{"id":3894,"date":"1972-06-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1972-06-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1972-vol-53-no-6-pioneers-are-still-needed\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:41:33","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:41:33","slug":"june-1972-vol-53-no-6-pioneers-are-still-needed","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1972-vol-53-no-6-pioneers-are-still-needed\/","title":{"rendered":"June 1972 &#8211; VOL. 53, No.6 &#8211; Pioneers are Still Needed"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The first European pioneers staked                     out their homesteads in Canada 374 years ago. On July first                     this year we celebrate the 105th anniversary of the day when                     their successors brought together their scattered hamlets                     and settlements into a confederated nation.<\/p>\n<p> All history is the story of continuous exploration and discovery                     and colonization. If we are not to suffer national stagnation                     we need to bring to life again the pioneer spirit, encourage                     freedom to change and grow; be willing to entertain suggestions,                     and provide growing space so that every person may develop                     skills to the fullest extent of his ability.<\/p>\n<p>Every man and woman in Canada can invent something, do something                     new, or do something old in a better way. There are opportunities                     for pioneers in industry, agriculture, education, finance,                     literature, music, art, technology and home making.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone is to some extent a pioneer. He notices a situation                     wherein improvement can be made, foresees the course of events                     a little, pictures in his mind&#8217;s eye a desirable outcome,                     and devises means by which he will bring about the betterment.                     Every generation produces people who seek after new lamps,                     and some are as fortunate as Aladdin.<\/p>\n<p>The men and women who came into Canada in the 1500&#8217;s were                     starting life, as it were, once more at the beginning, subsisting                     roughly in a land where there were none of the comforts of                     Europe. They fell back upon long-inactive instincts and they                     relearned forgotten crafts. Civilized people of anciently                     cultured lands, they did the labour of primitive races so                     that they might survive and forge ahead.<\/p>\n<p>Here were pioneers from two great nations, forced by their                     environment and isolation to modify what they had learnt so                     as to fit the ruggedness of the land in which they had chosen                     to build their homes.<\/p>\n<p>To their credit, they coped with the austere existence of                     the frontier, modified their thoughts and habits, and made                     experiment and adjustment amid the novel life of forest and                     prairie. They were sustained by expectation, enterprise, energy                     and courage, and they created a nation.<\/p>\n<p>Some people think that because there is so great evidence                     of progress since those days the picture is complete, but                     there are many unfinished jobs, incomplete inventions, unborn                     ideas and new problems. We need the pioneering spirit as urgently                     as ever.<\/p>\n<h3>Think of what might be<\/h3>\n<p>Everyone knows the saying &#8220;Necessity is the mother of invention&#8221;,                     but in today&#8217;s Canada fullness of life and not grievous necessity                     is the spark plug behind the production of new things and                     new discoveries. As H. Stafford Hatfield wrote in <em>The Inventor                     and His Worm <\/em>(Pelican 1948): &#8220;Fish colonised the land,                     bats and birds conquered the air, not because they were pushed                     out of the sea or off the land, but by a kind of \u00e9lan                     akin to our own inventive drive.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>No outside pressure or government decree will compel a person                     to become an explorer or an inventor or a pioneer. The desire                     must be within him; it is one that he can stir up. Discontent                     is not always a bad state of mind. It is constructive when                     restlessness of mind prompts a person to search for better                     ways of doing things.<\/p>\n<p>Pioneering requires awareness of what is going on instead                     of the heedless inattentiveness of a rut-bound life. We are                     in danger of getting so set upon following a formula, upon                     conforming to habit, that we miss the side views.<\/p>\n<p>Charles F. Kettering, Vice President of General Motors,                     said in a commencement address: &#8220;It is like driving through                     the country at night, when you don&#8217;t see any of the scenery                     at all. There is a lot more country on the side of the road                     than there is on the road.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The process of inventing or pioneering starts in this way:                     you expand your mind so as to think of things as they might                     be improved by changing them, adding some good qualities to                     them or taking away some inferior or unnecessary parts.<\/p>\n<p>Some people say that their everyday routine work limits                     their horizons. Technical and professional people say that                     their intense specialization prevents them from venturing                     over the parapet of their unique groove. These are not valid                     reasons. Anyone, whatever his job may be, can pioneer in something,                     invent something, or discover something. In part time study                     and in leisure time work he will find antidotes to the numbing                     effects of necessary routine and the stress of delicate operations.<\/p>\n<p>Expensive equipment is not needed. Some people get along                     quite well without wealth or apparatus. Aristotle was an astronomer                     without a telescope, a biologist without a laboratory, and                     yet his discoveries about natural phenomena stood up for 2,000                     years.<\/p>\n<p>A handbook for home mechanics is filled with information                     picked up by alert artisans, pieces of mechanism invented                     by workmen who saw easier and better ways of doing things,                     and plans thought of by imaginative people who made improvements                     in their way of living: all of these are starting places for                     today&#8217;s creative workers and homemakers.<\/p>\n<h3>In business and art<\/h3>\n<p>All business progress is the outcome of invention and pioneering.                     Creative activity is what produces new methods and opens up                     new territory.<\/p>\n<p>Industry had grown up in a helter-skelter way out of the                     home workshop era. Then new methods were brought into use                     under the heading &#8220;Scientific Management&#8221;. Their pioneers                     were people with stop watches and slide rules. They introduced                     specialization, systematization and control. Now they are                     assisted by computers. This is not the end, because business                     must advance or expire.<\/p>\n<p>Some corporations have departments of research and development                     where the creative work of a dozen skilled technicians yields                     a return in new or improved products. These corporations should                     not fail to tap the mental resources of the scores or hundreds                     of other men and women workers in their plants or offices                     whose creative ideas might be called into use.<\/p>\n<p>Frederic D. Randall said in an article in <em>Harvard Business                     Review<\/em>: &#8220;The management of a sizable business today must                     work hard at the task of maintaining a stimulating atmosphere                     for creative thinking.&nbsp;&#8230;This is a key management problem.                     It may not be successfully side-stepped.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>As in business, so in art. Every great musical composition                     is a triumph of pioneering, of putting an inspired thought                     on to lines and trying out the melody, then revising it until                     the thought communicates itself in music. A sculptor is a                     pioneer in every chisel stroke. Michelangelo said: &#8220;I had                     a block of marble in which was concealed that statue. The                     only effort involved is to take away the tiny pieces which                     surround it and prevent it from being seen.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Walt Whitman, one of the most important writers in the history                     of United States literature, glorified the pioneer in a poem:                     &#8220;We today&#8217;s procession heading, we the route for travel clearing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The need to explore<\/h3>\n<p>Why do people explore? Charles Miller, of <em>Cannibal Caravan                     <\/em>fame, put it this way: &#8220;It was my intention to press on                     to the snow line. Not that I had any particular business up                     there, but it is one of the rules of the exploring profession                     to go where you have no particular business to be.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Even when most people believed that the world ended at the                     horizon, there were navigators who wanted to find out if this                     was true. Norsemen crossed the Atlantic and settled on this                     continent in 1003. They spent three winters here: some writers                     say that the first and third winters were spent on the south                     shore of Chaleur Bay, New Brunswick.<\/p>\n<p>The process of pioneering seems to be something like this.                     You get an idea that there is rich land over the hill or across                     the sea, or that you can make out better in your work if you                     change your style, or that you can invent something that will                     add to the comfort of your life. You explore the probabilities                     and possibilities to make sure that the effort will be worth                     while. You work out the general line to follow, using the                     knowledge you have, information you dig up, and the spark                     of the idea that came to you. You test your theory in an experiment.                     You refine it by getting rid of all that is not essential,                     and you find the answer to the key question: &#8220;Is it useful,                     worthwhile and practicable?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Pioneer conditions tend to develop initiative and independence.                     They contribute a lot to the growth of common sense.<\/p>\n<p>We do not know anything about the earliest human pioneers                     except that they made tools and weapons of stone, bone and                     ivory. No other records survive. We do know that they had                     intelligence, or they could not have pioneered their way into                     civilization as we know it. They had purpose: they made tools                     because of the things they might do with tools.<\/p>\n<p>The trials and tribulations of Canadian pioneers have been                     told in many books, all of them written with a sense of satisfaction                     and the pride of attainment. A visit to one of the restored                     villages will show how the pioneer used what was at hand to                     make work easier and used his head to improve living conditions.<\/p>\n<p>By little and little they succeeded in opening up the country.                     As they pushed their way westward the vastness of the prairies                     encouraged them in broader and more ambitious thinking which                     became justified by the outcome. Says Grant MacEwan in <em>Between                     the Red and the Rockies <\/em>(University of Toronto Press 1952):                     &#8220;The story of its conquest by one of the greatest wheat economies                     the world has yet known is an epic chapter in the history                     of civilization.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Other pioneers were explorers who made maps so that people                     could follow in their steps without the hardship and danger                     of entering unknown territory.<\/p>\n<p>David Thompson was such a man. He was the first white man                     to descend the Columbia river from its source to its mouth;                     he surveyed the Nelson, Churchill and Saskatchewan rivers;                     he placed on the map the main routes of natural travel in                     a million and a quarter square miles of Canada and half a                     million square miles in the United States; he discovered the                     Athabaska Pass, which was used for more than half a century                     by the traders as a route across the Rockies.<\/p>\n<p>Are pioneer days over? There died only fifteen years ago                     a woman who disproved the idea. Mrs. George Black, daughter                     of an inventor, escaped the great Chicago fire; joined the                     gold rush, landed in Dawson City after surviving the dreaded                     journey over the trail through Chilkoot Pass, and set up a                     claimworking partnership. She married George Black, who became                     Commissioner of the Yukon; she was chatelaine of Government                     House, Dawson, for four years, and in 1935 she became the                     second woman elected to the Canadian Parliament. She was made                     a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and joined the                     distinguished company of those awarded the Order of the British                     Empire. Mrs. Black published two books: <em>My Seventy Years<\/em>,                     a stirring story about her pioneering life, and <em>Wildflowers                     of the Yukon<\/em>.<\/p>\n<h3>The moment of inspiration<\/h3>\n<p>The pioneer is a leader. He is first in his field in discovery                     and invention. He will be followed by settlers and developers                     and people who expand and exploit his discoveries.<\/p>\n<p>Before starting to blaze a trail, does he have to sit around                     waiting for the &#8220;moment of inspiration&#8221;? There is something                     attractive about the seemingly magical way in which a great                     idea for something new comes suddenly into one&#8217;s mind. It                     may occur while one is driving home from work, taking a stroll                     in a park, or washing the dishes.<\/p>\n<p>The explanation is simple: these are activities that provide                     the mental relaxation which enables inspiration to break through.                     The subconscious has been working on a problem, it has put                     the pieces together, but it needs an opening through which                     to pass the solution to the conscious mind.<\/p>\n<p>Mythologists have a way of making invention and discovery                     matters of &#8220;inspiration&#8221; or accident. They say, for example,                     that Charles Goodyear left a piece of raw rubber smeared with                     sulphui&#8221; near a hot stove and thus discovered vulcanization.                     But Goodyear had made himself so completely master of everything                     known about rubber that no phenomenon, however small, could                     meet his eye without his seeing its bearing upon his problem.<\/p>\n<p>Think of Sir John William Dawson, revered principal of McGill                     University for 38 years, a pioneer into the remote past. Digging                     up and chipping rocks as he criss-crossed the Gasp\u00e9                     Peninsula in his exploration, he found a fossilized land plant                     in the middle of an age of seaweed. His discovery carried                     back our knowledge of botany 350 million years. That meagre,                     venturesome growing thing, lost in the darkness of past time,                     came alive again in Sir John&#8217;s mind because he had studied                     so that he recognized its significance.<\/p>\n<p>Sudden illumination is evidence of conscious or unconscious                     prior work. Having a mind stored with knowledge, and curiosity                     about ways in which knowledge can be applied, one is ready                     to pounce on the first chance to observe and to experiment.<\/p>\n<p>Anyone seeking to become a pioneer will take care to fill                     his mind with what is known about the route he plans to take.                     We cannot learn anything except by going from the known to                     the unknown. We need to dig for facts about the problem, about                     what has been tried, and about why previous efforts failed                     to reach the goal. Anyone content to start at the surface                     of things, without laying a foundation, may find that he is                     building on permafrost.<\/p>\n<h3>Qualities needed<\/h3>\n<p>Some of the qualities needed in pioneering are interest,                     intelligence, imagination and determination. What sparks interest?                     A blank space on a map is all that some people need as an                     urge to go there and sketch in some rivers and hills. Others                     may find their interest aroused by a problem, a puzzle, or                     something out of the ordinary. Dr. Alexander Fleming wrote                     in his notebook: &#8220;I was sufficiently interested in the antibacterial                     substance produced by the mold to pursue the subject.&#8221; Thus                     came penicillin.<\/p>\n<p>One needs the intelligence to probe, and to get to understand,                     and the skill to experiment. A pioneer has to think: he has                     no handbook to tell him the answers to his questions. The                     high delights of successful mental exploration are based upon                     a respect for ascertained facts and intelligence in grouping                     them into new forms. Piling up facts does not make us wise.                     We need to reason about what we have observed.<\/p>\n<p>This is the time to use imagination. Your thought of something                     better may be a weak image in your mind. That is how great                     things start. Pursue your thought as far as you can. Make                     a note of it and of its development in your mind. Seek and                     find facts. Look at your notes a month later, when your subconscious                     has had time to work on the idea.<\/p>\n<p>No one can guarantee the quick success of an idea. A pioneer                     learns early to be watchful and patient, not rash and impulsive.                     He is stubborn in his refusal to accept defeat. Like Napoleon,                     he will sacrifice all secondary matters to secure what he                     believes to be his main objective.<\/p>\n<p>He is prepared to be misunderstood and to face opposition.                     All industrial progress has included stories of inventions                     whose nature was unintelligible to the ordinary mind. When                     people do not understand they deride out of ignorance or they                     oppose out of fear.<\/p>\n<p>Kettering, who experienced the resistance of people to new                     technological devices, concluded that &#8220;everybody is naturally                     negative to anything outside his own experience.&#8221; In Boston,                     in 1873, a telephone salesman was arrested because, said the                     authorities, &#8220;well-informed people know that it is impossible                     to transmit the human voice over wires.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Things to do<\/h3>\n<p>Look around. The pioneer has an alert movement of the eye,                     open to every promise of adventure or enterprise, like a child                     who goes wandering in a park with his mind on what there is                     to see and not on himself. When the questing knight Sir Launcelot                     asked a damsel &#8220;Know ye in this country any adventures?&#8221; she                     told him &#8220;Here are adventures near at hand, if thou durst                     pursue them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Look out frequently over the world of human activities with                     a mind attuned to attempting new things. The key to pioneering                     and invention is in your hand when you ask: &#8220;I wonder what                     would happen if&#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A twist suggested by the mind can turn one thing into something                     much more important and more widely useful. Rudolph Diesel                     examined the bamboo flame makers used by the natives of Samoa                     and developed the compression ignition engine that bears his                     name.<\/p>\n<p>There are four things to do when you decide to break out                     of the rut and become a pioneer: investigate, plan, experiment,                     and work.<\/p>\n<p>When a person sets out upon a pioneering mission he should                     have an understanding of things as they are, then the future                     cannot be wholly doubtful. He will calculate the odds closely,                     because it takes just as much effort to move to a site that                     will be unsatisfactory as to the ideal location. There are                     three sorts of circumstances to be thought of. You need to                     know what factors you can control, what factors are controlled                     by other people or by nature, and what factors are subject                     to chance.<\/p>\n<p>Preparation and planning follow the birth of an idea. This                     means taking account of the options of action. There may be                     more ways than one of attaining the objective. Many explorers                     and pioneers have been notable for their deliberation in planning:                     their steady, rather than spasmodic, advances; their wisdom                     in providing against contingencies as far as foresight would                     allow.<\/p>\n<p>Strategy is needed by a pioneer. He cannot leap out of the                     security of his accustomed way of living without having a                     plan of campaign. He works out the tactics later to fit circumstances.                     Strategy deals with the overall objectives and with the means                     for reaching them; tactics deals with the actual doing of                     the job.<\/p>\n<p>Venturesome thinking must be followed by testing. Galileo,                     famed as the discoverer of the laws of free fall, challenged                     the teaching of Aristotle, twenty centuries earlier, that                     a heavy weight will fall faster than a lighter one. Galileo                     tested his belief, and proved his case by experiment: he dropped                     two balls of different weight from the Leaning Tower of Pisa                     and they hit the ground at the same moment.<\/p>\n<p>To make experiments means that we stake our assumptions                     on investigation and research, and that we make tests and                     trials to gain facts from which our minds, through reasoning,                     may draw knowledge. We must accept the results of experiments                     as they come, however unexpected they may be.<\/p>\n<h3>Opportunity<\/h3>\n<p>Opportunities to pioneer are almost always controlled by                     the desire and determination of a man, and not by the daily                     work he does or the social circle in which he moves. They                     are created by awareness, aliveness and alertness.<\/p>\n<p>Initiative, said someone, is doing the right thing without                     being told. The pioneer has the disposition and the power                     to move of himself, instead of putting off action until an                     adversary gives him a push or a friend smoothes his path.<\/p>\n<p>One does not have to wait for an urgent need, but can find                     pleasure in solving problems that do not appear to have immediate                     significance. Apollonius studied conic sections for amusement;                     his theorems gave Kepler, 2,000 years later, his elliptical                     orbits of the planets; and all this enters into space flight                     today. A gambler asked Blaise Pascal in the seventeenth century                     for advice on a system to beat the dice, and Pascal gave birth                     to the theory of probability, an indispensable tool in today&#8217;s                     biology, physics and insurance.<\/p>\n<h3>Creativeness<\/h3>\n<p>Some people hesitate to use the word &#8220;creative&#8221; to describe                     human inventiveness, particularly in the mechanical world.                     But were not Newton, Maxwell, Faraday and Kettering as creative                     of new things as were Renoir, Shakespeare, Bach and Beethoven?                     To create is not to form things out of nothing, but to put                     life into something.<\/p>\n<p>The innovator reflects, tries out, gropes, compares and                     contrives, so as to gain the end which he sets before him,                     whether it be the composition of a musical score or the design                     of a new match-box. He looks creatively at the commonplace.                     He changed the rolling log into a wheel by adding an axle.<\/p>\n<p>On their 1972 anniversary, Canadians cannot be satisfied                     with a hedged-in view of their future, when with a little                     intellectual effort they can widen their horizons.<\/p>\n<p>We should dread above all things stagnation. Dr. Alfred                     North Whitehead wrote in <em>Adventures of Ideas <\/em>(Penguin                     1948): &#8220;The foundation of all understanding of human life                     is that no static maintenance of perfection is possible. Advance                     or decadence are the only choices offered to mankind.&#8221; And                     Kettering said: &#8220;There will always be a frontier where there                     is an open mind and a willing hand.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>New knowledge and new technologies are altering environment                     every year. There is room for speculative, thoughtful, advancement.                     Everyone has the choice of many roads on which to seek what                     is to be.<\/p>\n<p>It may be time for a new Renaissance, in which respect for                     the goodness bequeathed to us by Canada&#8217;s first pioneers blends                     into the development of new things that are better.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[52],"class_list":["post-3894","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-52"],"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>June 1972 - VOL. 53, No.6 - Pioneers are Still Needed - 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\/june-1972-vol-53-no-6-pioneers-are-still-needed\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"June 1972 - VOL. 53, No.6 - Pioneers are Still Needed - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The first European pioneers staked out their homesteads in Canada 374 years ago. 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On July first this year we celebrate the 105th anniversary of the day when their successors brought together their scattered hamlets and settlements into a confederated nation. All history is the story of continuous exploration and discovery and colonization. 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