| The Archives of Ontario
holds a wide range of health-related records from a variety of
sources, including papers from health-care providers, hospital
records, drawings for newspaper articles, photographs, films,
and files from many different government offices. A few samples
are presented here.
The medical daybooks of Dr. James Miles Langstaff (1825-1889)
give a daily account of the patients he visited, purpose of the
visit, and medicines prescribed or administered. Typical of the
period, they are a chronological listing kept as an aid for the
doctor’s memory. Dr. Langstaff was a physician based in
Richmond Hill. The daybooks, together with his account books for
keeping track of debts owed by patients, provide a wealth of information
about medical practice and pioneer life in rural Ontario.
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Medical daybook of Dr. James Langstaff, Dec. 13-24, 1849 James Miles Langstaff’s medical daybooks Reference Code: F 4329-1-0-1 Archives of Ontario |
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| The transcribed copies
of letters and reports sent by pre-confederation Chief Emigrant
Agent A. B. Hawke discuss a variety of subjects, including his
work with hospitals and boards of health to co-ordinate medical
services during the typhus epidemic that affected many Irish immigrants
who came to Canada following the Great Potato Famine.
This is part of a letter to Hon. John A. MacDonald, who was Receiver
General and Commissioner of Crown Lands at the time, reporting
on the state of health and social consequences of the new immigrants. |

Click to
see a larger image (71K) Letterbook of
A. B. Hawke, 12 August 1847 Chief Emigrant Agent’s letterbooks RG 11-1-0-3, pp. 130-131 Reference Code: Microfilm reel MS 6910 Archives of Ontario | 
Click to
see a larger image (127K) Letterbook of
A. B. Hawke, 12 August 1847 Chief Emigrant Agent’s letterbooks RG 11-1-0-3, pp. 130-131 Reference Code: Microfilm reel MS 6910 Archives of Ontario |
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| Public health programs
intersect with the values and structures of society and can be
controversial. Contemporary newspapers and political cartoons
tell the stories of public health initiatives and some of the
challenges they faced. This cartoon comments on the attempts of
Charles Hastings, Toronto’s Medical Officer of Health, to
make Toronto cleaner and healthier in the early 20th century.
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!["M.H.O Hastings: I had no idea you needed cleaning up so badly", [between 1910 and 1914]](pics/6074_cartoon_520.jpg)
"M.H.O Hastings: I had no idea you needed cleaning up so
badly", [between 1910 and 1914] Newton McConnell fonds Reference Code: C 301, 61 Archives of Ontario, I0006074 |
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| The records of provincial
hospitals and health care institutions contain information about
the development of modern medicine or the training of nurses,
as well as other less expected subjects such as building architecture
and office procedures.
The document below tells us much about patient life at a time
when able patients were expected to pay for their stay in hospital
and also “assist in nursing others, or in such services
as the Lady Superintendent may require.”
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Click
to see a larger image (528K) Rules for Patients, Cornwall General Hospital, 1897 Cornwall General Hospital fonds Reference Code: F 1396, No. 31 Archives of Ontario |
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![Photo: Children being washed by a nurse at school, [ca. 1905]](pics/5195_nurse_with_kids_270.jpg)
Children being washed by a nurse at school, [ca. 1905] Public Health Nursing Branch Black and white print Reference Code: RG 10-30-2, 3.03.4
Archives of Ontario, I0005195
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Public Health Nurse sitting on a car at South Gillies, Thunder Bay
District, 1923 Ministry of Health Black and white print Reference Code: RG 10-30-2, 2.20.1 Archives of Ontario, I0005230 |
| Visiting public health
nurses were often the only source of medical assistance in remote
areas. Their reports of school inspections, family visits, and
other work throughout the province present an evocative picture
of social conditions at the time. Some reports include photographs.
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Click
to see a larger image (288K) School Section No. 2, Spohn Township, Rainy River District (unorganized),
June 1926 Public health nursing historical files Reference Code: RG 10-30-1-1.14 Archives of Ontario |
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Governments and private
organizations have produced a multitude of pamphlets, posters,
videos, and other material designed to promote healthy life styles
and reduce the spread of disease. These items are indicative of
the prevalent health concerns at the time of their creation and
also show the expected interests of the intended audience.
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Walter Moorhouse (1883-1957) was
an amateur photographer and the Classics Master at Jarvis Collegiate
in Toronto from 1918 to 1948. Moorhouse took film footage showing
some of the students’ health-related activities.
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Click to
see a larger image (140K) Influenza poster, 1918 Secretary of the Board of Health and Chief Medical Officer of Health subject files Reference Code: RG 62-4-9-450a.1 Archives of Ontario
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Video clip of dentist with student,
Toronto, 1946 Jarvis [Collegiate Institute] dental and TB services Walter Moorhouse fonds Reference Code: C 231-18-0-8 Archives of Ontario |
The artwork below is
from a Karate Kids comic book produced in 1990 by Street Kids
International and distributed in Ontario with the assistance of
the Ministry of Health. The comic was part of a series of materials
designed to promote AIDS awareness in street children.
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Karate Kids comic book, 1990 Ministry of Health publications and films Reference Code: RG 10-13, transfer 95-528, box 43 Archives of Ontario |

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"I got mine" buttons, 1973 Ministry of Health publications and films Reference Code: RG 10-13, transfer 84-325, box 68 Archives of Ontario
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| Murphy the Molar was
the mascot for the Ministry of Health dental programs during the
1970s.
Murphy the Molar Specialty items brochure, 1973 Ministry of Health publications and films Reference Code: RG 10-13, transfer 84-325, box 68 Archives of Ontario |
Murphy the Molar Television Commercials Reference Code: RG 10-13-0-3 Archives of Ontario |
Murphy the Molar Television Commercials Reference Code: RG 10-13-0-3 Archives of Ontario |
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