Fonds RC0918 - Judith Robinson fonds

Zone du titre et de la mention de responsabilité

Titre propre

Judith Robinson fonds

Dénomination générale des documents

  • Document textuel

Titre parallèle

Compléments du titre

Mentions de responsabilité du titre

Notes du titre

Niveau de description

Fonds

Cote

RC0918

Zone de l'édition

Mention d'édition

Mentions de responsabilité relatives à l'édition

Zone des précisions relatives à la catégorie de documents

Mention d'échelle (cartographique)

Mention de projection (cartographique)

Mention des coordonnées (cartographiques)

Mention d'échelle (architecturale)

Juridiction responsable et dénomination (philatélique)

Zone des dates de production

Date(s)

  • 1913-2000, predominantly 1928-1961 (Production)
    Producteur
    Robinson, Judith

Zone de description matérielle

Description matérielle

4.67 m of textual records
53 photographs (b&w : 25.5 x 32 cm and smaller)

Zone de la collection

Titre propre de la collection

Titres parallèles de la collection

Compléments du titre de la collection

Mention de responsabilité relative à la collection

Numérotation à l'intérieur de la collection

Note sur la collection

Zone de la description archivistique

Nom du producteur

(1899-1961)

Notice biographique

Judith Robinson was born in Toronto, Ont. on Victoria Street on April 6, 1899. She was the daughter of Jessie and John Robinson Robinson (nicknamed “Black Jack Robinson”), who was the editor of the Toronto Telegram until his death in 1929. She attended Toronto Model School until age 12, when she contracted a childhood illness which stopped her schooling. Self-taught in journalism and literature, she also developed an interest in architecture.

Known as ‘Brad’ to her friends, Robinson became a reporter at the Toronto Globe in 1929. Under Globe President George McCullagh, she wrote a Page One feature column daily beginning in 1936. She resigned in 1940 over a political disagreement with the Globe’s coverage of World War II. With her brother John and Oakley Dalgleish, she clandestinely printed advertisements under the name “Canada Calling,” criticizing Mackenzie King government’s slow response to the war effort. In May 1941, she and Dalgleish founded NEWS, a national weekly newspaper whose editorial office was her home at 63 Wellesley St. NEWS closed in 1946. During the war she was also was active in the Women’s Emergency Committee which petitioned the Canadian government to close the Christie Street Veteran’s Hospital in Toronto. Those efforts helped result in the opening of Sunnybrook Military Hospital in 1946. Beginning in 1953, she wrote a daily column for the Toronto Telegram until her death on December 17, 1961.

Robinson authored three non-fiction books: Tom Cullen of Baltimore (1949), As We Came By (1951), and This Is On the House (1957). She edited John Farthing’s political treatise, Freedom Wears a Crown, and helped publish the medical memoir Days of Living: The Journal of Martin Roher, for which she wrote the introduction.

Historique de la conservation

Portée et contenu

Fonds consists of Judith Robinson’s correspondence; clippings of her newspaper writings; drafts, notes, and research files; working records of NEWS; personal material; petitions and other material related to the Christie Street Hospital campaign; manuscripts and writing related to her books, published and unpublished; and manuscripts and writing by her friends sent to her for editing.

Zone des notes

État de conservation

Source immédiate d'acquisition

The material has been in the custody of the creator’s niece, Gillian (Robinson) Watt, since 1974. She donated the first accrual to McMaster University in 2017, and the second accrual in 2022.

Classement

The first accrual is arranged within the following series:

  1. Correspondence. Boxes 1-9
  2. Articles, clippings. Boxes 10-15.
  3. Articles, research. Boxes 16-18
  4. “Calling Canada” / NEWS. Boxes 19-25.
  5. Invoices and personal material. Box 26.
  6. Christie St. Hospital. Box 27.
  7. Manuscripts and writing. Boxes 28-33.
  8. Work by other authors. Boxes 34-38.
  9. Oversized material. Boxes 39-40.

The second accrual (Box 41) consists of miscellaneous material including juvenilia, some correspondence, clippings, and other material.

Langue des documents

    Écriture des documents

      Localisation des originaux

      Disponibilité d'autres formats

      Restrictions d'accès

      No restrictions on access.

      Délais d'utilisation, de reproduction et de publication

      Instruments de recherche

      Éléments associés

      Éléments associés

      Accroissements

      No further accruals are expected.

      Identifiant(s) alternatif(s)

      Numéro normalisé

      Numéro normalisé

      Mots-clés

      Mots-clés - Lieux

      Mots-clés - Noms

      Mots-clés - Genre

      Zone du contrôle

      Identifiant de la description du document

      RC0918

      Identifiant du service d'archives

      Règles ou conventions

      Statut

      Niveau de détail

      Dates de production, de révision et de suppression

      C. Long, 1st accrual, 2020.
      C. Long, 2nd accrual, 2022.

      Langue de la description

        Langage d'écriture de la description

          Sources

          Zone des entrées