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Please note the Archives of Ontario will be closed on November 11 for Remembrance Day.

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At Centre Stage...



Miyopin Cheechoo, looking at the first page of the written treaty document at the Treaties 1 - 11 National Gathering at Taykwa Tagamou Nation, August 2017
Photo courtesy of Christina Nielsen

The Archives of Ontario is collaborating with partners to share an original copy of Treaty 9 in Toronto and Timmins during Treaties Recognition Week (November 3-9, 2024). By sharing the Treaty, we hope to increase access to this important living document among Indigenous communities and create opportunities for students to gain a deeper understanding of treaties, treaty obligations and the oral version of the Treaty 9.

Watch this space or contact us at reference@ontario.ca for more information on how and when to view Treaty 9.

A selection of Tarot cards depicting multicoloured drawings, diagrams and text.

Channel your intuition and challenge traditional forms of knowledge production by visiting Artists' Tarot and the Archive and Portraits as Portals — two exhibitions by DisplayCult, on until March 31 in our Reading Room. Visit our exhibition webpage to learn more.

Moses Brantford Jr. Leading an Emancipation Day parade down Dalhousie Street, Amherstburg, Ontario, [ca. 1894]

The Archives of Ontario is pleased to launch its new online exhibit “Slavery and Abolition in Upper Canada.” The exhibit is a refresh and a reframing of the Archives’ 2007 exhibit “Enslaved Africans in Upper Canada.” We hope that through this exhibit, we can encourage a greater understanding of the history of slavery and the lasting impact it has had on Black communities in the province.

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Find thousands of high-resolution images from our collections on Wikimedia Commons through our GLAM-Wiki webpage .  All images are free to use, but we ask that you please credit the Archives of Ontario.