Banking

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Banking

Banking

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Banking

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Banking

7 Archival description results for Banking

7 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Bank Letter - July 30, 1970

Letter from a manager of the Bank of Montreal to Meredith & Co., barristers and solicitors, regarding Harry and Esther Seidelman's house mortgage. Letter is dated July 30, 1970. This letter is one of two enclosures of another letter (see Part 1 of Item 1 in this file).

Leon Broitman

Oral History interview with Leon Broitman. Leon was born in 1922 in the USSR. He talks about the Ukrainian Holocaust and living in the USSR under Stalin. He started studying to become a teacher but was drafted and subsequently wounded during WW2 and never completed his education. After the war he came to Canada and became a cutter (Tailor) in Montreal. He then moved to Ottawa and opened a store. He also started an investment company that was still in business at the time of the interview (2013). He closed is store in Ottawa and moved to BC. He had 4 children with his wife and talks about them and their careers. Much of the interview is about Soviet Union history and talking about WW2 and the Germans.

Letter - April 11, 1970

Letter from Meredith, Marshall, McConnell & Scott, barristers and solicitors, to Harry and Esther Seidelman regarding their house mortgage. Letter is dated August 11, 1970.

Letter with Two Enclosures - August 11, 1970

Letter with two enclosures (another letter and a form) from Meredith, Marshall, McConnell & Scott, barristers and solicitors, to Harry and Esther Seidelman regarding their house mortgage. Letter is dated August 11, 1970.

Mortgage Form [1970]

Form for Meredith, Marshall, McConnell & Scott, barristers and solicitors, regarding Harry and Esther Seidelman's house mortgage. Form is undated and not filled out. This form is one of two enclosures of another letter (see Part 1 of Item 1 in this file).

Personal Finances Goldberg

File contains various receipts spanning from 1932 to 1970. Some are bank receipts, while others are sales receipts for everyday items such as linen handkerchiefs.