Still Day 5 but later on...I am only five days into my cross Canada adventure but I have decided to get off the normal north by northwest path from Ottawa to Whitehorse, my diagonal trip cross country, so as to indulge in one of my life's interests John George Diefenbaker.
Day 5 May 30This will be a fun day, chance to just be a tourist as opposed to, at times, feeling like a long haul trucker. I head due north of Saskatoon towards Prince Albert. However there is a point of interest before that.
Batoche is the last battle site in the 1885 Riel Rebellion and now a National Historic Site. This was a critical moment in Canadian history, not so much the actual outcome on the battlefield as there was never any doubt about who would be victorious. It was the
reverberations throughout the country in terms of how the decision concerning Riel and the other leaders of the rebellion would be handled. In the end it was decided that a rope was the best justice and that has had
consequences felt til this day. You can look it up,it has
googleability.
I have a wonderful day at the site, touring the museum in virtual solitude. there are some very good
displays especially the
diorama of a
Metis buffalo hunt. It brought back memories of the Museum of Natural History, when I was a small child, looking at the
diorama of the wolf pack attacking the bison. Quite dramatic. I tour the site at my leisure, once again it is me the buildings and land and western sky. Oh and two staff members drive by in their
atv. They stop beside me while I read the plaques, they are fixing something and ask if I had questions. "Not so much but thanks for asking." They finish up and drive off. I stroll back towards the church and surprise a guide who is reading a novel on a bench outside the building. She sees me, looks a bit sheepish but asks if I have seen the inside of the church. I accept her offer of a tour. She is quite thorough and informative and a
s we talk and I tell her of my federal government archival background she adds other
tid bits to the
presentation. I feel the history of the place come alive and I am happy to have been some small part of the process, a part of the team that made it our business to preserve history for all Canadians to enjoy. It is good to see the work being done so well.
Off to Prince Albert with a stop for an roadside attraction. Wheat stalks 15 metres high! A local
visitor centre uses this
eye catching work of art to
attract passers-by to their location,and very
effectively I might add.
As I drive I listen to Stuart McLean on CBC as he does his oh so familiar
shtick but I have to admit to the comforting feeling it gives you to know that there is a nation wide broadcaster spreading the same corny humour everywhere in this land. Maybe I can send him a bad pun and it will be heard coast to coast to coast, a collective national groan! My greatest legacy, the
Cristo of pun art. That's it I'll wrap the Parliament Buildings in Red Tape! Nah too many forms, too much bureaucracy. Something simpler perhaps along the lines of the lines of the John
Prine lyrics in
Please Don't Bury Me... "Give My Knees to the Needy!"
Ok maybe not, perhaps a work in progress.
So why
Dief, what's up with that? Glad you asked. I have had a curious affinity for this western populist
political that goes back years. I am on my way to visit his home, where he lived from 1947 on when he wasn't in Ottawa. These early years especially were spent in the political wilderness, losing five elections in a row. Yet he persisted and eventually won the leadership of the Progressive
Conservative Party and then went on to win the greatest majority ever recorded in Canadian electoral history. Now that's a comeback. The home, there it is below, quite striking, even
Rockcliffesque in its grandeur.
My interest began very early in life as my parents were
enthusiastic supporters of a fellow who was just a few generations away from the pejorative term DP or
Dispossessed Persons that was used in a not so
complimentary fashion for people from war torn regions in Europe who came to Canada as a refuge after the Second World War. Yet his vision and power of oratory influenced many non- traditional Tory voters to accept this westerner's view point. After this early inculcation, I was only five and six when he won his greatest victories, there were numerous
intersections in our lives. Not quite like the story of
Dief, the young paper boy meeting then Prime Minister Wilfred
Laurier at the PA train station and after having a brief chat, the
precocious Dief broke off the
conversation by telling the PM that he had to go, he had papers to deliver. For me there was the mock election campaign held in my grade six class, held parallel to the federal election. I played
Dief to Phil
Convey's Pearson.
Dief and I both lost but at least I did not have to face the humiliation of being pelted by tomatos throwing youngsters in, of all places,
Arnprior! I have it on good authority, I was there, that it was the sons of the local Liberal candidate who became a bit too partisan in their political discourse. From there to an address by
Dief to my grade eight class as we met the old political war horse in the old Railway
Committee Room. It was memorable for another reason as on the same day one, the opening of Parliament, Paul Joseph
Chartier an unemployed
construction worker, attempted to blow up the House of Commons but instead blew himself up in the men's washroom of the Centre Block on May 18, 1966. Something to be said for developing bladder control. Also handy on a cross Canada drive but perhaps too much information. Both events, the speech and the explosion, made indelible impressions on my memory. Some years later the Chief gave a speech to the graduates of
Arnprior and District High School. I was only in Grade 12 but able to attend as a junior
matriculation graduate. He gave a good
presentation and did not seem wary of either tomato or bomb tossers. The
ultimate connection came about part way through my career at Public Archives of Canada I was hired on contract to work on processing the Diefenbaker Papers. That turned into a contract with the University of
Saskatchewan but working at my same desk in Ottawa. Finally I won a
competition and became the Head of the Diefenbaker Project in 1981.
Managed to score a present for my parents, a signed photo by
Dief just prior to his death in August 1979, with a
personalized greeting to them. They were thrilled. A few years after
Dief died, I moved on to
what I always felt was my ideal job, archivist
for the Canadian North. But there is still something that lingers and connects me with this
important figure in Canadian history. That's why I am here and touring his home, filled with so many familiar
mementos including Sir John A.
Macdonald's couch and bed. Lots of nostalgia and memories.
Ok done with
Dief and now I am driving around PA. It is a tired looking town. The other superficial impression is that it has a very young, First Nations population, especially in the burbs, and nobody pays attention to traffic rules. I like rules myself, they help me sort out where I am and how I should react but it is chaos as people just step off the sidewalk and head across to the other side on a whim. Ones, two, entire families just strolling across streets. Oh well
vive la difference. Time for me to move on... in so many ways. Hey its a blog, its not all deep.
Speaking of blogs, this is a new experience for me. I have kept a journal from time to time, at one point I even maintained a diary but I found it pretty dull so I couldn't fathom anyone else being interested in its contents. I threw it out. I do recall one diary I came across at the archives, it was maintained faithfully by an individual who lived well into his eighties and the majority of entries were concerning the weather. Well it is a very nice sunny day today but I don't think I should fill up a blog with weather
observations, there are highly trained
professionals who do that for us. Maybe what I can pass along are some of the thousands of thoughts that cascade through my head, no not just the battle between my brain and my right foot, stop or at least slow
down once in a while, or the constant monitoring of bladder level, I am also processing a constant stream (bad choice of words) of scenery, highway signage, historic plaques, the roadside kitsch while also filtering through 57 years of memories.
Ok to be honest the first three of four years are kind of
sparse but nonetheless there is a lot of stuff there to chose from. So this damned blog business, a
promissory note to family and friends who want to be kept informed about my adventures, as if I was a lunar module, with constant updates on the hour. There is the small problem of lack of technical support along with the time commitment of driving 5700
kms. So what I try to do is write as much as I can each night and someday hope to transcribe that into the blog technology. Then there is the pressure of what to say to people, should I remind Caryn to water the lawn and the indoor plants, what about the ex-
twonie poolsters who expect wit usually distilled into a snappy two paragraph blurb. Then there is the expected updates on the
psychological adjustments of leaving the public sector and becoming a contractor to the public sector. Radical change that. Ah but I am still processing the retirement party and all of the good vibrations that entailed. Kind words spoken by people I truly respect and am
privileged to call friends and colleagues.
Ooops, former colleagues but friends for a lifetime. I am a lucky guy. And I've made the right decision.
Ok road, where to now?
As I get closer to the Alberta border there are more indications of oil activity with nodding horses dotting the landscape. I am heading towards
Lloydminister, a town with a unique distinction. It is the only city divided between two provinces. The Alta-Sask boundary runs right across the main street. I felt the almost biblical sign of separation when as if by natural design I was given a sign that I was indeed a different place, maybe not Kansas but certainly
latitudenally and
philosophically aligned with that part of the world.
I certainly feel the existence of a western mentality. At the motel there was a large sign over the office door, "Please Wipe Your Boots on the Matt Provided Before Entering." Worked for me, and I did.