A copy of a newspaper article titled "Bennie's Corner stone moved to Mill of Kintail," from the Almonte Gazette that was published in 1979. The article describes the origins of basketball from the game Duck on a Rock and the rock where this game was played by Naismith being moved from its post glacial resting place at Bennie's Corner to the Mill of Kintail. There are photos in the article. The first page there is a copy of a handwritten note from Edna Gardner Lowry, who is interviewed in the article, talking about the article being donated and about Naismith and some of the history behind the article. The note also mentions that she took at least one of the photos used in the article, but it doesn't say which one.
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James A. Naismith (November 6, 1861 – November 28, 1939), known as "The Father of Basketball" was born in Almonte, Ontario. When he was nine, both of his parents died of typhoid fever and he was raised by his uncle, who later financed Naismith's way through college. He earned his theological degree from McGill University and graduated from Springfield College, then the YMCA Training School, in 1891. After graduation, he was hired as a faculty member, where he taught for five years. It is in his first year as a faculty member at Springfield College that he created the game of Basketball as an activity for an unruly class. In 1895, Naismith enrolled at the Gross Medical School in Denver and received his M.D. in 1898. In that same year, Naismith took the position of department head of physical education at the University of Kansas, where he remained until his death.