Item is a photograph of Mrs. Arbuckle, who was born Marjorie Bradley Smith, and her seven children. Mrs. Arbuckle was born on August 19, 1899 in Massachusetts, USA, and was married to George Lawrence Arbuckle (1899-1941). She died on Octover 7, 1985 in Riverton, Pictou County.
Item is a photograph of Nita Pearl Fraser, who was born November 17, 1917 in Stellarton. She was married to Wentzell Reim, and they had at least one daughter, Sharon Reim. Fraser died in New Glasgow in 2001.
Item is a photograph of Dorothy Dunbar, who was born in 1914 and died in 2001. She was married to Hugh Daniel Cruickshank (1910-1992), and the couple had two daughters: Jean Estelle (1940-2009), and Ann, who lives in Queens Co., N.S.
Item is a photograph of baby Kathryn Elizabeth Johnstone, who was born in Coalburn, Pictou County in 1934. Kathryn worked as a nurse, and married Wayne C. Buttle of Thorburn. The couple had four sons: Jeffrey, Edwin, Leslie, and Derek. Kathryn died in October 1981 at the age of 47.
Item is a photograph of the two children of Mrs. McDonald. Frederick McDonald (1923-2015) married Marie Annabelle Muirhead. Katherine Jean "Jeannie" McDonald (1928-2015) married Francis Clifford Pitts.
Item is photograph of Isabella McIntosh, who was born September 10, 1907 in Stellarton, the daughter of John William McIntosh (1880-1910) and Marion Dunbar (1881-1951). She was married to Duncan Frederick McDonald (1908-2000) and died August 30, 2003 in New Glasgow. Photograph is annotated: "Aberdeen Graduate"
Item is a photograph of Mr. George Wong (1890-1966) with his wife, Molly Lee, and their daughter, Jennie. Jennie married Mr. MacNeil and lived in Springhill, Nova Scotia.
Item is a photograph of Doris Cunningham, who was born on March 3, 1914 in Stellarton. Her mother died of tuberculosis when Doris was a baby, and her father remarried Gertrude Sinclair. Doris married Aubrey William MacDonald (1916-1988) and had two children, daughter Aurelia McDonald and son Reginald Webster Cunningham. Doris died in New Glasgow in 1996.
File contains a photograph of two Black Nova Scotian soldiers, posed standing in army uniforms with caps and crops, most likely members of the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) No. 2 Construction Battalion. The No. 2 was raised in Truro, Nova Scotia, in 1916, and was the only Canadian battalion composed of Black soldiers in Canadian military history.