This file contains a hard cover book, written by John Brett McGeachie, of the Brett Family History & Genealogy. Walter Brett (1836-1917) for whom Brett's Lake, Lots 86-87, East Side, Hastings Road Survey, Tudor Township was named, letters written between 1871-1909. Also letters written from Curtis Brett to his son (1775-1780) and Walter Brett's letters.
Personal papers of Edith Nicholson - mortgage and financial papers. Edith Nicholson lived at 164 Victoria Avenue in Belleville. The file also includes a copy of a letter from Charles Wilson of United States of America offering "real counterfeits" for sale. There is a newspaper article from April 1898 with details of Charles Wilson's arrest and trial. The article also explains the letter.
File contains an original copy of a Report on Mining Lands, in Marmora & Elzevir, County of Hastings by Thomas Oliver Bolger, Provincial Land Surveyor, circa 1850
File contains an article written by W. Clyde Bell from Tweed, titled "How the family farm has changed". The article was written for the Ontario Historical Society's symposium celebrating 1000 years of Ontario (April 2000)
File contains original Land Grant to Daniel Clements dated 15-September-1869 for 31 acres composed of Lot No. 58 on the south west side of the Hastings Road, Township of Tudor, in the County of Hastings.
File contains cardboard backing from a picture frame that reported held a picture of Robert Finley Houston (1848-1919), founder of the Houston Lumber Company in Tweed, Ontario in 1893.
File contains correspondence from John Brett McGeachie, P.Eng. born 17 November 1912 Barbara Street, Trenton, Ontario. It contains an autobiography as well as genealogy for the Brett Family.
File contains a publication from the Moira River Conservation Authority, titled “Progress and Achievements 1947-1962; a newspaper article from the Intelligencer dated January 20, 1965 with a photo of the County Warden; a publication from the Corporation of the Township of Sidney, Historic Highlights 1790-1967
File contains a photocopy of pages 38-63 from the publication the Ontario Archaeology, Number 72, 2001, written by David A. Robertson "Mourning, Curing, Feasting of Industry? The Interpretation of the Quinte and Perch Lake Mounds".