Manuscript and mimeographed materials relating to history of labour and socialist movements in Ontario and Canada.
Archival Collections Finding Aids
The Library houses over 750 manuscript collections covering a wide range of subject areas. Holdings range from a collection of about 40 third-century B.C. Egyptian papyri to papers of the co-discoverers of insulin: Banting, Best, Collip and Macleod; and finally to drafts, research notes, and correspondence of Canadian authors such as Margaret Atwood, Gwendolyn MacEwen, Leonard Cohen, Mazo de la Roche and Josef Skvorecky. The majority of our manuscript collections date from the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first centuries and pertain to Canadian historical, literary, artistic or scientific fields.
Collections of personal papers are listed by the surname of the creator or collector, e.g. Birney, Earle. Institutional records are listed under the name of the institution, e.g. Royal Canadian Institute.
Collection level records for many of the manuscript collections appear in the on-line catalogue, along with links to finding aids in pdf format.
Displaying 26 - 29 of 29
64 boxes and items.
Notes, manuscripts, galleys for his books, editorial correspondence.
Papers, 1983-ongoing. 41 boxes.
Drafts and manuscripts, revisions, proofs, notes and editorial changes for published and unpublished work.
Papers, 1965-2015. 51 boxes.
Correspondence and literary ephemera from bookseller Irene McGuire, owner of the Toronto-area bookshop Writers & Co. Among the correspondents include Graeme Gibson, Nan Talese, Alberto Manguel, Helen Garner, Greg Gatenby, W.P. Kinsella and Douglas Fetherling, and others.
Records, [198-]-[199-]. 2 boxes.