.j. et les archivistes qui l’ont suivi au Collège Sainte-Marie. Les documents formant la collection témoignent de leur utilisation et création en tant que documents de recherche. Par conséquent, en plus d’offrir de l’information sur les jésuites en Nouvelle-France, la collection est caractérisé par le processus de développement de connaissances sur les jésuites en Nouvelle-France effectué à partir de 1840. Ces transcriptions comprennent de la correspondance de Charles Garnier, s.j. (1605-1649), Paul Raguenau, s.j. (1608-1680), Paul Le Jeune, s.j. (1613-1664), Barthélémy Vimont, s.j. (1594-1667) et autres jésuites présents au Canada au 17e siècle. La collection inclue également des notes biographiques sur les martyres canadiens, sur les missions jésuites en Huronie, y compris des cartes et notes géographiques. La collection comprend aussi des ménologes d’Isaac Jogues, s.j. (1607-1646) Charles Lallement, s.j. (1587-1674), Noël Chabanel, s.j. (1613-1649), Jacques Bonin, s.j. (1617-1659) et Florent Bonnemer, s.j. (1600-1683). De plus, la collection inclue des copies de Relations, de 1634 à 1668.

En plus des notes de recherche et des manuscrits concernant les jésuites de la Nouvelle-France transcrits par les pères jésuites, la collection contient de la correspondance de Félix Martin, s.j. ainsi que ses recherches, et documents compilés, sur Kateri Tekakwitha. Ces documents de père Martin datent de 1848 jusqu’à 1880.

Archives du Collège Sainte-Marie
Communications
CDA C-4.S2 · Série · 1843-2015
Fait partie de Jesuits of Upper Canada Northern Ontario Missions Fonds

The series testifies to the relationships maintained by the Jesuit community with external persons and organizations in the context of their missions and ministries in Northern Ontario. Mainly composed of correspondence, the series provides information about the relations between the Jesuits and private companies, departments of the Crown, the United States and the Canadian governments, as well as with Indigenous communities, parishioners, and other Catholic organizations. A significant part of the series is made up of correspondence with the bishops of Peterborough, Sault Ste. Marie, Hearst, Hamilton, and Thunder Bay, and bears witness to the extent of the partnerships maintained between the Jesuits and secular dioceses in the management of parishes.

The series is divided into two series: Parish Communications; and Relations with External Persons and Organizations. It contains parish bulletins for Armstrong, Fort William, Garden Village, Pays Plans, St. Andrew’s, and St. Anne’s, in addition to correspondence and photographs of bishops.

CDA C-4.S3 · Série · 1851-2013
Fait partie de Jesuits of Upper Canada Northern Ontario Missions Fonds

The series provides information on the various activities related to parish administration, the ministries, and the community projects carried out by the Jesuits in Northern Ontario. The series testifies to the activities of pastoral committees, councils, and associations, as well as special events, religious celebrations, spiritual life, and other activities happening in the communities in which the Jesuits were involved. In addition, photographs bear witness to the territories and buildings, as well as to families and members of these communities, which include the Fort William First Nation, the Batchewana First Nation, Biigtigong Nishnaabeg, Kiashke Zaaging Anishinaabek, and the Ginoogaming First Nation, among others.

The series is divided into four sub-series: Parish and Ministries Administration; Committees, Councils and Associations; Liturgies, Special Events and Communities; and Indigenous Knowledge and Teaching Activities. It contains St. Anne’s Church visitors’ books, diocesan regulations, a list of church service fees, parish records such as baptism, marriage, and death registers, Status Animarum, censuses, certificates, reports, lists of Jesuit and non-Jesuit personnel, correspondence concerning chaplaincy services, meeting minutes, liturgical objects, souvenir booklets and objects, as well as audio reels and cassettes.