Celebrate Canada 2010 – defining Canada's cultural tapestry in 2010

The Flag

Toronto Dec 29473On February 15, 1965, at hundreds of ceremonies across the country and around the world, the red and white Canadian maple leaf flag was raised for the first time. In Ottawa, 10,000 people gathered on a chilly and snow-covered Parliament Hill. At precisely noon, the guns on nearby Nepean Point sounded as the sun broke through the clouds. An RCMP constable, 26-year old Joseph Secours, hoisted the flag to the top of a specially-erected white staff, and a sudden breeze snapped the maple leaf to attention.

The day caught Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson and the Conservative Leader of the Opposition, John Diefenbaker, in very different moods. Diefenbaker dramatically pushed away his tears. He had fought the arrival of this moment every step of the way. Pearson was sick with a bad cold, leaving his bed to attend the festivities and returning there immediately afterward, but he was triumphant. He had his flag, calling it “a new stage in Canada’s forward march.” 06-21-13-19_04

Defeating Diefenbaker in the April 1963 election, Pearson had been full of promise and promises. During his first year in power, however, the Liberal leader had stumbled often and badly, and Diefenbaker grabbed Parliament by the throat. The Prime Minister seized on the flag as a political weapon. He wanted to reclaim the legislative initiative, rejuvenate a wounded Liberal Party and heal divisions in a country that had been knocked off balance by the assertive nationalism of Quebec’s Quiet Revolution. canada-day-2009_46 Without asking or telling his Cabinet colleagues, Pearson put on his war medals and marched off to the mid-May 1964 national convention of the Royal Canadian Legion in Winnipeg. There, before an angry crowd of veterans, he announced his determination to give Canadians a flag with the maple leaf as its dominant design. The vets had fought under the Red Ensign, which combined the British Union Jack and the Canadian coat of arms. It had long been the unofficial Canadian flag. “Keep it Flying,” the Legion insisted. In Winnipeg Pearson had been given a taste of what Diefenbaker was about to deliver in Ottawa. When the Prime Minister put his proposal before Parliament in June, the Opposition leader shamelessly wrapped himself in the Red Ensign and demanded that the people be consulted in a plebiscite. He claimed that the Prime Minister’s design, which joined three red maple leaves and centred them on a white background with blue edges, had nothing of Canada’s majestic traditions, its British and Christian past. “Pearson’s pennant,” Dief huffed. Diefenbaker and his traditionalist lieutenants mounted a filibuster. Pearson forced members of Parliament to stay over the summer, but that did not help. Finally, in September, the issue was shuffled off to a parliamentary committee.

allan-of-liverpool-with-canadian-flag“With a gun at our heads,” recalled Liberal MP John Matheson, the key member of the 15-person panel, “we were asked to produce a flag for Canada and in six weeks!” The committee held 35 bruising meetings. Thousands of suggestions poured in from a public fully engaged in what had become a great Canadian debate about identity and how best to represent it.  At the last minute Matheson slipped a flag designed by historian George Stanley into the mix. It had a single red maple leaf on a white plain, flanked by two red borders. The committee’s final contest pitted Pearson’s pennant against Stanley’s streamer. Assuming that the Liberals would vote for the Prime Minister’s design, the Tories backed Stanley. buffalo-drivein-dvThey were outfoxed. The Liberals voted for the red and white flag too, making the selection unanimous. brockvill-canada-flag The committee had made its decision, but not the House of Commons. Still Diefenbaker would not budge, prolonging the debate until one of his own senior members, Léon Balcer, advised the government to cut off debate. Pearson did so, and the final vote adopting the Stanley flag took place at 2:15 on the morning of December 15, with Balcer and the other francophone Conservatives swinging behind the Liberals. The Monday crowd on the initial Flag Day in Ottawa welcomed their new symbol of sovereignty politely but not exuberantly. It was a committee’s compromise reached after a six-month parliamentary train wreck that threatened national unity and diminished almost everyone who touched the prickly issue. Yet there was, from the very beginning, a broad and instinctive acknowledgement that members of parliament had chosen well even if they had chosen chaotically. As journalist George Bain wrote the morning after the first flags had flown, Canada’s maple leaf emblem “looked bold and clean, and distinctively our own.” View the Historica Minute: canada-day-2009_20Flags Comments 9:36 AM 27/08/09 Damnit Norman you are a superb writer. Thank you Posted by Jamie Laidlaw 0 people recommended this Recommend this comment 9:52 AM 03/09/09 I was adamantly opposed to the “new flag” when it was introduced -because it had no history whereas the Red Ensign did -but more importantly because throughout the year preceding its adoption we had been constantly told by the Liberals that the model we Canadians preferred was the one with three maple leafs and blue borders -and then suddenly and mysteriously we got this red and white thing. barton-school-taking-down-the-flag “When did we change our minds?” I found myself asking myself. “Did I somehow miss the referendum?” Forty years later I admit that I am extremely proud of our “new flag” -but still annoyed at the way it was foisted upon us. It just goes to show you that one can be trained to do/believe anything -even if one is an old dog. Of course then I was only 22 -and definitely a young dog! Jock Williams Yogi 13 Posted by Jock Williams 1 person recommended this Recommend this comment Sign in to add a comment Articles The Wire 5 Most recent articles and blogs in HistoryWire 1. Blog Post Fall election? by William Christian | comments (0) 2. Blog Post Identifying with Canada Day by William Christian | comments (0) 3. Article Canada is Failing History by Marc Chalifoux Marc Chalifoux Marc Chalifoux took over as Executive Director of the Dominion Institute in June 2008. He is a regular commentator in the media on national affairs. He is a graduate of the London School of Economics and Political Science. | comments (3) 4. Article Hockey: Canada’s Game by James Marsh James Marsh James Marsh was born in Toronto and has spent most of his working life in publishing as an editor and writer. He has edited over 200 books in Canadian history and social science and is the author of several books and over 100 articles on Canadian history. James was editor in chief of all three …corner-brook-05-23-003-11

Article The Flag: Distinctively Our Own by Norman Hillmer

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