Marine Museum of the Great Lakes At Kingston Access Screens
Marine Museum, Kingston
Introduction
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| Marine Museum of the Great Lakes, Kingston Ontario |
| |
| Welcome. There are over 30,000 records in the data base - approximately |
| 25% of the museum holdings. On-line access to 25% of the |
| collections seemed better than waiting an indetermineate number |
| of years for this information to become available. There are |
| in-house finding aids. for most of the collections. |
| |
| PF8 to Move Forward through the information screens - PF7 Back |
| 1. Categories of Information 2. Quick Search Information |
| 3. Where is the Museum 4. About the Artifacts |
| 5. Library Collections 6. Pictorial Collections |
| 7. Archival Collections 8. Ship Documentation |
| 9. Ship Owner Documentaton |
| |
Marine Museum of the Great Lakes at Kingston
- Categories of Information
- A record will give specific information
about a particular artifact, book, document, picture, ship and owner.
- True Artifact
- Objects in the collection, eg sextants, models etc
- Documentary Pictorial Artifact
- photographs, paintings, plans
- Documentary Bibliographic Artifact
- Books, journals etc.
- Documentary Archival Artifact
- documents, letters associated with
individuals and companies
- Ship Documentation
- a reference data base about selected ships
- Owner Documentation
- a reference data base about selected owners
Marine Museum of the Great Lakes at Kingston
Type Exp Keyword for more detailed search techniques.
KEYWORD searching is a powerful way to find information. To search by
Keyword type K followed by one or more search terms. The system
will look for the occurrence of the terms anywhere in the record.
- K=csl adj group
- will search for the two words together.
- K=compass
- will search for all occurrances of compass in a record. That
includes books about the compass and of course all artifacts
- K=compass not bibliographic.
- The word not excludes books in the
search. (Why? The Category for books includes the word bibliographic
which is not wanted in this search)
- K=compass and toghill.
- and ensures toghill must be in the record
with compass. Toghill is an author who writes about compasses.
- K=compass or navigation.
- Searches for the first or second or both terms.
- K=com?
- searches for all words with the first three letter "com"
Marine Museum of the Great Lakes at Kingston
The museum is located near downtown Kingston only a few blocks from
Queen's University. The museum reference library and archives is open
10 to 5 daily, Monday through Friday. You are welcome at any time but
in order to ensure help from our small staff we advise calling the
museum prior to your visit to make an appointment.
In addition to the museum we recommend the considerable resources of
Queen's University Archives, Special Collections and Library. The
Royal Military College Library is also recommended.
55 Ontario Street, Kingston, Ontario. K7L 2Y2
Telephone: +1 613 542 2261; Telefax: +1 613 542 0043
Trilliam Museum Network trill.mmglk
Artifacts
Artifacts are representative of those used aboard sailing, steam and
small craft on the lakes and include objects from related shore
activities. Included are navigation instruments, tools used by ship-
builders, sailmakers and the naval architect, models, small craft,
uniforms, domestic articles and engines. Fields used to describe
artifacts: Accession # , Title (object name), Category) (True
Artifact), Vessel (if applicable), Title (name that appears on
the object), Date (when created or patented), Artist One (eg engine
manufacturer), Artist Two (eg modeller of an engine), Dimension ,
Material , Condition , Acquired , Location , Notes .
Only filled fields appear in a record. Please note the accession #
if you want to look at an object.
Library Collections
The library has over 8,000 titles. The subjects are international and they also cover most aspects of Canadian marine activities: yachting, canals,
ship registers, ship histories, fleet histories, steam technology, naval
history, navigation, shipwreck directories, transactions of nautical
societies, ethnographic studies, naval architecture, shipbuilding, sails
and rigging, underwater archaeology, engineering, ports and museums etc.
There are currently over 250 journals and over 1,000 vertical files.
Fields used to describe books are Acc # (internal control numnber),
LC (Library of Congress call number), Author , Title , Subject ,
Publication Data , Category (Documentary Bibliographic Artifact)
Notes . Only filled fields appear in the record.
Pictorial Collections
The naval architects provided design drawings; shipyards, builders
plans and fleets working drawings altogether totaling more than
30,000 items. This is an important collection for the student of
design, technology, and the forces affecting technology transfer. There
are currently over 12,000 photographs distributed amongst twenty major
collections as well as paintings and drawings.
Fields are Accession # ,
Title (object name eg negative), Category (Documentary Pictorial
Artifact), Vessel (if applicable), Title (as on the picture), Date
(of picture), Artist One (eg name of painter), Artist Two (eg
lithographer of painting), Dimensions , Material , Condition ,
Acquired , Location , Notes . Only filled fields appear in the record.
Archival Collections
The archives contain many private and corporate papers, cine, video
and audio tapes. The collections lend themselves to a study of labour
issues, ship and shipyard management, lives of sailors, shipbuilding,
ship and fleet operations, business practic, marine policy, design,
technology and social history.
The Fields are Acc # , Title
(log, contract etc), Category (Documentary Archival Artifact),
Vessel (if applicable), Date , Artist One (writer of document),
Artist Two (eg employer of writer of document), Dimensions ,
Material , Condition , Acquired , Location , Notes .
Only filled fields appear in the record. There are extensive finding
aids on site.
Ship Documentation
At present there are 4,500 records of ships registered at ports on the
Great Lakes - mostly 19th century. Ships will be added to this data base.
Category: Built By: Registered:
mmglno: *Construction: *Propulsion:
Vessel Name: Decks: Horsepower:
Official Number: Masts: Number of Owners:
Registry Port: *Rig: Dividing Factor:
Registry Year: *Vessel Type: Closing Year:
Port Number: Length: *Reason Closed:
Prev. Registered: Beam:
Prev. Regist. Date: Depth: There are inconsistances due to
Where Built: Gross: differing standards.
Year Built: Net: * tables will be availble
Ship Owner Documentation
At present there are over 4,500 records in the data base of ships
registered at ports on the Great Lakes - mostly from the 19th
century. Not all of the individual registers of ships contained owner
information thus there are fewer owners than ships.
Fields in the
owner data base are: MMGLNO (important cross reference number that
links you to the ship), Title (name of vessel owner), Category
(Owner Documentation), Official # (the registry number from the source
register), Port Number (register number for that port for a particular
year), Owner Number (number of individuals co-owning the vessel),
Shares (divisor of 64), Date Bought , Date Sold , Occupation (of
owner), Residence , Data Source (important you know the source since
each souce will capture information according to need) Only filled
fields appear in a record.
Ship Owner Documentation
All fields are searcheable, shown here with typical data
Vessel Owner: Occupation:
Category: Ship Owner Documentation Residence:
mmglno: Builder/Owner:
Official Number: Data Source: Registry
Port Number:
Owner Number:
Shares:
Date Bought:
Date Sold: NOTE: Not all fields are present in
each record