{"id":3625,"date":"1956-04-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1956-04-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1956-vol-37-no-4-canadas-memorials\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:25:25","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:25:25","slug":"april-1956-vol-37-no-4-canadas-memorials","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1956-vol-37-no-4-canadas-memorials\/","title":{"rendered":"April 1956 &#8211; Vol. 37, No. 4 &#8211; Canada&#8217;s Memorials"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> Any country that is alive to its future                     should be interested in its past, but we are tempted by the                     pressures of the present to relax our grip on remembrance                     of what has been.<\/p>\n<p>Someone has said that the greatest mistake made by the contemporary                     generation -any contemporary generation &#8211; is that it does                     not read the minutes of the last meeting. It starts its course                     with the handicap of having to learn all over again in practice                     what it could have learned readily from the records of its                     ancestors.<\/p>\n<p>Our past is preserved in memoranda made up of stonework                     and earthwork, weapons and utensils, pictures, sculpture,                     scratches on rock and scribblings on paper. We cannot save                     everything, and everything is not worth saving. What we save                     must have significance. It may be a painting in an ancient                     church, or a bullet scar on a wall, or the signature on a                     document, or a frayed map, but it must have meant something                     in its day.<\/p>\n<p>We do not go back to our memorials to raise their broken                     wails as shelter for our families and parliaments today, but                     so that we may learn from them, so good in their time, what                     principles their builders used that are useful in our new                     circumstances.<\/p>\n<h3>How recent is our past!<\/h3>\n<p>The past of other continents is a mine of fossil facts.                     Here in Canada our past is more recent. Other nations are                     proud of a history that goes back to the night of time; we                     belong to the sunrise. But our little past is just as vital                     in our present as is their great past.<\/p>\n<p>The builders of early Canada were not equipped with the                     prodigious knowledge of engineering and manufacturing that                     we possess today. They were doing something for the first                     time. Within their means and technical understanding they                     did it well.<\/p>\n<p>This is the importance of our memorials, not that they are                     old, but that they were new. Every fort that was built, every                     portage that was broken around a waterfall, every palisade                     erected by an adventuresome community: every one of these                     was an advance, a broadening of horizons, something daringly                     new.<\/p>\n<h3>Historic buildings<\/h3>\n<p>Nearly every town and city in Canada has at least one building                     that was the scene of human adventure and significant events.<\/p>\n<p>John P. Kidd, Executive Director of the Canadian Citizenship                     Council, who has been active in preserving Canada&#8217;s memorials,                     wrote not long ago: &#8220;If one were to think of efficiency in                     terms of dollar value and of consumption of oil for heating                     and wages for cleaning and painting, then no doubt the modern                     kind of building is more efficient. However, if you think                     of it in terms of the culture and memories of a young nation                     with perhaps a thousand years of history ahead, then what                     price will you put on modernity?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A picture publication of Standard Oil Company (Kentucky)                     prints photographs every month of historic buildings in the                     <em>Scenic South<\/em>. A recent issue includes pictures of                     Shaker residences, relics of a strange sect that lasted from                     1805 to 1910; of the slave quarters where &#8220;Uncle Tom&#8221; lived;                     of an iron furnace built in 1791; of the house where the man                     who wrote &#8220;Home Sweet Home&#8221; was imprisoned as a suspected                     spy, and of a reconstruction of the first house built in Kentucky.<\/p>\n<p>Some may say that we in Canada have nothing like these;                     but we have! In the heart of Westmount is a farm-house                     that remained in the same family for 285 years; its basement                     has embrasures through which the men fired at raiding Indians,                     while their womenfolk and children took refuge in a sealed-off                     room. At Lake Memphremagog is a stone house built by brothers                     who came here at the time of the American revolution. Lachine                     Manor, built almost 300 years ago, has been converted into                     a museum.<\/p>\n<p>The Montcalm house in Quebec, reputed to be the residence                     of the great French soldier and his death place after the                     Battle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759, was rescued by the                     local planning commission from wreckers just a few months                     ago. Ross House, the first official post office in western                     Canada (1855) was saved by efforts of the Manitoba Historical                     Society. The house in which Sir Wilfrid Laurier was born has                     been acquired as a national memorial. The York, Ontario, Pioneer                     and Historical Society has preserved a curious early 19th                     Century building, the Temple of Peace, as a museum.<\/p>\n<p>Ch\u00e2teau de Ramezay, built in 1705 in what was then                     the fashionable part of Montreal, is a treasure house of antiquities.                     Here were held the levees of the governors-general and                     intendants; here were planned the expeditions to fur fields,                     the voyages of discovery, the military expeditions. In 1775                     the Chateau was headquarters for the Continental Army under                     Montgomery, and to it there came in the following year Benjamin                     Franklin and other envoys seeking to persuade the French-Canadians                     to revolt against British rule.<\/p>\n<p>Canada has many forts, well-preserved and carefully                     tended, from Fort Anne on the east coast, the site of a French                     settlement 15 years before the Pilgrim Fathers landed on Plymouth                     Rock in 1620, to far western forts that belong to the past                     century. These structures justify their preservation, because                     it was in and around them that the course of our history,                     perhaps the course of world history, was changed.<\/p>\n<h3>Antiquities<\/h3>\n<p>The impression of an event remains longest when it has been                     recorded through most sense avenues, and so those who seek                     to preserve our history in significant form should lean to                     the preservation of actualities. Few history books have power                     to kindle emotional interest, but few persons remain unstirred                     when they tread a path that Champlain trod, climb the gully                     that Wolfe climbed, touch the walls that Madeleine de Verch\u00e8res                     defended, look westward from the rock at Bella Coola whence                     Alexander Mackenzie, first of men to cross the continent of                     North America, sighted the Pacific.<\/p>\n<p>Cairns, tablets and monuments should be the last resort                     in marking historical places, except to tell the story embodied                     in the original stonework, earthworks, buildings and trenches                     when these can be preserved. &#8220;This stone was raised by Pierre                     Le Moyne, Sieur d&#8217;Iberville&#8221; is infinitely better than: &#8220;Near                     this spot a fort was built&#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When we have around us the foundations of buildings, or                     the furnishings of houses, the chairs and beds and pots and                     pans, used by the people of the 17th and 18th centuries, those                     people cease to be shadowy abstractions and take on the dimensions                     of warm and vital human beings.<\/p>\n<p>Sir Leonard Woolley tells in his report on his excavations                     at Ur of the Chaldees two poignant instances that bring alive                     in our minds that long ago age. In Queen Shub-ad&#8217;s grave,                     the fingers of a girl harpist were still touching the strings                     of her lyre, and, more intimate still: &#8220;One girl was not wearing                     her silver hair-ribbon &#8211; it was in her pocket, tightly                     coiled up, as if she had been late for the funeral and had                     not had time to put it on.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Archaeology is coming into its own in Canada, with expeditions                     from several universities going into the field every summer.                     Clay pots have been found in North Simcoe which prove that                     there was a civilization in that area at least 2,500 years                     B.C.<\/p>\n<p>Since 1934, skilled archaeologists of the federal government,                     the Royal Ontario Museum, and the University of Western Ontario                     have been directing the task of uncovering the sites of Indian                     villages and of the first European outposts in Ontario. At                     the site of the first Fort Ste. Marie they have discovered                     what is probably the first waterworks, canal and sewage system                     constructed north of Mexico.<\/p>\n<p>Out west, Manitobans treasure the bells of Red River, from                     the 100-pound church bell sent to the baby settlement                     by Lord Selkirk in 1819, through a long line of school bells                     (one of which had formerly been used as a fog warning) to                     the chimes of St. Boniface, which, incidentally, crossed the                     Atlantic five times, caused the first recorded strike in this                     country, and inspired a poem by John Greenleaf Whittier. Calgary                     has its first schoolhouse, a typical foot-hills cabin                     of the early days, and a red river cart, visited by thousands                     of people every year. The Pacific coast is restoring its Indian                     totem poles.<\/p>\n<p>These things have been saved by the vision and effort of                     people aware of the significance of the past, not only because                     of its material influence upon our present way of life but                     because of its inspiration. The antiquities are not worth                     much money (our forefathers had small riches) but they are                     beyond price as part of our heritage.<\/p>\n<p>The letters and documents preserved in the Canadian Archives,                     in museums such as Bytown Museum in Ottawa and Ch\u00e2teau                     de Ramezay in Montreal, and in university and private collections,                     recreate in warmly human terms the people who wrote and used                     them.<\/p>\n<h3>Landmarks and monuments<\/h3>\n<p>In commemorating great men and women there is one difficulty:                     by the time they make their mark on the world in science,                     literature, politics or war their birthplaces have changed                     hands, the furniture of their youth has been disposed of and                     scattered. In such circumstances, just the same as when ancient                     buildings have fallen before the march of progress or fire,                     we must resort to markers.<\/p>\n<p>Enough information, printed so as to be legible without                     effort (which cannot be said for the plaques now widely used)                     should be given so that the reader learns not only the significance                     of the site but its drama, too. For example, there is a cut-stone                     monument in Lachine to commemorate events connected with the                     massacre of the inhabitants by fifteen hundred Iroquois in                     1689. Why not erect a large map, showing the comings and goings                     of that fearful night, how the Indians loaded their canoes                     with victims, flaunted their victory in the face of the supine                     governor at Montreal, and tortured them at fires within his                     sight? All this is eloquently told by Thomas B. Costain in                     <em>The White and the Gold <\/em>(Doubleday Canada Limited,                     Toronto, 1954).<\/p>\n<p>In addition to historic sites and other material remnants                     there are antiquities of another sort, folk-songs. Our                     history is told largely in songs our ancestors sang, songs                     that were, especially among French-Canadians, as familiar                     as bread.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Marius Barbeau spent more than forty years collecting                     Canadian folk-songs and folk-lore. The National                     Museum, where he served officially from 1911 until his retirement                     in 1948 and unofficially thereafter, now has a collection                     of 195 Eskimo folk-songs, more than 3,000 Indian, close                     to 7,000 French-Canadian, and some 1,500 old English                     songs.<\/p>\n<p>These are songs that beat time for the paddles of early                     explorers and the coureurs des bois; they enlivened the scene                     wherever the raftsmen and lumberjacks appeared on eastern                     rivers; they set the rhythm for winnowing in the barns, spinning,                     beating the wash, and rocking the cradle by the fireside.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Barbeau has written dozens of books on the subject,                     obtainable from the National Museum of Canada, Ottawa. One,                     <em>Folk-Songs of Old Quebec<\/em>, tells the story of                     these old songs, and gives the words and music of fifteen.                     Arthur Lismer contributed seven drawings.<\/p>\n<h3>Need for imagination<\/h3>\n<p>We in Canada need to use imagination in naming roads and                     trails, beaches, portages, and natural features of the landscape.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;The Road to the Isles&#8221; is a far more dramatically fitting                     name than &#8220;Canso Causeway&#8221; for that new link between Cape                     Breton and the mainland; it carries echoes of the Scottish                     homeland from which this land was settled. Ontario had a happy                     thought when it named its main roads &#8220;The King&#8217;s Highway&#8221;                     and the road from Toronto to Niagara Fails &#8220;The Queen Elizabeth                     Way.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Let&#8217;s go on from there. At Georgian Bay, Ontario, there                     is excellent opportunity to use the Indian legendary figure                     Kitchikewana as the central figure for the fascinating legends                     that abound in the islands. From Lake Ontario to Lake Simcoe                     there runs the Trent waterway &#8211; why do we not make attractive                     use everywhere along it of the fact that this was the ancient                     Iroquois trail, travelled by Indians, missionaries and adventurers                     in the great days of French occupation and English exploration?                     Why not mark at several points the road that runs along the                     Ottawa River from Montreal to recall the stirring story of                     Adam Dollard, Sieur des Ormeaux, and his gallant band of sixteen                     French youths. &#8220;This road,&#8221; the signs might say, &#8220;follows                     the river up which Dollard and his sixteen youthful volunteers                     paddled their canoes on their way to battle a thousand war-mad                     Iroquois descending upon Montreal. They held out against the                     Indians for two weeks. Every one of the little band was killed,                     but the Indians retreated.&#8221; No single plaque by the roadside                     does justice to this great Canadian epic.<\/p>\n<p>Forts and battlefields should have large maps showing the                     battles that took place there, the movements of the opposing                     forces. There is no room on these maps for stodgy particularity:                     draw the picture in sweeping strokes. Give visitors, the fifth                     or seventh or tenth generation descendants of the brave men                     who fought there, a guide so that they may walk where their                     forefathers marched and counter-marched, and reconstruct                     in informed imagination the brave deeds that were done there.<\/p>\n<h3>National memorials<\/h3>\n<p>The Canadian Historical Association has as one of its objects                     &#8220;to promote the preservation of historic sites and buildings,                     documents, relics and other significant heirlooms of the past.&#8221;                     Like so many similar organizations, it has been handicapped                     by lack of money, but it has, nevertheless, achieved greatly.                     In recent years the Association has concerned itself with                     publication in permanent form of information about historic                     sites.<\/p>\n<p>The Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, first                     set up in 1919 to act in an advisory capacity to the government,                     has been instrumental in placing about 500 markers commemorating                     events or persons connected with the history of Canada. Structures                     of historic interest have become national historic parks and                     museums, from the great Louisburg fortress on the Atlantic                     to Fort Langley on the Pacific.<\/p>\n<p>Canada is moving in the direction of a National Trust, like                     the National Trust for Scotland, an independent body founded                     in 1931 to save from destruction buildings and lands that                     are of architectural or historic interest. A speaker said                     recently: &#8220;An occasional growl from a trusty watchdog has                     a salutory effect.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Speculation about a National Trust for Canada resulted from                     the visit here of the Earl of Wemyss and March, Chairman of                     the Scottish Council. His illustrated talks told convincingly                     the Trust&#8217;s story of achievement.<\/p>\n<p>The Queen Mother, Queen Elizabeth, said to the National                     Trust for Scotland last September: &#8220;In our desire for progress,                     and our hurry to achieve it, there has been a danger that                     some of the treasures of the past might be allowed to decay,                     or even to be destroyed, either through indifference or through                     ignorance of the issues at stake. The work of the Trust is                     to protect this heritage so that our children may enjoy the                     beauties of the past and learn through them the stirring history                     of their country.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Local responsibility<\/h3>\n<p>If we are to preserve our memorials there is needed a hard                     core of local enterprise and its spreading halo of enthusiasm.                     It is not enough to admit a need for something: broad local                     citizen interest must be bolstered by activity.<\/p>\n<p>Every town and city has scenes, buildings, and articles                     of historic interest. There is romance in the oldest tree,                     the first school, the first industry, the blacksmith&#8217;s shop                     and the birth-place or home of a famous son.<\/p>\n<p>Space does not permit us to give details of the splendid                     work being done by historical societies in many provinces                     and communities: Ontario, Manitoba, Toronto, Fenelon Falls,                     Grimsby, Dundas, Niagara, Essex County, York County, and the                     Canadian Railroad Historical Society all wrote us telling                     with pride of their accomplishments and plans.<\/p>\n<p>Just as an example of what can be done by a combined effort                     of local, provincial and federal people, consider Huronia,                     where in 1610 the white man made his first appearance in what                     is now the province of Ontario. Here, in three centuries,                     the human race progressed from the stone age to the machine                     age. Those years cover three important stories: that of the                     Huron Indian, that of the French missionary, and that of the                     war of 1812.<\/p>\n<p>The first white man in Huronia was Etienne Bruld, sent there                     by Governor Champlain to learn about language, customs, resources                     and geography. In 1615, a French missionary celebrated the                     first mass in Ontario at the Indian village of Carhagouha,                     and in 1649 the Iroquois put to death at the stake two Jesuit                     priests. In the American war of independence, an American                     commander besieged a blockhouse near what is now the beautiful                     Wasaga Beach; the British scuttled their ship the &#8220;Nancy&#8221;                     and sank two ships of the American force: today, the hull                     of the &#8220;Nancy&#8221; is in a museum on Nancy Island, and the ribs                     of one of the American ships are preserved in a park at Penetanguishene.<\/p>\n<p>All these, and much more, made a past worth preserving,                     so in 1941 a group of business and professional men organized                     the Huronia Historic Sites and Tourist Association. It sponsored                     archaeological research, marking of sites, restoration of                     buildings, and promotion of the district as a place to visit.                     By 1947 there had been established at Midland a museum that                     attracted 17,000 paying visitors in four months. Co-operation                     between the Midland Y&#8217;s Men&#8217;s Club and the University of Western                     Ontario resulted in reconstruction of a Huron Indian village.<\/p>\n<p>At the east end of Huronia is the residence of the late                     Stephen B. Leacock, which it is hoped to preserve as an historic                     literary shrine. In Orillia the historical society has been                     instrumental in marking the houses, stores, etc. mentioned                     by Leacock in his book <em>Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>All the story of the development of Huronia as a centre                     of historical and tourist interest is told in J. Herbert Cranston&#8217;s                     book, <em>Huronia, the Cradle of Ontario&#8217;s History <\/em>(Huronia                     Historic Sites and Tourist Association, Barrie, 1950, 25 cents)<\/p>\n<h3>Retrospect and Prospect<\/h3>\n<p>The exploration of the past we have glanced at should be                     a strange and wonderful experience. Many things happened,                     or almost happened, that give us food for thought today. Every                     act in that past was an experiment, the result of which we                     experience.<\/p>\n<p>Today is the time to preserve our memorials, while they                     are still available. As the Queen Mother said: &#8220;Once gone                     they can never be replaced, and each one of us is the poorer                     for their loss.&#8221; No chromatic brilliance of the future should                     dazzle us into seeing only dull grey in our past.<\/p>\n<p>To be successful we need the energetic co-operative                     effort of national, provincial and local people. So much has                     been lost, so little remains, that decisive action is imperative.<\/p>\n<p>The cost need not be great, and it can be equitably divided                     according to means. Buildings and sites of national importance                     can be preserved by the Government of Canada; those of provincial                     significance by the provincial governments, and local sites                     can be marked by municipal authorities and the co-operative                     effort of community organizations.<\/p>\n<p>Here is one area of our social life in which we can let                     ourselves go in uninhibited enthusiasm. The political and                     sectional differences of bygone years have ceased to agitate                     our minds. In our conception of a united Canada all our past                     belongs to all of us. Passion and prejudice and mythomania                     could have no better monument erected to signify their demise                     than this: that Canadians should work together to commemorate                     the struggles and achievements of their forefathers.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[36],"class_list":["post-3625","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-36"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>April 1956 - Vol. 37, No. 4 - Canada&#039;s Memorials - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1956-vol-37-no-4-canadas-memorials\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"April 1956 - Vol. 37, No. 4 - Canada&#039;s Memorials - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Any country that is alive to its future should be interested in its past, but we are tempted by the pressures of the present to relax our grip on remembrance of what has been. 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