OTTAWA | April
2, 2004 — Do you think you have what it takes
to be a person of national significance?
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Explorer Samuel de Champlain has a plaque from the
Historic Sites and Monuments Board that rests underneath his Ottawa
statue.
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If so, then someone should nominate you to the Historic Sites and Monuments
Board of Canada. After passing the screening process, the board considers
your importance to Canadian history and then makes recommendations to
the environment minister, who makes the final decision.
The process normally takes more than a year — and, by the way,
you have to have been dead for 25 years, unless you were prime minister.
Even if your name survives the process, you still may not receive a commemorative
plaque.
Tourists and history buffs are familiar with the historical places operated
by Parks Canada — such as the Halifax Citadel, Kingston’s
Fort Henry, and the Laurier House in Ottawa. However, the government pays
tribute to people of national significance, too.
| 'Some people are of local or provincial
significance. At the end of the day you have to demonstrate the person
had an impact on Canadian history.' |
The Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, created in 1919, meets
twice a year to select historic people, places, and events. The board
annually receives about 100 nominations, says Michel Audy, the board’s
executive secretary. About 30 end up being designated as nationally significant
by Environment Secretary David Anderson.
Need for national stature
How does the board choose who’s historic and who’s not?
"Some people are of local or provincial significance," Audy
says. "At the end of the day you have to demonstrate the person had
an impact on Canadian history."
Almost 600 people are recognized. They range from explorers and generals
to nurses and poets. Prime ministers are automatically designated after
they die. That’s why Pierre Trudeau became a national historic person
after his death in September 2000.
But about 90 national historic people still do not have a commemorative
plaques. They include:
- Prime ministers Alexander Campbell, Lester B. Pearson and Trudeau
- Agnes Macphail, the first female member of the House of Commons
- British-born conservationist and writer Archibald Belaney —
known to the world as Grey Owl
Wars of words
Audy says some are without plaques because there’s a backlog for
installing them. One reason for this is the debates that take place over
how the plaques should be worded.
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| Pierre Trudeau became a national historic person
after passing away in 2000, but a location has yet to be chosen for
his plaque. |
"Sometimes we never get to a resolution," he says. This is
because Parks Canada and the board work closely with local groups and
other interested parties, and that can make for a lot of discussion.
A plaque’s wording can create disputes, a lot of editing and inevitable
delays, experts say.
"When you’re putting something in bronze that has the government’s
name in it, you have to be sure," says Gerald Friesen, a University
of Manitoba history professor and president of the Canadian Historical
Association. "Sometimes it can be hard to agree, even on 50 or 75
words."
Another issue is the question of what location is most closely associated
with the person, especially if it's a prime ministers. After Parliament
Hill, the prime ministers' homesteads are the next choice, but even that
can pose problems. Audy points to John Diefenbaker, whose family moved
often when he was young. The board settled on Prince Albert, Sask., the
site of Diefenbaker’s law office.
History meets technology
Friesen served on a similar historical board in Manitoba. He says there’s
still room for official plaques — even though most Canadians are
more likely to discover history through television and other mass media.
'When you're putting something in
bronze that has the government's name in it, you have to be sure.
Sometimes it can be hard to agree, even on 50 or 75 words.'
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An alternative way to present information besides on plaques is through
publications and the Internet, Audy says. And some historic persons are
recognized in other ways.
A government program exists to preserve the grave sites of prime ministers.
War of 1812 heroine Laura Secord was designated in 2002, and she has
not yet received a plaque — yet her homestead at Queenston, Ont.,
is a local historic site, with a stone monument nearby.
Board chairman Richard Alway says the board is focused on making sure
the role of women in Canadian history is properly recognized.
"There used to be an emphasis on political and military history,"
he says. "What is often missed are the people who are also significant
in the role of the nation, but haven’t had a lot written about them."
The nine most recent national historic persons were announced in 2002
and 2003. They include Secord, African-Canadian publishers Mary and Henry
Bibb, and Michael Anthony Fleming, a 19th-century Newfoundland bishop.
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