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Kings County Historical and Archival Society English
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Censuses in Kings County

  • Item
  • 1871-1966

A collection of censuses from Kings County. One document registers the population from 1871-194. Details places of worship, mills, stock. A census from 1971. A list of Kings County Municipal officers.

Gigantic Supplements: Young Lades Journal

  • Fonds
  • November 1871, March and June 1872, April and August 1873

Five copies of the Gigantic Supplements, Young Ladies Journal. These journals illustrate and show off fashions for young women.

Reverend Hiram A. Cody

  • Fonds
  • 1872 - 1972

This fond of Hiram. A Cody is comprised of two newspaper articles, parts one and two of an article written by Ted Jones, as well as two copies of an address given to the Kings County Historical Society by A. P. Hetherington, in 1972, titled Life and Times of H. A. Cody.

Reverend Cody was both a pastor and a literary figure, having prolifically written in many forms such as plays, short stories, novels, sermons ans serializations. He was born on the Washademoak, New Brunswick in 1872. He moved to the Yukon in 1904 as a travelling missionary, and in 1909 him and his family moved back to New Brunswick and to the rectorship of St. James' Church in Saint John. In 1927 Rev. Cody was appointed Archdeacon of Saint John. He died in 1984 at the age of 75.

Kings County Municipal Wardens

  • Item
  • 1877-1966

Six programs with a list of all the Kings County Municipal Wardens and the years that certain individuals were the Wardens.

Azor Hoyt's Diary Transcript

  • Item
  • 1881 - 1868

Azor Hoyt, son of Loyalists James and Mary Ann (Belden) Hoyt, was born on the 13th of September 1770 and died on the 2nd of June in 1842, and is buried in St. Paul's Cemetery in Hampton, New Brunswick. Azor moved with his family at age six or seven to New Brunswick from Connecticut, USA. The Diary has been titled "Ice Out Past My House," and was kept by Azor until his death in 1842, and it appears to have been continued by his grandson, Isaac Ketchum Hoyt, until his death in 1855. The entries from 1855 to 1868 were most likely made by Isaac's son, John Allan Hoyt.

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