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Library and Archives Canada. Music Collection [of the] National Library of Canada['s] Music Division = Collection de musique [de la] Division de la musique, Bibliothèque nationale du Canada. Ottawa: National Library of Canada, 1989. N.B.: Texts in English and in French, printed tête-bêche. ISBN 0-662-57231-9; Library and Archives Canada.
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The National Archives of Quebec (French: Archives nationales du Québec, ANQ) were founded on 2 September 1920, with Pierre-Georges Roy as Quebec's first Head Archivist. . The purpose of the institution was to process historical materials, more specifically public archives and the Quebec government's archives, and to collect documents pertaining to the history of Quebec. the ANQ were brought ...
This is a list of archives in Canada. These archives , for the purposes of this list, are entities in Canada that work to acquire, preserve, and make available material as documentary evidence about a person, community, business, government, municipality, etc., for future generations. [ 1 ]
The Ottawa Public Library (OPL; French: Bibliothèque publique d'Ottawa) is the library system of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. [1] The library was founded in 1906 with a donation from the Carnegie Foundation .
The site was likely the first Canadian federal library mobile website. In April 2010 the library implemented a federated search system allowing the public to search its local and licensed resources together - including a combined search of NPArC, and the NSL catalogue and the NRC Research Press. NRC researchers are also able to combine searches ...
Ca 1906, Provincial Archives of Alberta Photo A539. The Provincial Archives of Alberta dates back to 1906, when the Provincial Library was established. The Library collected, published archival material. There is evidence that Katherine Hughes served as the first Provincial Archivist within the Provincial Library as early as 1908.
The building was opened to the public on April 2, 2009, and is expected to be the site of the Archives for at least the next thirty-five years. [8] In addition to preserving the records of the Ontario government, the Archives has from the outset actively sought records of private individuals and organizations that reflect Ontario's history.