Pioneers in Architectural History at Parks Canada!
Parks Canada
is celebrating its centennial this year. While there are only 42
national parks and 4 national marine conservation
areas, there are many more Parks-administered national historic
sites across the country - 167 in fact! They range from the highest
national historic site in the country, located at Abbot Pass in the Rocky Mountains, to the
easternmost tip of the country at Cape Spear in Newfoundland &
Labrador. These special historic places were protected
because the federal government recognized the importance of
Canada's shared history. Yet, to protect these places, exceptional
and dedicated staff at Parks Canada have worked tirelessly and with
passion to help save these places for future generations.
As an international leader in heritage conservation, Parks
Canada holds a rich history of research dating back almost a
century. Parks Canada has attracted the best and brightest
historians, archaeologists and architectural historians to work in
the field and in the archives, scouring to uncover meaningful
documents and objects for all Canadians to learn from and
appreciate. Without the work of staff historians, underwater
archaeologists would not know where to search for Franklin's
elusive Erebus and Terror ships in
the Arctic; without architectural historians working on research of
urban historic districts, communities may lose their cherished
neighbourhoods and sense of place; without ethno-historians,
Canadians would lose the history of Aboriginal People. This month,
the Canadian Register of Historic Places would like to recognize
architectural historians at Parks Canada.
As a field, architectural history introduced to Canadians the
rich diversity of architecture in their own backyard. Partly born
out of a new national spirit in the 1960s, Canadians began to
recognize that their architectural history was more impressive than
was once thought. From French Regime homes of Quebec's Ile d'Orléans to early skyscrapers in Winnipeg, Canada's older
buildings came to the attention of citizens concerned with the
rapid pressures of Canada's post-war growth.
In the early 20th century, the federal government
recognized that Canada's military and fur trade sites were in need
of protection for future generations. In 1919, the Historic Sites
and Monuments Board of Canada (HSMBC) was established to advise the federal
government on all historical matters and commemorative
opportunities. Parks Canada worked closely with the HSMBC to create
the network of national historic sites across the country we now
benefit from for understanding our collective national history.
However, by the late 1950s, it was clear that forts and fur
trading were narrow facets of Canada's cultural heritage. In
fact, Canadians were becoming more interested in their built
history. Beautiful Victorian homes, historic fishing villages, deteriorating canals and neglected farmsteads came to the attention of Parks
Canada and the HSMBC by vocal individuals who understood that
future generations would never be able to appreciate the beauty and
meaning of these places without better protection. Yet, to evaluate
and designate sites in the country, there was no clear sense of
what existed. How many older buildings were there across the
country? What styles were used? What types of homes were built over
the centuries? No one really knew...
First Steps...
At the time, there were only a handful of specialists in
architectural history in Canada - and it didn't help when a
pre-eminent scholar wrote that "you will not find in Canada much of
what is commonly considered Great or Original architecture..."
(Alan Gowans, Looking at Architecture in Canada
, 1958). With a new national awareness in the
1960s, Parks Canada's young architectural historians could see
"greatness" from within.
"... you will not find in Canada much of what is commonly
considered Great or Original architecture..."
- Alan Gowans, Looking at
Architecture in Canada , 1958
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Parks Canada spearheaded the first inventory of historic
buildings. Unprecedented in the world, Parks Canada initiated in
1970 a nation-wide survey of buildings constructed before 1914. To
lead the new Canadian Inventory of Historic Buildings (CIHB), Parks
Canada hired architect Barbara Humphreys to manage the
program. Unlike most federal government departments at the
time, Parks Canada recognized the role of professional women in its
organization. Indeed, for the next generation, a group of dynamic
women were hired to help research and educate Canadians about their
architectural history.
Barbara Humphreys understood architecture. She was one of
Canada's earliest female professional architects, graduating from
the University of Manitoba's architecture program in 1941. During
the Second World War, she honed her skills working alongside men at
the drawing tables of private firms and federal agencies. By the
1960s, she was ready for a change. Parks Canada historian, Jack
Richardson, who specialized in Quebecois architecture, knew that
there was a dire need for specialists in Canadian architecture.
A pilot project to survey the Rideau Canal corridor was the first step in
developing the tools necessary for a larger national survey. As
Barbara Humphreys recalls, "no one had any idea of what was out
there. No one understood the settlement around the Rideau Canal and
there was no overall survey, only a few documents on a few
buildings..." Of course, her pioneer work would one day lead
to UNESCO inscribing the Rideau Canal on the World
Heritage List!
In 1970, the survey program was launched at the national level.
Employing students in the summer months to spread out across the
country, photographs were taken and detailed description sheets
were filled out to document selected towns and cities. To dispel
community concerns about young people photographing their homes,
commercials were run on television to inform the public that their
homes might be surveyed. Sometimes, however, not all went according
to plan!
A young member of the survey team, former Director-General of
National Historic Sites at Parks Canada, Dr. Christina Cameron,
remembers a harrowing experience when she was surveying the
Saint-Roch neighbourhood in downtown Québec in October 1970 - at
the height of Canada's October Crisis! Camera and notepad in tow,
she was suddenly arrested and spent the night in jail. Fortunately,
Dr. Cameron ended up leading the program by the end of the 1970s
and nurtured the National Historic Sites Directorate into the
country's leading centre of excellence in knowledge on Canada's
built heritage and history. Fortunately, her work at documenting
Saint-Roch led to saving one of Canada's most vibrant urban
neighbourhoods!
By the mid-1970s, the CIHB's early phases were near completion
with 169,000 buildings documented. Two thousand of these
buildings' interiors were documented in greater detail. Its
primary purpose was to provide a sampling of buildings across
Canada that would serve as a comparative basis for assessment
by
the HSMBC. Each building was identified, dated and described. Early
mainframe computers processed the data for easier selection of
information.
Janet Wright, who began her career at Parks Canada, recalls
that the CIHB was the first time in Canada that a comprehensive
understanding of its rich architecture was amassed in one place.
The analysts could see even greater potential use of CIHB. One of
the most popular results was the publication by Parks Canada in
partnership with Reader's Digest, of "The
Buildings of Canada" - a layman's guide to architectural styles
in Canada, which went out to tens of thousands of Canadians.
An invaluable resource even today, "The Buildings of Canada"
reflected Parks Canada's strength in engaging Canadians and serving
their needs.
Parks Canada: A Leader in
Architectural History
As Parks Canada became a leading knowledge centre and the envy
of countries around the world, a new direction followed the
extensive recording projects of the 1970s. It was time to focus on
giving Canadians a greater sense of their own architectural
heritage. As Janet Wright recalls, "the best approach to writing
about Canadian architectural history was through the research of
specific styles." In 1979, two pilot publications were completed
for the Canadian Historic Sites Occasional Papers in Archaeology
and History Series: Second Empire Style in Canadian
Architecture, and Gothic Revival in Canadian
Architecture. To date, there had never been
comprehensive research on Canadian architecture's popular
styles.
Throughout the 1980s, Parks Canada
supported and encouraged a generation of researchers to delve into
the work begun by those pioneer architectural historians at CIHB.
As a result, many new national historic sites were designated for
their architectural style and building type. Fortunately for the
work of the architectural historians, Canadians can now visit
impressive architectural monuments across the country and read
about what makes them special on the Canadian Register of Historic
Places (CRHP). All of the publications produced by Parks Canada,
including Leslie Maitland's Queen Anne Revival in Canada,
Nathalie Clerk's Palladian Style in Canada, and Janet
Wright's Architecture of the Picturesque in Canada
completely sold out their first print editions! Today, they are now
beginning to be available in electronic format for anyone to
download.
Laying the Foundations
Parks Canada architectural historians laid the foundation of
work which led to greater awareness of Canada's rich architectural
history. In one generation, a sea-change of interest in
architecture led to greater protection and conservation across the
country. As public historians, these authors connected with
the wider Canadian population through accessible reading on
thousands of historic places.
Fortunately today, many historic places listed on the CRHP and
highlighted by specialists at Parks Canada have become treasured
icons for all Canadians. Saving these sites has created a better
sense of place in many communities, prevented the loss of
buildings, and encouraged creative minds to re-use these places in
a new economy.
At 100, Parks Canada's role as a national agency that
protects and presents nationally significant examples of
Canada's cultural heritage, and foster public understanding,
appreciation and enjoyment in ways that ensure commemorative
integrity for present and future generations, is reflected in
the immense work of a generation of architectural historians who
dedicated their careers to serve the Agency's mandate.