[2][7] [8] These are considered by scholars and the public alike as a high point in the history of the graphic arts in Canada.
[9] Manly went sketching with Frederick Henry (Fred) Brigden in Eastern Ontario, Quebec, and the Maritimes (1894-1906).
He wrote articles about the Conestogo country for the Canadian Magazine (May 1908) and did illustrations in colour for a book published in 1909, Canada by J.T.
[10] In the years 1906-1910, he produced least 30 paintings for Warwick Bro’s & Rutter, Limited of Toronto for reproduction as postcards.
in 1903, as well as a founding member of the Graphic Arts Club (1903)[5] and a member of the Associated Watercolour Painters, Toronto (1912), along with Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith, Frederick Henry (Fred) Brigden, Robert Ford Gagen, T.G.
[2][13] In the Edward P. Taylor Library & Archives, Art Gallery of Ontario is a book inscribed on the front endpaper "Notes: various / C.M.