Fonds No
001
Title
Multicultural History Society of Ontario fonds
Material Type
Sound recording ; graphic material
Physical Description
X audio cassettes (ca. X hr., X min.) ; X photographs : b&w and col.
Creator
MHSO
Date of Creation
1971-2014
Place of Creation
Toronto, Ontario
Language
various
Administrative History
The Multicultural History Society of Ontario (MHSO) is a not-for-profit educational institution and archives established in 1976 by Professor Robert F. Harney, Professor Milton Israel, Professor (later Supreme Court Justice) Frank Iacobucci, and a few close colleagues who were convinced that the chronicling of immigrant, ethnic, and Indigenous stories was essential to understanding Canada in the 20th century and beyond.
The MHSO is the creator of the most extensive assemblage in Canada of archival materials documenting immigrant, ethnic, and Indigenous experiences. Assisted by ethnic and Indigenous associations and dozens of actively engaged community researchers, the Society undertook oral history interviews and collected historical photographs and personal and institutional textual records during the first decades of its operation, producing a resource of unparalleled richness and scope. More recently, additional collection activities, including an ethnic press retrieval program, have been undertaken in connection with specific projects. Today, as a result of these efforts, some 100 ethnocultural and Indigenous communities, and over 280 municipalities are represented in the MHSO’s archival holdings. There is no other comparable grouping of primary sources in Canada capable of opening up alternative readings of the country’s past – especially its post-World War II history.
The Society has long been committed to public education. Often working in partnership with other organizations, it has produced and distributed many publications, mounted and circulated countless exhibitions, and staged innumerable conferences, public lectures, and special events. In recent years, it has focused on virtual programming. The MHSO also provides professional and technical services to teachers and students, scholars and community historians, heritage and cultural organizations, and members of ethnocultural and Indigenous communities.
The MHSO is the creator of the most extensive assemblage in Canada of archival materials documenting immigrant, ethnic, and Indigenous experiences. Assisted by ethnic and Indigenous associations and dozens of actively engaged community researchers, the Society undertook oral history interviews and collected historical photographs and personal and institutional textual records during the first decades of its operation, producing a resource of unparalleled richness and scope. More recently, additional collection activities, including an ethnic press retrieval program, have been undertaken in connection with specific projects. Today, as a result of these efforts, some 100 ethnocultural and Indigenous communities, and over 280 municipalities are represented in the MHSO’s archival holdings. There is no other comparable grouping of primary sources in Canada capable of opening up alternative readings of the country’s past – especially its post-World War II history.
The Society has long been committed to public education. Often working in partnership with other organizations, it has produced and distributed many publications, mounted and circulated countless exhibitions, and staged innumerable conferences, public lectures, and special events. In recent years, it has focused on virtual programming. The MHSO also provides professional and technical services to teachers and students, scholars and community historians, heritage and cultural organizations, and members of ethnocultural and Indigenous communities.
Scope and Content
The fonds consists of audio and photographic materials collected by the MHSO in an effort to preserve the records and promote the histories of migration, ethnicity, and Indigeneity. The fonds also includes projects the MHSO undertook with other heritage organizations, such as the Ontario Black History Society and the Delhi Tobacco Museum and Heritage Centre.
Contains 21 series:
1. Core Interview Collection
2. African Canadian Collection
3. Glengarry County Collection
4. Delhi Tobacco Belt Collection
5. Nishnawbe Aski Nation Collection
6. Southeast Asia Refugees Collection
7. Ethnic Face of Toronto / Toronto Storefronts & Street Scenes Projects
8. Voices of Chinese Canadian Women Project
9. But Women Did Come / Reflections Projects
10. People & Neighbourhoods of Toronto Project
11. Many Rivers to Cross Project
12. Safe Haven Project
13. Austrian Immigration to Canada Project
14. Five Generations Project
15. German Canadian Project
16. Fortunato Rao Project
17. Agincourt Project
18. Hungarian Exodus Project
19. Chinese Canadian Women Project 1923-1967
20. Baycrest Journey through Memory Project
21. Past MHSO Researchers/Interviewers Project
Contains 21 series:
1. Core Interview Collection
2. African Canadian Collection
3. Glengarry County Collection
4. Delhi Tobacco Belt Collection
5. Nishnawbe Aski Nation Collection
6. Southeast Asia Refugees Collection
7. Ethnic Face of Toronto / Toronto Storefronts & Street Scenes Projects
8. Voices of Chinese Canadian Women Project
9. But Women Did Come / Reflections Projects
10. People & Neighbourhoods of Toronto Project
11. Many Rivers to Cross Project
12. Safe Haven Project
13. Austrian Immigration to Canada Project
14. Five Generations Project
15. German Canadian Project
16. Fortunato Rao Project
17. Agincourt Project
18. Hungarian Exodus Project
19. Chinese Canadian Women Project 1923-1967
20. Baycrest Journey through Memory Project
21. Past MHSO Researchers/Interviewers Project
Restrictions
The collection is open to researchers. Some restrictions may apply as specified in the access field of the item.
Subjects
various