1. Clipping and photocopy of article in local newspaper of unknown date, entitled “Members of Lochwinnoch Church Believe in Paying Way as They Go”. Anniversary social. Rev. Sinclair.
2. Photocopy of a map of Lochwinnoch drawn by Isobel McGregor in 1951 with family names, railway line, Lochiel Creek, etc.
3. Photocopy of typed note by Jenny McDevitt Storie in 1965, entitled “The McDevitt Farm”. James Storie, James Stewart, James Clark, Douglas family, Donald James Storie, James Caldwell, Anthony Caldwell, Edward McDevitt, Patrick McDevitt. Also photo (copy) of a birch bark canoe on top of a car.
4. Photocopy of 5-page notes. Phillips Farm (David Phillips). “Theme Song Old Lochwinnoch” (composed by Mrs. Leonard Lindsay). 3 photos: McGregor Bridge (old and new), photos 1941 by Isobel McGregor. “Miscellaneous Events”: first post office (1872 or 1873), first church (1841), first railway station (1880), first telephones (1909), first rural mail (1912), first car (1919), first radio , first tractor, first snow-ploughed roads (1941), first hay bailer (1949), first threshing machine with blower (1906), first forage harvester (1951), first electricity (1931), first television (1954), first school bus (1945) . . .
5. Photocopy of 8 legal pages of historical material regarding Lochwinnoch. “Brief History of Lochwinnoch Presbyterian Church”(formerly Castleford Presbyterian Church) by Rev, T.W. Brett, 1952. Photo of Rev. Brett and Mrs. Brett, Sep. 1945. Handwritten notes by Isobel McGregor. Photocopies of newspaper clippings. On last 2 pages: photocopy of “Journal of Rev. William Bell”, 1840 (a clergyman in Perth, Ont. who visited McNab Township in 1840). James Morris (postmaster). Passed an Indian camp with wigwams. Three small photos by Isobel McGregor, 1942 (church and manse).
6. Photocopy of newspaper report about the Lochwinnoch Women’s Institute (1914). Met in McGregor’s Grove. Speaker’s subject: Tuberculosis. On the same sheet: copy of an invitation to a birthday party in Lochwinnoch (1924). Florence E. Normand.
7. Photocopy of a handwritten calendar of events for the Lochwinnoch Women’s Institute (1939).
8. Clipping of newspaper article with photos, from Ottawa Citizen, Jan. 20, 2002, regarding “Canada’s disappearing heritage”. The photo of barns for sale included the landmark octagonal barn in Lochwinnoch (on the Horton side of the township line).