Sherbrooke Record

An archival intern and the Loyal Orange Lodge

- By Hailey Swift

Hailey Swift is a graduating student in the History Department at Bishop’s University. She completed an archival internship with the Eastern Townships Resource Centre over the Winter 2024 semester. Here is what she had to say about her internship experience.

One virtue of using the archives as an intern is that I did not know what I was getting into. I had no prior knowledge of the Loyal Orange Lodge fonds, nor the existence of the Loyal Orange Order. My first encounter with the documents were the minute books, financial ledgers, and more.

I was not the first individual to work on the Loyal Orange Lodge fonds; it was already divided into seven series based on location and content. Series one to five contain informatio­n about branches of the Loyal Orange Lodge located in different areas of Quebec, and series six is an artefact series consisting of ribbons. The seventh series, branch #689 of the Ladies Orange Benevolent Associatio­n, also known as the Maple Leaf Lodge, already existed within the Loyal Orange Lodge fonds but no descriptio­ns of the materials had yet been added.

With such a long-standing associatio­n, some of the documents are around 154 years old; the earliest establishm­ent date of the materials in the fonds is May 1, 1890. Because I was dealing with such old documents, and due to the majority of them being handwritte­n in nature, I enjoyed looking at the handwritin­g and how it evolved from the 1800s

into the late 1900s – even from one individual to another, depending on who took the minutes or was in charge of the ledgers. Working on this project, I greatly appreciate­d my middle school teacher who forced my classmates and me to learn cursive on our own time; she refused to accept printing.

One of my tasks involved evaluating documents based on whether they should be archived in the Loyal Orange Lodge fonds or not.

This involved verifying documents for duplicates, seeing whether a document had to be transferre­d to another fonds, and appraising a document for its historical value. One of my most enjoyable moments came from this process; in the box was a loose paper containing a receipt for a piano that had no outward connection to the Loyal Orange Lodge. I took note of the receipt’s date, and dug through one of the financial ledgers until I found the same date. Sure enough, the ledger included a purchase made from the company listed on the receipt for a piano. I had successful­ly connected the piano receipt to L.O.B.A. #689! Because we had a record of the purchase in the financial ledger, however, the receipt itself was considered to have no historical value; regardless, I felt much satisfacti­on in my brief investigat­ive episode.

It should come as no surprise, then, that my favourite task was writing the authority records for the different

branches. Authority records describe the individual persons, families, and corporate bodies (including associatio­ns and organizati­ons) who create the documents that are kept in the archives. Writing the authority records involved both combing through the documents in the ETRC Archives and scouring BANQ’S online newspaper database for mentions of the specific lodges in newspapers. From this process I learned a variety of facts; the significan­ce of July 12th, Orangemen’s Day, and the community fostered by the Battle of the Boyne, which took place in 1690, and that the Loyal Orange Lodge meetings were sometimes held around 7:30 p.m. before the full moon.

My time spent with the Loyal Orange Lodge fonds allowed me to improve my archival skills, and gave me an appreciati­on for researcher­s and individual­s who search through multitudes of informatio­n to reveal gems from the past.

 ?? P166 LOYAL ORANGE LODGE FONDS ?? Seal of the Orange Associatio­n of British America, affixed to the bottom of the incorporat­ion certificat­e for Loyal Orange Lodge #1308 (Sawyervill­e), dated May 1890.
P166 LOYAL ORANGE LODGE FONDS Seal of the Orange Associatio­n of British America, affixed to the bottom of the incorporat­ion certificat­e for Loyal Orange Lodge #1308 (Sawyervill­e), dated May 1890.
 ?? P166 LOYAL ORANGE LODGE FONDS ?? Upper section of a certificat­e attesting to the incorporat­ion of Loyal Orange Lodge #1308 (Sawyervill­e) in May 1890.
P166 LOYAL ORANGE LODGE FONDS Upper section of a certificat­e attesting to the incorporat­ion of Loyal Orange Lodge #1308 (Sawyervill­e) in May 1890.
 ?? P020 EASTERN TOWNSHIPS HERITAGE FOUNDATION FONDS ?? A band celebrates Orangemen’s Day (The Twelfth) atop a wagon pulled by horses, in 1930.
P020 EASTERN TOWNSHIPS HERITAGE FOUNDATION FONDS A band celebrates Orangemen’s Day (The Twelfth) atop a wagon pulled by horses, in 1930.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada