Spacing Toronto's Liam Lacey reports on a speech given by former Ontario Lieutenant-Governor James Bartleman about what is and isn't remembered about the war of 1812, the North America phase of the Napoleonic Wars.
Prior to the Canadian Thanksgiving weekend, I attended the final day of a three-day history symposium at Fort York on Oct. 9 to hear Ontario’s former Lt.-Governor James Bartleman speak on the subject of how best to celebrate the forthcoming 2012 bicentennial of the War of 1812. I got more than I bargained for.
The “Sense of Place and Heritage Trails: Realizing the War of 1812 Bicentennial” conference at the Cultural and Heritage Tourism Symposium 2009 was organized by Centennial College and presented in association with the City of Toronto at the historic site, Oct. 7-9. Kudos to the College’s organizers for holding the event at Fort York and not way the hell out at its campus in Scarborough.
Bartleman served as an ambassador in Canada’s Foreign Service for 35 years prior to serving as Ontario’s Lt.-Gov. Simply put, the retired diplomat gave the audience a two-pronged history lesson on the War of 1812 and the subsequent racism this country’s aboriginal population has endured since the European powers-that-be decided the natives were no longer useful militarily.
“The popular view of this war is that . . . we preserved Canada from the worst of all possible fates: becoming part of the United States. I guess there’s some truth to that but as we’re looking at the forthcoming bicentennial of the War of 1812, I imagine you’d want to avoid the fate of the 250th anniversary of Quebec City,” he said, referring to the holding of a reenactment during that city’s celebrations of what was effectively the defeat of the French on one of the most historic sites in French Canada. Needless to say, the event offended many French Canadians across Quebec.
He explained the main participants in the War of 1812 were British Americans and native peoples. As he told the heritage and tourism professionals in attendance, when we look at the commemoration of the War of 1812, we must look at it carefully because “it’s their histories specifically which is going to be examined and put under the microscope,” he said. “If we’re careful, this can be a fantastic commemoration of the War of 1812 but we have to recognize the reality of history in Canada.”