Behrend, Carl. The Legend of the Christmas Ship: A Novel. Munising, Michigan: Old Country Books and Records, 2005.

Bourrie, Mark. Many a Midnight Ship: True Stories of Great Lakes Shipwrecks. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press, 2005.

Cox, E. T. A Chronology of Commercial Fishing on Lake Erie and the Detroit River: People and Events, 1215-2000 (CD)

Gough, Barry M. Through Water, Ice and Fire: Schooner Nancy of the War of 1812. Toronto: Dundum, 2006.

Greenwood, John. Greenwood’s and Dill’s Lake Boats 1991-1995. Cleveland, Ohio: Freshwater Press.

Liebenthal, Dale L. Archeological Search for Shipwrecks in the Vicinity of Kelley’s Island, Lake Erie: A Pilot Study, August 2003. Columbus, Ohio: DNR Division of Geologic Survey, 2006.

Longhurst, G. I. Purvis Marine Limited. Vineland, Ontario: Glenaden Press, 2007.

Ramsay, Raymond. For Whom the Bell Tolls: The Unexplained Losses of S. S. Edmund Fitzgerald, M. V. Derbyshire, and Other Vessels of the Bulk-Cargo Silent Service. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Dorrance Publishing Co., 2006.

Malcomson, Robert. Historical Dictionary of the War of 1812. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2006

Maritime History as World History, edited by Daniel Finamore. Salem, Massachusetts: Peabody Essex Museum, 2004

Tenold, Stig. Tankers in Trouble: Norwegian Shipping and the Crisis of the 1970s and 1980s. St. John’s, Newfoundland : International Maritime Economic History Association 2006

Thiesen, William H. Industrializing American Shipbuilding: The Transformation of Ship Design and Construction, 1820-1920. Gainesville : University Press of Florida, c2006

Von Riedel, Franz A. Tugboats of the Great Lakes. Hudson, Wisconsin: Iconographix, 2007

Wachter, Georgann and Michael. Erie Wrecks and Lights. Avon Lake, Ohio: Corporate Impact, 2007.

See Guide to Local Government Records on our website for a complete list of our holdings.

See Guide to Newspapers on our website for a complete list of our holdings.

U.S. Census. 1880. Non-Population Census of Agriculture (14 reels)

Correspondence from the office of the Mayor of Toledo has been prepared and is now ready for use by researchers. At just over nine cubic feet, the collection covers activities in the Mayor’s office during the last years of the Great Depression, World War II and the first post-war years. A complement to the larger Toledo City Manager Correspondence (1934-1967), researchers studying governmental functions, the history of the city of Toledo or mayoral administrations in Toledo would find the documents in this collection very useful.

To review the finding aid for this collection, see Toledo Mayor Correspondence on our website.

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