The item is a postcard of showing the Mansonville Methodist Church and the school in around the 1920s.
The item is a postcard showing the Mansonville United Church (initially of Methodist denomination), an elementary school and St. Paul's Anglican Church looking north on Main Street in Mansonville from around the 1920s.
The item is a photo postcard of Christ Church, of Anglican denomination, in Bondville from around the 1910s.
The item is a postcard of St. Patrick's Anglican Church in Bolton Centre from around 1912.
The item is a postcard showing the Saint Édouard Catholic Church and manse in Knowlton from about 1909.
Item is a photograph of St. George’s Anglican Church in Clarenceville in winter with people, horses and sleighs visible, from around 1900.
Item is a reproduced photograph of a group of women at quilting bee at the Lacolle United (formerly Methodist) Church around 1910.
Item is a photograph taken around the 1910s of Main Street in Mansonville. Two churches are visible in the photograph.
The item is a photograph of the Centenary United Church in Stanstead in winter, taken around 1955.
The item is a photograph of the Centenary United Church in Stanstead in winter, taken around 1955.
Item is a photograph taken around 1900 of Christ Church (Anglican) at Rawdon, Quebec. There is a man standing in the foreground and a cemetery visible to the right of the church.
The sub-series contains primary source information on the establishment, construction, and activities of the St. Thomas Anglican Church in Clarenceville from 1815 to 1915. It consists of lists of subscribers, receipts and contracts for construction and repairs, and a programme for the centennial anniversary of the church. In particular, the Mayo, Billings, Derick/Derck, and Vaughan families were implicated in the church's founding.
The file contains primary and secondary source information on Reverend William Herbert Naylor from 1910 to 1990. It consists of a copy of land deed from William H. Naylor to George Bryan, biographical research, obituaries for W.H. Naylor and for his son, Rev. Reuben Kenneth Naylor, and correspondence between L. Reed Naylor and Herbert R. Derick.