File contains a newspaper article concerning a ceremony honouring S.Howard Connor, who served 50 years as a teacher and principal at the Tweed Public School
File contains a newspaper article dated 3-January-1957 titled "Local Industries Will Not Be Seriously Affected by C.P.R. Firemen's Strike, Officials Say". It also contains an "Industrial Prospectus" for Tweed from circa 1965.
File contains several newspaper clippings on miscellaneous topics related to Tweed, Ontario, including Centennial Year (1967) projects; public efforts to stop the closure and sale of the Tweed High School in 1968; and newspaper photographs of local landmarks.
File contains a printed brochure with a calendar of Centennial Year events being celebrated in Tweed in 1967. Also present are two newspaper articles concerning Centennial events in the town.
File contains 2 newspaper articles about a survey of older homes in Tweed and the community north of the town in co-operation with the School of Architecture, University of Toronto.
File contains a newspaper article from The Tweed Newsconcerning the disinterment and theft of the body of the late Stephen Conger Johnston and an ensuing controversy involving Kingston medical students in November 1889.
Colour photographs of the Norris Whitney bridge under construction between Rossmore and Belleville, Ontario and aerial photographs of Belleville, Wellington, Picton, Tweed, Stirling and the open pit mine at Marmora. Photographs of aircraft, including a replica of the 'Spirit of St. Louis', which visited Belleville in 1977 or 1978.
File contains a newspaper article concerning the awarding of merit medals to Tweed brothers and Boy Scout members, Bill and Michael Ingles, who engaged in a life-saving effort at the Tweed Mill Dam in June, 1968.
The file contains a typed article about the history of the Church at Lodgeroom Corners. In 1847 Robert Gordon organized the first Sunday School near Tweed.
Text of interviews with:
Violet Gaylord and Myrtle Williams, who lived on a farm near Henderson, Ontario during the Depression
Fr. Baker, who lived in Cornwall, Ontario and was 30 during the Depression *Paul Murphy, who had lived in Western Canada until moving to Tweed, Ontario, where he stayed for the rest of the Depression