Archief F 0013 - Ted Day fonds

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Ted Day fonds

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F 0013

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Datum(s)

  • 1800s; 1970s (Vervaardig)

Fysieke beschrijving

Fysieke beschrijving

5 cm textual records
3 8x10 inch b&w print photographs
448 photographic slides (35mm size)

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Naam van de archiefvormer

(1934-2004)

Biografie

Edward Earl “Ted” Day (1934-2004) was a teacher who became involved in the preservation of Kent County history. After earning his BA in Geography from Carleton University (1962), the high demand for teachers during the Baby Boom years led him to find immediate employment as a teacher at Almonte High School in Almonte, Ontario, in 1962-63. While teaching he earned his diploma in Education from Queens University (1963), then pursued a Physical Education specialization (1966) and a Master’s degree in Education (1972) both from the University of Toronto. He briefly taught at Midland Avenue Secondary School in Scarborough, Ontario (1963-1966) before joining the staff of John McGregor Secondary School in Chatham, Ontario in 1966. There he taught Geography and became Phys. Ed. Department Head by 1970. In this capacity he produced resources dealing with “Family Life Education” for the federal government and Toronto’s New Press.

In 1970 Day successfully applied for a Canada Council grant to do social history research in Kent County and Essex County, photographing pre-1900 homes, buildings, furnishings, objects, and weapons in urban and rural areas. In 1972 he took a leading role as Chairman of the Hector Walker Pioneer Home Foundation, an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to raise money for the restoration of a rare fieldstone-clad pioneer farmhouse in Kent County. Day appears to have given some radio broadcasts about early Kent County history, and was a member of the National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, as well as the Antiquarian Horological Society.

Ted Day was married to Sharlene Cayla Day (née Tradburks, 1943-2017), a nurse who trained at the Ottawa Civic Hospital (Class of ’64) and spent 40 years in the profession, many of them at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Chatham. Sharlene was active in her Jewish faith, and an advocate of local arts and culture through her work for ARTspace and the Cultural Centre. Together, Ted and Sharlene Day raised three sons: Seann, Ian, and Judd.

Sources: Contents of fonds; Obituary for Sharlene Day, 2017, https://mckinlayfuneralhome.com/tribute/details/7172/Sharlene-Day/obituary.html (accessed 6 May 2021).

Bereik en inhoud

This fonds contains documents and images related to nineteenth- and early twentieth-century European settlement in Essex and Kent counties. These include an Irish immigrant’s personal journal of settling in Essex County with his two sisters (1850). The journal primarily details Jasper Golden’s travels (Atlantic crossing, St. Lawrence River, Quebec, Kingston, Niagara, Buffalo, Detroit, Windsor) but also includes later details about time spent in Malden, Anderdon, and the now-lost port of Albertville (near Kingsville). There are also official records of infrastructure and property in Howard Township (1909), and organizational and research material related to an effort to preserve the Walker family’s rare fieldstone-clad Kent County farmhouse as a historic site. (David and Ann Walker were Scottish immigrants who settled in Harwich Township, Kent County in 1845, with their original grant of farmland remaining in the family until 1972.) The fonds also includes approximately 448 slides depicting pre-1900 homes, buildings, furnishings, objects, weapons, and equipment in Kent and Essex counties, from a Canada Council-funded project to document these artifacts. There is also a short history of Buxton, Ontario, and slides of a memorial to Shawnee chief Tecumseh.

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  • Engels

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None

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A PDF finding aid is available.

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Associated materials

Various exhibits of the Chatham-Kent Museum.

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No further accruals are expected.

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