Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Wellington Village's 100-Year Old Houses - North of Wellington edition!

Back in 2018, I wrote an article for the Museum (https://kitchissippimuseum.blogspot.com/2018/07/wellington-villages-100-year-old-houses.html) that looked at the first batch of houses built in Wellington Village in 1919, following the initial auction of all the Wellington Village lots by the Ottawa Land Association. (More on that here: https://kitchissippi.com/2015/04/17/history-of-wellington-village-ottawa/). At the time I thought it would be cool to find the original houses from Wellington Village that still exist today, and profile them. The article turned out to be a hit, and I got a lot of great feedback from it.

Since that 1919 auction saw the sale of just the lots south of Wellington Street, I had the idea last year to do a similar article, but cover the lots north of Wellington, on the lots sold in the second Ottawa Land Association auction, in June of 1920. This would thus be the 100th anniversary of these original houses in the neighbourhood.

(I always have to add this caveat that technically, Wellington Village includes some houses that pre-date those 1919/1920 auctions. The little community that runs off Carleton Avenue dates actually back to 1895, a subdivision called "Ottawa West" laid out by R.H. Cowley. As well there were a handful of houses fronting Wellington Street that were built prior to the auction, as well as a handful on Holland Avenue. So technically some of those houses that still exist pre-date the 1919/1920 auctions, and thus the 100th Anniversary stuff that was done last year, but for 99% of the neighbourhood, this has been the 100th Anniversary of Wellington Village.)

So anyhow, a while back I got started writing this article, and lost a bit of momentum on it due to other priorities, but also just the fact that I didn't have any vintage photos of the houses really, nor were there that many definitively built in 1920.

So today I take a look back at the first 7 houses that were built (or were well advanced) during the first year that Wellington Village (north of Wellington Street) was subdivided for building. In a way it's surprising that so few houses were commenced after the auction. However, this portion of Wellington Village was a geographical disaster at the time. It was heavily treed, hilly, with substantial bedrock close to the surface. It featured ditches and trenches to carry the water of the farms and lands south of Wellington and well past Carling Avenue down to the River. Even still, it flooded extensively every spring with upwards of 6-8 feet of water in some locations (many of the houses built prior to the sewage system installation in 1928, particularly north of Spencer Street, were built with 8+ foot high foundations; keep an eye next time you walk down Huron, Caroline, Smirle, etc in this area). Even a year after the auction, in April of 1920, a resident of Kenora Avenue pushing for Fisher Park to be established alongside Harmer Avenue (where of course it eventually would be) discounted Wellington Village north of Wellington as a possible Fisher Park location in a letter to the editor, calling it "without question only fit for industrial purposes and will never be a strictly residential section of the city.”

Ottawa Citizen, April 6, 1920

However, construction gradually took place in this part of Wellington Village. The trees were cleared, the flooding and sewage issues were taken care of, and now one would never have known that at a time, this area was considered, at least by some, to be an impossibility for residential housing.

***

99 Huron Avenue
The first house built in the new subdivision following the auction was the home at 99 Huron Avenue. It was constructed by a 24-year old contractor and WWI-veteran named Alexander Peacock.

Peacock had enlisted in March 1917, and was sent overseas right away.  By the fall he was engaged as a stretcher barer on the battlefield, as a member of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment. In late October he was gassed and wounded, and sent to a hospital in France. Records available did not reveal if he came home right away or remained overseas.

Alexander Peacock, builder of 99 (and 89) Huron
Avenue, as photographed while in military.

Regardless, after the war, Peacock was back in Ottawa and living with his wife and two young children, with a third on the way (and three more to come later). At the auction, Peacock purchased three lots. He bought two side-by-side on the east side of Smirle, north of Spencer, for $170 (which he later sold). And he also purchased a lot on Huron Avenue, south of Spencer, for $100.

It was on this lot that Peacock immediately began construction of 99 Huron Avenue, a 2-storey wood-frame house, with 7 rooms. He possibly completed it in stages, as he took out a total of four mortgages between July 1920 and June 1922. However a good-sized house was completed by the fall of 1920, as it was captured in the aerial photo seen at the bottom of this article.

99 Huron Avenue in 2019
For reasons that are lost to history, in July of 1922, Peacock acquired the lot just down the street at the corner of Huron and Spencer for $250, and had plans to build a duplex on the lot. He took out a building permit for a duplex, but by August, had changed his plans and instead constructed a single, the home which is now 89 Huron Avenue. Upon completion in late 1922 he sold 99 Huron, and the family moved in to 89 Huron.

The Peacocks would remain at 89 Huron for only a year and a half, selling to George Blyth in May of 1924, and moving to Trenton, New Jersey.

The Blyth family remain in the home today, in what I have to believe is the longest single-family occupation of a house in Wellington Village (96 years!). George kindly provided me a photo of his house at 89 Huron from what is estimated to be the late 1920s.

89 Huron Avenue circa-late 1920s, also showing 91 & 95
Huron, as well as 71 Holland in background. Not the vintage
street light, and ditches along Spencer Street.
(photo courtesy of Don Blyth)


100 Huron Avenue
John Bruce was a 53-year old carpenter with the Ottawa Stair Works company, who were "stair builders and cabinet makers" located at 989 Somerset Street. He had also been a long-time building contractor in Ottawa. He lived downtown with his wife, but must have found the idea of building in the new Wellington Village community appealing. He bought two adjoining lots on Huron at the big auction sale, and that fall began construction on the house that is now numbered 100 Huron Avenue, for him and his wife Margaret to retire to.

John had a neat date of birth (he was born on New Year's Day on the year of Confederation, 1867), but even more neat was the fact that his brother George married Margaret's sister Violet. Kind of unique double-sibling marriages. But perhaps even more interesting was that George and Violet had a son, Morley Bruce (John and Margaret's nephew) who was on the original Ottawa Senators team, playing in 71 career NHL games, and winning the Stanley Cup with the early Sens in 1920 and 1921.

Morley Bruce 1920

However, this story takes a sad turn, as either just as the house at 100 Huron was completed, or in the final stages of construction, Margaret Bruce passed away on March 31st, 1921 at age 52. She may never have gotten to live in the home.

A month after her passing, John Bruce's other nephew, Bower R. Bruce, also a home builder, acquired the lots next door to the Bruces and constructed 102 Huron. George Bruce had passed away, so the home was built for his widow Violet, and her son Morley, the hockey player (as well as their daughter Lydia). Morley Bruce retired from the Sens that spring at the age of 28, and began working with the Ottawa Fire Department. So while 102 Huron doesn't qualify as one of the houses built in 1920, it was one of the earliest houses and has the many notable connection to John Bruce of 100 next door.

John Bruce remained in 100 Huron until 1940, when he sadly lost it due to mortgage foreclosure (the depression and WWII hit everyone hard, of course).


143 Caroline Avenue
Mrs. Alice Fisher was a 36-year old Scottish-born widow with four kids (John 15, Alice 10, Katie 9 and Frederick 3) when she purchased the lot for $250 at the auction. Her husband John W. Fisher had died in action during WWI at Passchendaele in October of 1917, and she was raising the family on her own. The military pension was supplemented by a job she took as a "charwoman", cleaning government offices. It appears the Fisher family built a small shack on the lot right away to live in; at Census-taking time in early 1921, the family was listed on the lot, in a wood house that was just a single room!

143 Caroline in 2019

It was later in 1921 that Alice Fisher obtained a mortgage for $2,000 and had the complete 143 Caroline Avenue built, with its brick finish, as it still stands today. Further to this, it appears she had to do a bit of negotiating to even get the building permit. At the time she was applying, in April 1921, the City hesitated to issue the permit as Caroline Avenue did not have water service installed yet. However, it was agreed to approve the permit, on the understanding that water might not be available in time.

The house was likely completed by early 1922, and records show that perhaps the cost had been more than anticipated for Mrs. Fisher, as that summer, she had the house up for sale, and later even the family car.

Ottawa Citizen, June 9, 1922.

Ottawa Citizen, September 14, 1922.

But they clearly rebounded, with Mrs. Fisher offering rooms for rent the following year (with use of telephone and piano included!). The Fishers would end up staying in the house until 1943.

Ottawa Citizen, September 29, 1923.

While glancing through the old newspapers, I noticed that in 1925, her daughter Alice, then 15, barely escaped death while riding her bicycle on Wellington Street near Garland. A truck driven by Hintonburg fruit dealer Anthony Ferone heading in the same direction, hit Alice when she swerved in the road in front of him. She was in serious condition in the hospital, but survived. The driver was charged with reckless driving, but no follow-up was ever given in the paper.

So 143 Caroline is included in this list with an asterix, as the current house is as 1921-built home, however there was another, temporary house (though quite possibly part of the current house) that was built in 1920.


103 Caroline Avenue
This house was built by Angus Lawrence McDonald, who had paid $200 for the lot at the auction, and spent most of 1920-1921 building the home. The 33-year old McDonald was a carpenter by trade, and was a small-time contractor building houses in the area. He and his wife Elisabeth had five children (with two more to come), ranging in age from 2 to 10 at the time. Sadly just a month after the auction, his four year old son Lawrence died.

103 Caroline Avenue in 2019

McDonald built the house and while he did, the family resided in it, as they were captured here on the 1921 census. However upon completion, the house was rented out to the family of Frank C. Rickey, who was employed as a butcher. The McDonalds later did move in to the house from about 1926-1931, before later selling and relocating to Cornwall.

I couldn't find anything notable in the history of 103 Caroline, except for this funny little story from 1927 about a lost boy spending the night in the house.

Ottawa Citizen, September 8, 1927.


55 Grange Avenue

James Helmer was a 45-year old stationary engineer with the Ottawa Water Works department, and father of 7, who purchased his lot on Grange north of Spencer for $100. He immediately began clearing the lot and constructing his home. It appears it was a gradual build, as in June 1921, when the Census-takers arrived, Helmer and his family were listed as living in a home that was just two room large. Evidence on the 1920 aerial photograph does show clearing work underway, and the house was likely finished until the spring of 1922, when Helmer took out a sizeable mortgage towards its completion.

Present-day photo of 55 Grange Avenue

The Helmers remained in the home for only a short time, moving in 1925. The Liston family resided there the next three decades. I can't too quickly find anything too interesting about the history of the house or the families, other than that John F. Liston, the son of Joseph Liston, spent the war overseas as an air bomber, and his photo appeared in Ottawa newspapers on several occasions.

Ottawa Citizen
December 30, 1941


60 Smirle Avenue

The house at 60 Smirle was certainly not completed in 1920, and may not have even been commenced until early 1921. It was still under construction in June of 1921 when the Census takers came by, but the family was living on the lot (or in the very raw house), to the point that the Census takers put question marks in the categories of single/duplex, material type and number of rooms. However, there is evidence of clearing and/or foundational work on the lot from the 1920 aerial photo, so I've included it in this list.

60 Smirle Avenue in 2019

The lot was purchased by Richard Cornwall, an Ottawa house painter, for $85. Cornwall held the lot only briefly, selling in March of 1921 to Michael Cain, a 25-year old salesman, and his wife Kathleen. The couple had two young children, 3-year old Michael and 1-year of Margaret. Vague records makes it difficult to tell the story of the first year of the house. Cain sold it as a finished house in February of 1922, so it is possible he built the home only for the purposes of selling it. Or perhaps there were financial reasons. It's also possible Cain himself did not build the house but had hired a builder to do it, as he was a salesman by profession, and quite young. (Details that would take a lot more time than it's worth to dig up for this article)


"50/52" Ross Avenue

This was a house, or more likely a shack that only existed briefly in the 1920s. 47-year old sheet metal worker John D. Morris operated a small sheet metal shop at 361 Somerset Street West. He purchased two lots at the 1920 auction for a total of $300, the lots on which 50 and 52 Ross now stand.

Both the 1921 Census and Ottawa City Directory list Morris and his wife Anna as occupying a small 1-room house on Ross Avenue. So some kind of house was constructed there in late 1920.

However by 1922, there is no record of an occupant of any kind of house/shack on either of the lots, and Morris is listed as living elsewhere. Registry records show Morris sold the two lots for $700 in 1923 (a fair price considering the initial uptick in land value between 1920-1923), and had never taken out a mortgage on the property to build. There are also no stories of any house fires happening on Ross around that time that would also explain the loss of a house.

Aerial photos from 1927 and 1928 appear to confirm the existence of a tiny house set at the very back of lot 820 (52 Ross), along the rear lot line. It must have been a primitive shack, and even the Census lists simply an "X" in place of his earnings, indicating he made very little.

May 1927 aerial photo, showing Gilchrist at top,
Ross at bottom, and Spencer running top to bottom.
54 Ross is built at the corner, and at the rear of the
lot for the future 52 Ross is a small building,
presumably the Morris "shack" from 1920-1921.

November 1928 aerial photo of the same view. 52 Ross
has now been built, and a small garage appears behind it,
seemingly smaller and a bit more to the north than the
shack that's there in 1927.
So best research efforts seem to indicate that a shack did exist on that spot for some years, occupied at minimum for a year or two by John and Anna Morris, who then moved out (perhaps not even by choice; recall the OLA had put in very specific building conditions to ensure a higher-class neighbourhood), and the shack stood for 6-7 more years, seemingly without any occupants until removed in 1928 when 52 Ross was built. Tragically, Morris died in his shop in May of 1925 when the gasoline tank of a car exploded while he was using a blow torch.

---

The photo below is from the earliest set of aerial photos taken of the neighhourhood, in late summer of 1920. It shows only the two houses on Huron, some clearing work on others (including the Grange and Smirle houses), plus the established subdivision west of Western, and a few individual houses fronting Wellington and Holland which pre-dated the auction. (Click on the photo to see it larger, or right-click and select to save it to view it in even greater detail).

Aerial photo of the north half of Wellington Village from
the summer of 1920, the earliest known aerial photo of WV.

So happy 100th anniversary to these seven houses (of which five, with possibly a portion of a sixth still stand)! But more importantly, cheers to the unique and colorful history that every single house in Wellington Village has! So much history here!

Monday, April 6, 2020

The Spanish Flu of 1918 in Ottawa & Kitchissippi and the parallels to COVID-19

The new issue of the Kitchissippi Times just came out, and with so much changing in our lives with COVID-19, I decided last minute to switch gears on my article this month, and write about something virus related. The most relatable story might be the Spanish Flu of 1918. Though Covid is not the flu, there are an incredible number of similarities with how sudden and devastating it was. In the article I write about how it appeared, how it affected Ottawa in general, and of course a specific look at what happened in Kitchissippi with it. Please have a read at:

https://kitchissippi.com/2020/04/05/quick-to-act-how-ottawa-quelled-the-spanish-flu-in-1918/


Sunday, March 1, 2020

Fisher Park turns 100 years old in 2020!

Fisher Park is the hub of Kitchissippi, and in 2020 the park turns 100 years old! I dug through old records and newspapers to piece together the story of how the park came together - why a park was needed, who helped lead the charge to create it, where it almost ended up, and how it developed over the last 100 years. I love this article, and I love Fisher Park, it's been a part of my life for my whole life, as I'm sure it has for just about everyone.

Check out the article at the Kitchissippi Times:

https://kitchissippi.com/2020/03/06/early-days-fisher-park-celebrates-100-years/

Here are some bonus photos that did not make the online or print edition:

1928 aerial photo showing the old GRT rail line at left (now
the Queensway), Harmer as an unpaved road at top going
left to right, and Holland the wide finished road at the bottom.
The square in Fisher Park is the old bowling green.

May 5 1933 aerial photo of Fisher Park, with cleaner detail

Fisher Park High School, May 1954
(City of Ottawa Archives CA-4342)

Fisher Park High junior football team November 1955
(City of Ottawa Archives CA-35167)

Fisher Park Winter Carnival February 1956
(City of Ottawa Archives CA-36701)

Fisher Park during Queensway construction in 1961
(City of Ottawa Archives CA-8455)

Ottawa Journal April 22 1967

Friday, February 14, 2020

75 Years of CARE

Once again I'm straying outside Kitchissippi to write on a topic that's more related to the greater Ottawa history... But this a topic I thought well worth covering.

I'm sure we've all experienced it before, where you hear of something one day, and then suddenly by total coincidence you come across it again multiple times within a short period of time. That happened to me recently with the world relief organization CARE. A flexible acronym, it was originally known as the Cooperative for American Remittances to Europe, but now stands for Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere.

I'd of course heard of CARE and the work that they do worldwide, but with a little digging, was intrigued to find out that their work originated at the close of WWII. In fact, 2020 is the 75th anniversary of the organization. And as far as it's role in Canada, it all began here in Ottawa, with the founding of CARE Canada (or 'CARE of Canada' as it was officially originally known) just a few months after its origination in the States.

I absolutely love the concept of what CARE first was established for. During WWII, large portions of Europe had been decimated. When the war was over, there was so much work to be done to rebuild these large, historic cities. So many people had been displaced, so many soldiers had returned home to nothing. In Canada especially, many citizens still had close ties to Europe. Many had only recently escaped the Nazis by moving to Canada, while others had come during the years prior to the War with the looming threat in Germany. Additionally, a great many others were first generation Canadians, sons and daughters of Europeans, with still large families of close relatives back home.

CARE was established so that individuals and organizations across the U.S. and Canada could make financial contributions to an organization that would lead directly to a family member (or even a person in need in their old hometown) receiving a food aid package.

Stealing from Wikipedia, at first founding, CARE was "initially a consortium of twenty-two U.S. charities (a mixture of civic, religious, cooperative, farm, and labour organizations) with the purpose of delivering food aid to Europe in the aftermath of World War II. The organization delivered its first food packages in 1946. CARE's food aid took the form of CARE Packages, which were at first delivered to specific individuals: the US people paid $10 to send a CARE Package of food to a loved one in Europe, often a family member. President Truman bought the first CARE package. CARE guaranteed delivery within four months to anyone in Europe, even if they had left their last known address, and returned a signed delivery receipt to the sender. Because European postal services were unreliable at the time these signed receipts were sometimes the first confirmation that the recipient had survived the war."

The establishment of CARE was launched as important news in every major newspaper across North America on the morning of Friday November 30th, 1945:

New York Daily News - November 30, 1945

Louisville Courier-Journal - November 30, 1945

What an amazing concept, and it was a huge success in the first years following the war. Again from Wikipedia: "The first CARE Packages were in fact surplus “Ten-in-One” US army rations packs (designed to contain a day's meals for ten people). In early 1946 CARE purchased 2.8 million of these warehoused rations packs, originally intended for the invasion of Japan, and began advertising in America. On May 11, 1946, six months after the agency's incorporation, the first CARE Packages were delivered in Le Havre, France. These packages contained staples such as canned meats, powdered milk, dried fruits, and fats along with a few comfort items such as chocolate, coffee, and cigarettes. (Several on the CARE Board of Directors wished to remove the cigarettes, but it was deemed impractical to open and reseal 2.8 million boxes.)"

Each of the original CARE packages weighed 21.37 pounds, and contained 40,963 calories of food, as well as blanket packages made from materials that could be turned into clothes.

New York Daily News - full page ad
June 26, 1946

New York Daily News - full page ad
October 8, 1946

It was obviously not long before Canadians wanted to take advantage of the organization. In July of 1946, the Unitarian Service Committee of Canada, at its HQ in Ottawa at 78 Bank Street, began offering citizens the chance to contribute to CARE, by filling out a form that would be forwarded to CARE in the States.

Montreal Gazette, July 31, 1946

As well, a small collecting office for Western Canadians opened in Winnipeg in the fall of 1946, established by the Jewish Immigrant Aid Society of Canada, in partnership with the still U.S.-based CARE.

Saskatoon Star-Phoenix
November 30, 1946

Official expansion of CARE did not take long. Almost exactly one year after launching in the United States, CARE of Canada was established in Ottawa, at an office in the "Sparks Chambers" building at 193 Sparks Street, between Bank and O'Connor.

A circa 1950 view of 193 Sparks Street, the original home
of CARE Canada. 193 is the segment of the block that
has sets of three identical windows on each floor. CARE
Canada was located in room 313, on the third floor.

Same view now (thanks to Urbsite for the photo
compares and the history of the old Sparks Chambers building
which you can read at: this link

CARE Canada was established primarily through the efforts of A.B. MacDonald, general secretary of the Co-Operative Union of Canada. MacDonald had worked extensively in relief work with the United Nations, serving as national chairman for UNICEF for two years, and saw an opportunity to continue his important work through his firm.

A.B. MacDonald

MacDonald made arrangements for opening of the first CARE Canada office a floor above the Co-Operative Union offices at 193 Sparks Street. He then instituted the first Director of CARE Canada, Mr. Breen Melvin. Breen was 29 years old, Winnipeg born, but educated in B.C., where he worked as a school teacher, then with the Y.M.C.A. War Services during WWII, before working with the UBC in the co-operative field as a field worker in the fishing communities of the west coast. Early in 1946 he joined the British Columbia Co-operative Union as a secretary-treasurer. He later that year
accepted the offer from MacDonald to go to Ottawa and guide the CARE program for Canada, which he did for several years before becoming secretary of the Co-operative Life Insurance Company and the Co-operative Fire and Casualty Company.

The first published mention of the establishment of CARE Canada comes from the Winnipeg Tribune in December of 1946:

Winnipeg Tribune, December 9, 1946

Some Ottawa news coverage followed a month later in January 1947:

Ottawa Citizen - January 4, 1947

Somewhat surprisingly, the United Kingdom was not an eligible destination for the first year or so of operations. It was not until April 2nd 1947 that CARE packages could be sent to the UK. It was explained through the media that it was felt that there was more urgent need elsewhere, and thus the UK waited, becoming the 14th country eligible as a destination on that date. It was reported that CARE Canada, through its Ottawa office had been handling $50,000 of orders per month, which was expected to rise greatly due to the expansion to the UK.

It was estimated that in 1947 alone, over $90,000,000 worth of food and clothing was to enter Europe thanks to the CARE program, all through the $10 packages.

CARE was delivering to Germany as well, beginning in August of 1946. Occasionally blockades were set up by governments to prevent delivery, particularly in German. As a result, CARE stockpiled  30,000 packages in two warehouses in Berlin, and invited residents from the city to come to the warehouse to pick up their packages. Russia would not allow CARE to operate within their country, nor the countries they occupied (which included a portion of Berlin at the time).

Ottawa Journal - Oct 27, 1948

By the early 1950s, CARE Canada had began focusing on war-torn-villages world-wide, focusing village-by-village on rehabilitating the communities. Organizations in Canada (service clubs, youth groups, women's organizations) were encouraged to adopt villages, and contribute directly towards their rebuild. This included things such as tools, livestock, machinery for the making of clothes, school kits, and emergency food. The goal was to build a new life of hope and accomplishment for those who had lost virtually everything.

CARE Canada had moved its headquarters to the more spacious 116 O'Connor Street by this time. An old three-storey brick house that had been converted to a commercial building for three firms, CARE would operate here for the next 15 or so years, until moving to 63 Sparks Street in 1966.

In 1952, CARE Canada made a significant donation when it presented an iron lung to the General Hospital in Rangoon, Burma using surplus funds collected during the previous year. The substantial donation was a contribution to what was known as the Colombo Plan (which was an organized project established by commonwealth countries to battle poverty in South and Southeast Asia). the board of CARE Canada made this decision based on what they felt was an increasing trend in Canadians donating towards the overseas self-help projects, that donors would approve of the sizable contribution to Burma, An iron lung, by the way, was a primitive machine used by hospitals to help improve breathing for those who have lost muscle capacity or simply could not breathe enough. It was known as a 'negative pressure ventilator', and also helped prevent the spread of polio.

7 Years of CARE Canada. Ottawa Journal. April 6, 1953.

By 1955, CARE had raised over $6M in Canada, and $180M worldwide. They continued to offer targeted relief in Europe, but their main focus had shifted to relief and rehabilitation work in other parts of the world, including Asia, South America and Africa. Their primary policies at the time were the distribution of surplus agricultural produce to countries where desperation was prevalent, and establishing self-help program in areas of need, "based on village organization and geared to what the local economy could support in the future and the express desires of the people." The latter would soon develop into CARE's main work over the coming decades.

As wars and devastation continued to affect certain parts of the world, food and clothing became dire needs in certain areas. Hunger and massive crop failures were a major concern in Southeast Asia, while war orphans and refugees were escaping war-torn Russia and Germany.

In 1955, Lillian Wadsworth was appointed Director of CARE Canada, a position she maintained until her sudden passing at the young age of 53 in 1966. She was a trailblazer in Ottawa for women, having started a working career in the 1940s as a director and later on-air host in Ottawa radio at CFRA and CBO, later becoming president of the Women's Press Club Ottawa, president of the Quota Club, president of the Central Council of Service Clubs, first vice-president of the Ottawa branch of the Canadian Council of Women, and had been a long-time member of the Business and Professional Women's Club, the civic committee for the Tulip Festival, and a member of the Ottawa Winter Carnival Committee, all on top of her tireless work with CARE Canada.

Lillian Wadsworth in the offices of the Army Survey
Establishment RCE at Christmas December 1956, receiving
a donation cheque from the unit commander Lt-Col. J. I.
Thompson. Also pictured at left is Gloria Bortolotti.

In November of 1955, Lillian brought Pak Jong Yong, who was Korean-born and an agriculture student at MacDonald College, to speak to a meeting of representative students from all of Ottawa's high schools to talk about the work CARE has done across the world, the effects of war in his country, and the importance of fundraising in the high schools (and everywhere). A photograph was captured from that evening showing Yong speaking to some of the students present.

Pak Jong Yong speaking to Ottawa high school students
November 10, 1955.
(City of Ottawa Archives CA-035277)

The following are a sampling of photos I found through the City of Ottawa Archives related to CARE and the work they were doing at this time. Fundraising and promotion was extensive at this time, and the newspaper photograph archives captured many photos related to these activities in Ottawa:

CARE window in an Ottawa shop, December 5, 1955
(City of Ottawa Archives CA-035727)

CARE exhibit at the  B'nai B'rith convention. Nov 28, 1955
(City of Ottawa Archives CA-035591)

This was captioned as "Mrs. Henry Logan, a typist with the
Department of Veterans' Affairs, makes first donation to CARE's
plan for Christmas funds." A.G. Watson of CARE is receiving 
the money while B.W. Ridley, a supervisor at DVA looks on. 
December 8, 1955. (City of Ottawa Archives, CA-035772)

Singing group The Four Aces present A.G. Watson of CARE
Canada with a cheque. December 10, 1955.
(City of Ottawa Archives CA-035812)

Joan Hardy donating a cheque. Dec 12 1955.
(City of Ottawa Archives, CA-035832)

Mrs E. Jawahir, wife of the venerable archdeacon of
Lahore diocese, West Pakistan at 140 Bay Street.
February 16, 1956
(City of Ottawa Archives, CA-036904)
Ottawa Citizen, February 20, 1956

1956 marked the 10-year anniversary of CARE in Canada:

10 years of CARE Canada
May 9, 1956
(City of Ottawa Archives, CA-038326)

Nepean High School put on a fundraising campaign during the Christmas season of 1956. Lillian Wadsworth spoke at the school, and a photo capturing Lillian, principal D.O. Arnold, vice-princila W.R. Sharkey and students Brian Sharkey and Sandra Wilson appeared in the Citizen:

Ottawa Citizen, December 13, 1956

In 1959, Ontario's four major milk producers made a combined gift of $42,000 to CARE Canada, to over the shipping cost of nearly 3 million pounds of Canadian surplus milk powder contributed by the Canadian government, which was shipped to Turkey and Pakistan.

Ottawa Journal. March 4, 1959.

By the 1960s, the targeted relief efforts of donating food to a specific person or individual was phased out, and instead CARE focused on general relief. CARE packages from Canada were still sent overseas with a maple leaf on it, and the words "A gift from the people of Canada", along with the name and address of the Canadian whose donation had purchased the box.

The name of the organization changed in 1959 to "Cooperative for American Relief Everywhere", and by 1961, were involved in the establishment of the Peace Corps with President John F. Kennedy. CARE selected and trained the first volunteers who were deployed to development projects in Colombia. These joint projects with the Peace Corps continued until 1967.

In 1962, CARE absorbed the medical aid organization MEDICO, increasing CARE's ability to improve medicine and health throughout the world. MEDICO trained local personnel in the field of medicine, emphasizing community health care through these development programs that began in the mid-50s. Doctors and medical specialists would donate their time and skills for a month or more to train their international counterparts, paying their own travel expenses.

The last original CARE package was delivered in 1967, a final tally of over 100 million packages sent. (The format would later return on an ad hoc basis following the Bosnian War and through an occasional promotional campaign).

By the 1970s, CARE Canada continued to focus on battling hunger, malnutrition, disease, illiteracy and poverty in developing countries. Though CARE functioned out of the U.S. and Canada up until the mid-1970s, it was not until then that CARE truly became an international organization with the establishment of CARE Europe in 1976, and CARE Norway, Germany, Italy and UK all around 1980. An umbrella organization for CARE International was established in 1982. (There is so much more I could write here, but I'd strongly recommend just reading the CARE Wikipedia entry or any other of a number of great resources on the net discussing the history of CARE).

CARE Canada today has a more directed focus, as per their website www.care.ca: "We help women and girls in over 90 developing countries lift themselves and their families out of poverty and out of crisis. We develop solutions with women and girls and their communities to tackle the big issues facing them like climate change, economic empowerment, food security and emergency relief in times of crisis or disaster." The website goes on to detail the very valid and important reasons why the organization focuses on women and girls today, notably that women and girls are disproportionately affected by poverty and discrimination, face the greatest risk, and are an integral part of the solutions needed to truly overcome poverty. (more at https://care.ca/why-women-and-girls/)

I hope sharing the interesting history of this important organization, and particularly the role Ottawa and its residents have played in it over its 75 years, made for a good read, but may also urge you to consider contributing to the significant work being done by CARE Canada today!


Monday, February 10, 2020

Oliver & Sons Furniture: Early Hintonburg Industry

This month my article in the Kitchissippi Times focuses on a long-lost but important firm that set up shop in Hintonburg back in 1899 and went on to become one of Canada's largest furniture manufacturers. Bankruptcy during the great depression brought about an end to this successful company in the 1930s, but their legacy is one worth exploring.

Please check out the article at https://kitchissippi.com/2020/01/31/early-days-furniture-store-thrived-in-early-hintonburg/

Unfortunately for many months of hunting, I could never find a photo of the factory whatsoever. However I've recently discovered one might exist at Library and Archives Canada, so I will re-add it to this post in the future if I'm able to track it down! In the meantime, I have a few photos that help demonstrate the factory's size:

LeBreton Flats factory in 1895 before moving operations
to Hintonburg in 1899

1922 fire insurance plan showing the buildings
and wood piles. "Oliver" is what is now
Gladstone, and that's Breezehill along the left.

1901 newspaper ad

Sunday, January 26, 2020

The night when it was feared the Ku Klux Klan had arrived in Ottawa...in Hintonburg

Obviously not a topic I ever intended to, or wanted to write about. However, sometimes when researching another topic, I'll stumble across an article from long ago that tells a story about something else completely different. That happened to me this week, in discovering arguably one of the most shocking stories from Kitchissippi's past.

**

The evening of Saturday October 22nd, 1927 was cool and cloudy in Ottawa. Life was still good in the city, with the prosperous roaring twenties still pushing forward, with little hint of the pending stock market crashes and economic depression that were just around the corner. The Rough Riders finished their afternoon game at Lansdowne Park against Hamilton (then known simply as the "Tigers"), a 14-7 loss which was actually their first home loss in three years, ending a successful streak that saw them win the Grey Cup in 1925 and 1926. The movie theatres were packed in downtown Ottawa, the streetcars bustling through all of Ottawa's neighbourhoods, the trains roaring through Hintonburg, Wellington Village and Westboro on their way to distant points east and west.

Hintonburg was extensively developed by this time, but pockets of vacant land still remained in the neighbourhood, as land was still cheap enough that the railroads, and even some private ownership could still afford to keep acres of land for future investment.

A snapshot of the southeast end of Hintonburg from a few months later in April 1928 show one such section of the neighbourhood that was still quite under-developed:

April 1928 aerial photo of the area.
That's Young Street and Gladstone running top to bottom
near the centre, with the old GTR railway tracks just to the
right of Young. At the top running left to right is Bayswater
Avenue., while Breezehill and Loretta below it are barely
visible. The Standard Bread factory sits on the right side
of Gladstone, and across the street from it is the J. Oliver
& Sons furniture factory. 

It was in this vacant field not far from where Breezehill intersects with Gladstone today, that a dark moment in Ottawa's history occurred on that chilly October evening.

**

At 9:24 p.m., the telephone rang at Station Number 11 on Parkdale Avenue. The fireman answering the call was told to rush up Gladstone Avenue to Breezehill Avenue for a live fire. At the same moment, the station alarm sounded, indicating the fire alarm box had been pulled at the J. Oliver & Sons furniture factory on Gladstone Avenue at the corner of Loretta. This was no false alarm, there was something serious happening in Hintonburg.

A large number of firemen from the station climbed aboard their rigs and raced up Gladstone Avenue. Firemen from another station to the east made their way as well. Their eyes would have seen it well before they arrived, as the sight was viewable for quite a distance in all directions. And what they saw was likely almost impossible to believe. Certainly, one wouldn't have wanted to believe it, not in Ottawa, and not in Hintonburg.

There, in the vacant field alongside the Grand Trunk Railroad tracks, set a little ways back from Gladstone Avenue, was an enormous cross, burning in flames with a glare "which lit up the whole district".

**

The fiery cross was a symbol of the Ku Klux Klan, and typically appeared as a spectacle to announce that a supportive branch of the hateful organization had formed in that locality. It's arrival in Ottawa was a major concern.

These were tense times in eastern Ontario, as the Klan had begun to make advances in Canada, and over the previous year had gained significant popularity in certain districts, most notably in Smiths Falls.

It had only been a month earlier that five huge crosses were burned on the St. Lawrence when 3,500 supporters showed up to a meeting of the KKK at Windmill Point, one mile east of Prescott. Though no evidence of the Klan had been recorded in Ottawa to that point, it was noted that several Ottawa citizens were among those at the meeting in Prescott.

The Prescott meeting came on the heels of the second annual meeting in Smiths Falls, which had occurred on August 28th, where it was reported that thousands attended the full day and evening meeting, which concluded with the burning of five crosses, ranging from thirty to seventy feet in height, "the largest cross presented an impressive scene as it burst into flames and illuminated the field showing the white robed figures of the Klansmen in the red glow." A chilling account by the Citizen.

Ottawa Citizen
August 29, 1927

Smiths Falls Klan stories appeared throughout 1926 and 1927, with cross burnings occurring every four to six months. A meeting in September of 1926 brought "between six and seven thousand people...from Kingston, Belleville, Brockville, Perth, Ottawa and the whole countryside", where a speaker, "known as the vice wizard of the Klan movement in Canada, was present from New Brunswick and at the afternoon and evening sessions gave addresses outlining the origin formation and claimed benefits of the Kan movement, which he clearly defined as a Christian, national, gentile, and white man's organization, one hundred per cent Protestant and British", so reported the Citizen.

The development in Smiths Falls had been quick. It was reported only in late April that the first cross burning occurred on the outskirts of town. Originally believed to be most likely a practical joke, a second burning a month later on May 25th confirmed the organization, and the newspaper reported that Klan literature had recently been circulated in the area.

Ottawa Journal, May 27 1926

A dynamite bombing of a church in Barrie in June of 1926 further heightened fears of the KKK in Ontario, as three Klansman took credit for the explosion which occurred just after a rally in the city. The Attorney-General for Ontario Hon. W. F. Nickle was pushed to investigate how extensive the organization of the Klan had grown in Ontario, but he declined, instead (very oddly) issuing a statement noting that "assurance had been given him by Klan officials that the organization stood for law and order and that they would use every effort to facilitate the capture of law-breakers who used the Klan as a vehicle to further their own ends".

According to a Maclean's article from 2017, "The Canadian expansion of the KKK was buoyed by inter-war anti-immigrant sentiment, the usual white nationalism that had deep roots since Confederation and concerns over vice—alcohol, drugs and non-heterosexual monogamous sex that was often prejudicially associated with ethnic minorities. In the United States, similar concerns were in play, but the biggest reason for the revival of the anachronistic post-Civil War-era “Clansman” group at the start of the 20th century was the concern in the south that black Americans were making real political and economic gains. It was a backlash. And that—nearly 50 years after the end of the Civil War—was when the majority of Confederate statues were erected and the majority of Jim Crow laws (establishing segregation and trashing voting rights, among other things) were established. The KKK’s terror campaign was a way of ensuring that systemic discrimination wouldn’t be challenged." (Full article at: https://www.macleans.ca/news/canada/the-kkk-has-a-history-in-canada-and-it-can-return/)

The Klan meanwhile had grown in popularity in western Canada, with membership exceeding 10,000 in the west, where each member contributed $10, providing a kitty of $100,000, a powerful amount of money to organize unfathomable activities and events.

Suffice to say, there would have been a lot worry in Ottawa in 1927 that the Klan might attempt to make a presence in our city. It was reported that in mid-1926, three or four men had come to Ottawa as KKK organizers and had attempted to form a branch, but left town after a brief stay, having achieved nothing. Ottawa police and newspaper editors seemed please to boast that Ottawa essentially had no history with the Klan, yet certainly it was clear that the movement had its local supporters, and those supporters were finding their outlet in the nearby gatherings in Smiths Falls, Prescott and elsewhere.

**

When firefighters arrived to the vacant field off Gladstone Avenue, they quickly extinguished the burning cross using "three hand chemicals".

The cross was made of planed timber, about four inches square, which had been varnished. It was guessed but not confirmed, that the wood had been taken from the Oliver's factory wood piles. It was approximately 15 feet high, with a cross bar about six feet long. It was reported to have been buried at a depth of two feet or more into the ground, and was reportedly "quite firm". There were also stones placed around the base to help support it. They heavy cross arm had been bound to the upright using picture-hanging wire. The entire cross was wrapped around with clothes which had been soaked in oil (and tied by the same picture wire), to make them burn more readily.

The firemen found an empty five-gallon can, wood covered, which had been used to carry the oil that started the fire.

If this had been a prank, it certainly was well planned, and carefully engineered. Lieut. Langdon of the Parkdale fire station was convinced that the fire was not the work of local boys. "The cross was quite heavy", he said "and it was impossible that young boys could have lifted it into position."

A large crowd had assembled, as the fire could been seen from a long distance, while others had followed the fire trucks to the site.

The emergency crews on scene immediately began to search for witnesses and it was a group of boys who had been playing nearby as the sun set, who reported seeing four men run from the cross, jump into an automobile and drive way hurriedly. It was those boys who then rang the alarm from the fire alarm box at Oliver's.

A female witness, who had walked by just before the fire began, reported that she had seen a car parked close to the lot, which she found odd as there were no houses in the area. She was surprised to see the car, but made no investigation into it.

The location was perfect for such a significant display. It was a large vacant field, in the middle of a populated part of the city, in one of it's highest points, allowing it to be seen "at a great distance".

**

As word spread of the incident on Sunday, many ventured out to the location to view the charred remains of the cross. "Youngsters of the neighbourhood gathered about it in wonderment, apparently expecting to see a troupe of white hooded riders gallop on the scene at any minute, but they were doomed to disappointment", reported the Journal.

Still scattered about the field on Sunday morning were portions of the rags used in the fire. These included "remnants of clothing, overalls, bags, shirts, coats, etc." Pieces of the Ottawa Citizen were also found nearby, which also perhaps had been used to help start the fire.

The location of the burning cross (marked with red X)

The lack of Klansmen present at the burning was perhaps the most reassuring part of the incident, as it was apparently typical of the members to remain on guard by the cross, usually on horses, until it had burned itself out. Local police felt this was the first time a burning cross had been extinguished by firemen.

**

The burning of the cross in the field at the end of Breezehill Avenue was big news when the Monday morning newspapers came out in Ottawa.

Interestingly, Ottawa's two English-language papers appear to have taken different views of the incident. The Journal's slant on their reporting was that it was likely the work of boys or just a prank. The Citizen meanwhile leaned more towards it being tied to the KKK. Their headlines appear below:

Ottawa Citizen, October 24, 1927

Ottawa Journal, October 24, 1927

Regardless, on Monday morning the RCMP refused comment on the incident, and also it was noted that "no investigation of the Klan is under way or is even contemplated by the force." Though it would have been outside the jurisdiction of the RCMP apparently, and up to municipal or provincial authorities to investigate, there was still a call for the federal police agency to intervene. However, the burning of a cross was not against the law, and "the act of itself, police officers say, would not justify official action".

On Monday Ottawa Police were insistent that they believed it was "merely the prank of young men seeking a sensation", yet that seems to go against the evidence presented, and fire Lieut. Langdon's comments a day prior. It was noted that Ottawa Police were also "ready to assure the public that should a branch of the organization make its appearance in Ottawa, it will receive short shrift should it attempt to take the law into its own hands in any way. While there is no definite law against the formation of a secret society, acts of lawlessness such as have been attributed to the Klan in various parts of the United States will not be tolerated at all."

The Citizen noted that "some of the authorities incline to the idea that the burning of the cross was largely in the nature of a hoax. But whether it was, or whether it was a token that the Ku Klux Klan has come to Ottawa does not appear to make much difference."  Wow.

Why multiple levels of government refused to consider any kind of investigation astounds me in 2020, and it is hard to imagine why they would not have wanted to get to the bottom of the activity, at minimum to calm the concerns of local residents.

**

The stories which filled the newspapers of Monday October 24th simply stopped right there. No mention of the fire, the KKK or anything related to the incident appeared in the Tuesday newspaper, or in any other following for a full week.

However, just a little over a week later, on Halloween night, a cross was burned in a field in Hog's Back (the field was adjacent to the road linking what was then called Bowesville road with Hog's Back. Bowesville Road is now Riverside Drive, so that would it put it somewhere in the vicinity of Riverside and Hog's Back Road). The description of the cross, its construction, and the same rags and overalls were all the same as the Hintonburg burning from the week prior. The cross apparently burned for an hour until it was put out by local residents, the fire reportedly bringing out "all the Hogsbackers from their homes". Despite this concerning incident, the story drew just two paragraphs in the Citizen, no mention in the Journal, and no comment from the police, nor any further follow-up.

Whether the police and media intentionally (and strategically) avoided covering any Klan topics over the short-term following is unknown. Perhaps the cross burnings were the work of pranksters, and were simply isolated incidents. Perhaps (and probably more likely) it was the work of a very small group of supporters attempting to create a stir, and to their credit, the media buried it.

Regardless, the cross burnings were awful incidents to occur. However, as terrible as they were, especially if they were actually connected to dedicated KKK organizers, we can be thankful that these are seemingly the only two incidents to ever occur in Ottawa related to the Klan. Other Canadian/Ontario cities cannot boast of the same. Yet, it is still shocking to think that an incident like that did once occur here in Kitchissippi.