Oil Pipeline Spill History at the National Energy Board of Canada Library

National Energy Board Offices, Calgary, Alberta.

National Energy Board Offices, Calgary, Alberta.

By Sean Kheraj

This week, I am taking advantage of some of the historical research materials available at the National Energy Board library in Calgary, Alberta. As we discussed on a recent episode of Nature’s Past: Canadian Environmental History Podcast, federal department libraries are incredible resources for environmental history. With the closure and consolidation of so many of these libraries across the country, I wanted to get to the NEB library before any materials got lost in the shuffle.

The trip to Calgary paid off almost immediately. I am currently working on a history of oil pipeline spills in Canada and I wanted to get a broad picture of the frequency of pipeline failures on Canada’s interprovincial and international oil pipeline network. The helpful staff at the library dug through the catalogue and we turned up this:

Pipeline Incident Database Binder

A binder full of every pipeline incident reported to the National Energy Board between 1959 and 1996.

This was exactly what I was looking for. The binder contains 325 pages of every pipeline incident reported to the National Energy Board between 1959 and 1996. Page after page of spreadsheet charts include dates, locations, incident types, causes, quantities, product types, companies, and annotations for all reported pipeline incidents. This includes every oil pipeline spill. It is basically the mother lode. Continue reading

History Slam Episode Forty: The First World War at the Pierre Savard Conference

By Sean Graham

From April 23 to 25, the History Graduate Students’ Association of the University of Ottawa hosted the 10th Annual Pierre Savard Conference. Robert Englebert, professor at the University of Saskatchewan at founder of the conference, joined the ranks of John Ralston Saul, David Hackett Fischer, and James Bartleman, among others, as the conference’s keynotes. In my five years at the University of Ottawa I have been privileged to participate in the conference every year. Over the years the conference has changed and grown, but the presence and bright smile of Mme. Savard has constantly been a welcome sight to all attendees.

One thing that made this year’s conference particularly notable was the presence of a strong contingent of students from the University of Western Ontario. Several members of the school’s history department made the trek from London to Ottawa, a lot of them bringing presentations on the First World War. With the centenary of the war’s outbreak fast approaching, the war has increasingly received attention in the press, including questions on how the country is commemorating the event. And just last week, we highlighted the video series on the war by the History Department at York University.
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Feminist Mentorship @ the Berks

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By Jennifer Hough Evans

Full disclosure I am very much invested in the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians (Berks). My supervisor at the University of Toronto is Franca Iacovetta, the first Canadian President of the Berks. I am the Administrative Assistant for the Berks, finding answers for conference participants’ questions, inputting changes to the conference program and making sure information gets passed along to correct outlets. In 2011 in the lead-up to the Berks, I made a 14-hour round trip in a mini-van with five other historians to attend the Little Berks in Saratoga Springs, New York. From the beginning of plans to bring the Berks to Toronto, I have been witness to many of the conversations and efforts. I am confident the Berks will be a resounding success!

The question I get asked most often by colleagues and professors is, “what have you learned from your work with the Berks?” There are a lot of answers I could give in response, ranging from the mundane to the creative to the work-related benefits. But what I will take away from working for the Berks is the importance of feminist mentorship. Far from just “scut” work, graduate students and junior scholars have made meaningful contributions to this conference. In research for this blog, I had conversations with three colleagues about our work for the Berks and what we will take away from our experiences.
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I Dig the Past

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By Jay Young 

With optimistic thoughts of warm summer days soon approaching, I recently decided to tackle the backyard. We moved into a home in Toronto last year and we had anticipated some outdoor projects ahead.  This included the widening of a backyard walkway and the erection of a few vegetable planter beds there too. Much of the hard work is now complete, and we look forward to spending some time enjoying the fruits of our labour. Looking back, I’ve come to realize that my recent tasks have a direct relationship with the past.

GardenmarkersEven before starting my backyard project, I’ve felt the meaning of the past within my home. An hour of research at the City of Toronto Archives revealed that the janitor of the nearby elementary school lived here during the 1930s and 1940s. A bit more time in the archives would probably show more inhabitants and their backgrounds.

For the past few decades, our house had been home to a family who had migrated from Italy in the early 1970s. They left their own touches on the building by constructing the cantina in the basement, incorporating architectural details, and caring for a deep backyard garden.

My wife and I hoped to keep the tradition of the backyard garden alive. Soon after we moved in, neighbours told us that the family’s mother had worked hard to maintain a productive vegetable garden for many decades. One neighbour remembered her coming into the street and announcing the “insalata” she had to share with anyone interested. Another reflected that the garden was her pride and joy, her passion even late in life. I heard of harvests of tomatoes and many varieties of lettuce. When raking the leaves and weeds that had followed last summer’s fallow, I found a handful of garden markers. This confirmed neighbourly observations, but also revealed other crops: red peppers and zucchini.

I began to see my backyard as a kind of archive made of human actions and the environment around me. Continue reading

History Slam Episode Thirty-Nine: Corpus, a play about the Holocaust, Memory, and History

By Sean Graham

Corpus is currently in the midst of its world premiere run at Arts Court Theatre in Ottawa. Shows run through May 10, 2014. For further information, go to counterpointplayers.com

This past Monday evening marked the end of Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day). The occasion brought with it tributes to those whole were killed and reminders that such atrocities can never be allowed again. But, as can happen with any day of remembrance, it brought questions about how we remember the Holocaust and whose memories have shaped our understanding of the genocide. As the number of survivors who are still alive continues to decrease with time, will our memory of the Holocaust change? Is there room for new memories that may emerge in still unseen journals or still untold stories? What about those memories that we will never have the opportunity to hear? How do we account for them? These questions remind us that there is never a universal understanding of an event, particularly one that elicits such strong reactions.

In Corpus, a young genocide scholar named Megan (Sascha Cole) is forced to confront these questions when she becomes captivated after uncovering an unexpected relationship between the wife of a Nazi officer and a Polish Jewish prisoner at Auschwitz. With the help of her online lover Heinrich (Daniel Sadavoy), Megan pursues the story with the excited energy of a PhD student eager to take her place in the academy. As she delves further into her research, however, she encounters the contested terrain of memory and how elusive the ‘truth’ can be.
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The War to End All Wars: A Look Back at World War One – A Video Series from the Department of History at York University

header1When Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated by Serbian nationalist Gavrilo Princip on June 28, 1914, it set off a chain of events that became one of the deadliest combats in human history, known as the First World War. To mark the centennial of the start of this war, York University’s Department of History has produced a documentary series, entitled The War to End All Wars: A Look Back at World War I.

Comprised of six English-language episodes and one French-language episode, the series includes 14 of York’s History professors discussing various events of the war, including: The World at War, Canada at War, Women at War, Empires at War, Technologies at War, The Spoils of War and Les Canadiens français et la Première Guerre mondiale. “The series of videos in English and French, offers an opportunity to better understand the impact that the First World War had on Canadians and the world,” said Marcel Martel, Chair of the Department of History. Continue reading to watch them all! Continue reading

Ten Books to Contextualize the Alberta Tar Sands

By Stacy Nation-Knapper, Andrew Watson, and Sean Kheraj

athabascatarsands

Athabasca Tar Sands, 1892. Source: Library and Archives Canada.

Last year, Nature’s Past, the Canadian environmental history podcast, published a special series called, “Histories of Canadian Environmental Issues”. Each episode focused on a different contemporary environmental issue and featured interviews and discussions with historians whose research explains the context and background. Following up on that project, we are publishing six articles with ActiveHistory.ca that provide annotated lists of ten books and articles that contextualize each of the environmental issues from the podcast series.

The eighth and final episode of the series examined the history of the Alberta tar sands, arguably one of the most significant contemporary Canadian environmental issues. This episode featured a panel of speakers from the 2013 American Society for Environmental History who participated on a plenary titled, “The Fossil Fuel Dilemma: Vision, Values, and Technoscience in the Alberta Oil Sands.” We also interviewed Dr. Andrew Weaver, a climatologist from University of Victoria, member of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and a Green Party of BC Member of the Legislative Assembly.

Nature’s Past Episode 38: Histories of Canadian Environmental Issues, Part VIII – Tar Sands

Here are ten books to contextualize the Alberta tar sands: Continue reading

The CBC, Budget Cuts, and the Environmental Movement

By Ryan O’Connor

On April 10th CBC/Radio Canada announced an immediate budget cut of $130 million. This move will have dire consequences for the network, with 657 jobs cut over the next two years, numerous service cutbacks, and a reduction in original television programming. Having already lost the Canadian rights to broadcast the National Hockey League to Rogers Communications – the iconic and revenue-rich Hockey Night in Canada will air for two more seasons under the production of Rogers before fading to black – the network has since announced it will no longer compete for professional sports altogether. Needless to say, the future of the CBC is uncertain.

In times like this it is worth remembering the important work carried out by the network. For me, nowhere is this clearer than in the CBC’s work on the environment. Many are familiar with The Nature of Things, which has aired on television since 1960, and with arch-environmentalist David Suzuki as its host since 1979. Suzuki came to The Nature of Things having hosted the radio program Quirks and Quarks since its inception in 1975. Both programs have played an important role in popularizing science and bring environmental issues to the forefront of the public’s mind. Incidentally, they remain among the CBC’s more popular programs.

Larry Gosnell. Photo courtesy of Denise Gosnell.

Larry Gosnell. Photo courtesy of Denise Gosnell.

Lesser known is the CBC’s role in kickstarting environmental activism in Ontario.  On October 22, 1967 the network broadcast an original program titled The Air of Death. Produced by Larry Gosnell and hosted by national news anchor Stanley Burke, this program aimed to awaken Canadians to the realities of air pollution. (Many, it seems, naively believed air pollution was a problem in the United States, but one that didn’t seep across the border.) This program drew a sizeable audience and received rave reviews for its informative message, but it also raised the hackles of industry for its depiction of events in Dunnville, Ontario, where effluent from the nearby Electric Reduction Company (ERCO) phosphate plant was damaging farmers’ crops and crippling livestock. While ERCO had previously acknowledged its fault, and had been paying damages to farmers affected by its fluorine pollution, the company took exception to allegations that it was making members of the community sick. A veritable witch hunt ensued, with officials at ERCO endeavouring to discredit Gosnell, Burke, and the rest of the team responsible for The Air of Death. Two high profile investigations ensued: a one-sided Royal Commission in which friends of ERCO served as commissioners and a Canadian Radio-Television Commission (CRTC) hearing that exonerated those responsible for the program from the accusations of shoddy workmanship and bias. Continue reading

Of History and Headlines: Reflections of an Accidental Public Historian

By Ian Mosby

When I first heard Alvin Dixon’s voice I was driving along Dupont Avenue in Toronto with my partner, Laural, and our three-month-old son, Oscar. Dixon was talking to Rick MacInnes-Rae, who was filling in as the co-host of the CBC Radio show As It Happens. The interview was about Dixon’s experience at the Alberni Indian residential school (AIRS) where he had unwittingly been part of a recently uncovered nutrition experiment conducted by the federal government during the late 1940s and early 1950s.

VanSun

In addition to describing his memories of the experiment – in impressive and accurate detail – Dixon talked in a jarringly blunt manner about hunger and about the horrors of life in that notorious institution on the west coast of Vancouver Island. “It was totally inadequate food a lot of the time,” Dixon told MacInnes-Rae. “I remember all of us kids having to steal fruit, steal carrots and potatoes so that we could roast potatoes somewhere off site on a fire and eat them – because we were never full when we left the dining room table.”

Dixon had long suspected that something had been done to them at the school. “As early as 20 years ago,” Dixon told MacInnes-Rae, “I heard that there were these experiments from former students who worked in the kitchens.” And when asked what it said to him that his federal government was willing to do this, Dixon responded that it affirmed what he’d always believed: “That the federal government and most Canadians don’t give a shit what happens with us as First Nations people. They’re on our stolen lands, our holy lands and they’re not going to be happy until they have it all. They were trying to eliminate us. So that’s not surprising.”

By the end of the interview I was in tears – something that would happen with increasing frequency over the coming months as I met, corresponded with, and listened to the stories of survivors of these experiments and of Canada’s Indian residential school system more generally. While I’m still not sure what I expected to happen after I published my research on these experiments, I don’t think anything could have prepared me for how profoundly the strength, courage, and anger of survivors like Dixon would change my life and my perspective on what it meant to be an (active) historian. Continue reading

The Value of Thinking Big: Experimenting with Pedestrian Space in Toronto, 1970s and 2014

By Daniel Ross

Beaches International Jazz Festival

Beaches International Jazz Festival

In cities across Canada, citizens are emerging from their winter hibernation to a spring and summer season packed with street festivals, concerts, and other special events. In Toronto alone there are hundreds each year, from Salsa on St. Clair to Pride to the literary Word on the Street, and on summer weekends it’s hard to walk more than a few blocks downtown without stumbling across a city block crowded with vendors, beer gardens, and band shells. But despite our eagerness to get out and celebrate warm weather, cities like Toronto have always had a love/hate relationship with street closures. This is evident in city hall’s lukewarm response to a recent proposal—Open Streets—to close Bloor Street for a few Sundays this summer.

Ciclovia in Bogota. Photo courtesy of Mike's Bogota Blog

Ciclovia in Bogota. Photo courtesy of Mike’s Bogota Blog

In this post I take a look at that plan in light of the project that really started the whole discussion about closing downtown streets in Toronto: the Yonge Street pedestrian mall of the early 1970s. Can the story of the mall help us understand today’s debates over street closures? I’d argue that, among other lessons, it should warn us to think big when we consider the creation of pedestrian space: half-measures tend to create their own problems, and play into the hands of those opposed to repurposing streets. Continue reading