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David Boyle


David Boyle
Boyle, David.jpg
Born 1842
Died 1911
Residence Curator of the Archaeological Museum, Toronto
Occupation museum work
Society Membership
membership Local Correspondent
left 1911 deceased
elected_AI 1900.10.23



Contents

Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

nominated for election 1900.05.15
Executive committee 1900.05.08: Resolved, to recommend to the Council for nomination as Local Correspondents, Mr David Boyle, of the Museum of Toronto, and Mr Cecil Wray of the Museum of Perak.
1900.10.23 accepts post of Local Correspondent

Notes From Elsewhere

David Boyle (born Greenock, Scotland 1 May 1842- died Toronto 14 February 1911) was a Canadian blacksmith, teacher, archaeologist, musicologist, and historian.
Boyle arrived in Canada from Scotland in 1856 and apprenticed to a blacksmith. He would become a teacher in rural Ontario in 1865, a school principal in Elora from 1871-1881, and later a bookseller in Toronto. Boyle followed what were then "radical child-centered theories"[1] of Johann Pestalozzi.
In 1884, Boyle became curator of the Canadian Institute Museum, a post he held until 1896, and of the Ontario Provincial Museum from 1886-1911. He cultivated a core of loyal collectors across southern and central Ontario who assisted him in archaeological digs and in collecting artifacts for the museums. These men included Andrew Frederick Hunter, George E Laidlaw, J. Hugh Hammond, John Long, Dr Thomas W. Beeman, William Wintemberg and Frederick William Waugh. He was also the Secretary of the Ontario Historical Society after 1898, and became highly influential in the local historical societies that grew up in Ontario in the late nineteenth century. In 1898, Boyle also began to conduct ethnographic fieldwork at the Six Nations of the Grand River near Brantford, after having met John Ojijatekha Brant-Sero through the Canadian Institute. He later met Dr Peter E Jones of the nearby Mississauga of the New Credit reserve who also assisted him in his fieldwork.[2] An Ontario Historical Plaque was erected by the province to commemorate David Boyle's role in Ontario's heritage.[3] His work served as the basis for archaeology as a serious scientific discipline in the province. Between 1887 and 1911, he published Annual Archaeological Reports for Ontario, Canada's first journal primarily dedicated to archaeology.
Boyle was also a history buff and preservationist, as well as the author of a book of nonsense poetry for children.
He died in 1911 after a serious stroke. His papers are housed at the provincial Archives of Ontario, the University of Toronto Archives, and at the Royal Ontario Museum archives.

Publications

External Publications

House Publications

Paganism of the civilised Iroquois of Ontario 1900

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Other Material

Royal Ontario museum: Boyle’s correspondence, lectures, scrapbooks, poetry, and other records