Series consists of a copy of "Brampton: an illustrated history" (1987), written by Helga Loverseed. The book was published by Windsor Publications in cooperation with the Brampton Board of Trade.
Series consists of five photographs, collected by or created for the Brampton Board of Trade.
- Item 1: Brampton Fire Department, ca. 1905 (21 x 16 cm, mounted)
- item 2: Official Opening, Brampton Real Estate Board and Chamber of Commerce Office, 11 April 1958 (19 x 24 cm)
- item 3: Office, 39 Main St. S., ca. 1960 (19 x 24 cm)
- item 4: 1963 American Motors Rambler (24 x 16.5 cm)
- item 5: group of men seated in a restaurant, possibly a Brampton Chamber of Commerce Annual General Meeting, ca. 1950 (35 mm negative, single frame)
Series consists of scrapbooks with clippings from local newspapers, relating to the Brampton Board of Trade and local businesses:
- Vol. 1: 1958-1960
- Vol. 2: 1960-1962
- Vol. 3: 1963-1965
- Vol. 4: 1965-1966
- Vol. 5: 1967-1968
- Vol. 6: 1972-1973
- Vol. 7: n.d.
Series consists of minute books created during the third and fourth incarnations of the Board:
- Vol. 1: 1909-1919
- Vol. 2: 1947-1955
- Vol. 3: 1956-1961
Item consists of a photographic postcard of the 1948 Brampton flood.
Item consists of a postcard of a photograph of the 1948 Etobicoke Creek flood in Brampton, inscribed on the side by the owner "Brampton 1948".
Item consists of a postcard of houses on Main Street South, Brampton, including a car starting up one of the long driveways.
Item consists of a postcard of the Peel County Courthouse, built in 1867, likely a reprint of an earlier photograph.
Item consists of a postcard parodying the accent of a European immigrant.
This generic postcard design is known to have been used in the United States as well. (Bryon L. Reppert, "Postcard History Series: Mechanicsburg", (Charleston SC: Arcadia Publishing), 2010, page 18.)
Item consists of a postcard with a generic reproduction of a watercolour painting of a flower, to which the name "Brampton" has been added.
Item consists of a generic postcard of cattle and a red flag, on which Brampton's name has been added. The colourized photograph shows brown, spotted cows, which would suggest Guernsey, Ayrshire, or Red and White Holstein; it is likely, however, that they are actually simply unnecessarily colourized Holsteins.