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Showing 12511 results
Authority recordInternational Who's who in community service
- CA QUA04045
- Corporate body
- n.d.
No information available on this creator.
International Typographical Union
- CA QUA01308
- Corporate body
- n.d.
The International Typographical Union was founded in 1869 and was the oldest surviving union in North America as of its dissolution in 1986. It was an industrial union for people involved in various aspects of the printing trade. It was a progressive union who allowed female members to join in 1869, making it one of the earliest unions to do so. The Kingston branch union #204 was the oldest trade union in Kingston at the time of the donation of its minute books and ledger to the Archives in 1964.
- CA QUA09888
- Corporate body
- fl. 1910s
The International Stationary Co., Picton, Canada
International Post Card Company
- CA QUA09887
- Corporate body
- fl. 1900s
The International Post Card Company, Montreal
International Longshoremen's Association - Local 1477 (Thorold, Ont.)
- CA QUA01309
- Corporate body
- n.d.
In 1892 delegates from eleven ports convened in Detroit where they adopted the by-laws of the longshoremen's Chicago local and the name National Longshoremen's Association of The United States. By 1895, the name was changed to International Longshoremen's Association to reflect the growing numbers of Canadian members. Shortly thereafter, the ILA affiliated with the American Federation of Labor (AFL).
International Image Conversions Inc.
- CA QUA10053
- Corporate body
- fl. 1980s
No information is available about this creator.
International Hockey Hall of Fame
- CA QUA02317
- Corporate body
- 10 September 1943-
Founded by the National Hockey League and the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association on September 10, 1943, Kingston's International Hockey Hall of Fame and Museum is the original hockey hall of fame and the oldest sports hall of fame in Canada. Captain James T. Sutherland of Kingston spearheaded the bid to bring the Hockey Hall of Fame to Kingston and was inducted into the hall in 1947 - one of the first forty-two members inducted into the hall during the Kingston-era.
Capt. Sutherland died in 1955 and never realized his dream of seeing the hall of fame built in Kingston. Fifteen-years after initially awarding the Hall of Fame to Kingston, N.H.L. President Clarence Campbell withdrew support in 1958 and Toronto was awarded the hall of fame. Despite a major setback, the Kingston organizing committee moved forward and the International Hockey Hall of Fame finally opened in 1965 in a brand new building on the Kingston Memorial Centre grounds at the corner of York and Alfred Streets.
In 1992, an agreement was reached with the International Ice Hockey Federation to have the Kingston shrine become the International Ice Hockey Federation Museum. That partnership was abandoned in 1997 and since that time, the Kingston hall had been known as the International Hockey Hall of Fame and Museum. On January 1, 2003, the operating name was changed back to International Hockey Hall of Fame, in part to help celebrate 60th anniversary celebrations.