The Non-Teaching of Canadian History in Schools and Universities

(first posted on July 1, 2020 by rdavies)

Long gone are the survey courses in both of my youth. With the widespread usurpation by politically-correct topics, kids and newcomers no longer know, study, or encounter the following:

Frederick Banting

Alexander Graham Bell

Billy Bishop

the Bluenose

Robert Borden

Brebeuf

General Brock

the amazing building of the first transcontinental railway (CPR)

John Cabot

Guy Carleton

Jacques Cartier

Samuel de Champlain

Company of New France

Confederation

Conscription

Constitutional Act

Coureurs de Bois

Depression

Diefenbaker

Adam Dollard at Long Sault

the Donnellys

Tommy Douglas

Durham Report

Lief Ericson

Evacuation of Japanese Canadians

Expo ’67

First World War

FLQ Crisis

Fort Louisbourg

Terry Fox

Fur trade

Alexander Galt

Group of Seven

Halifax Explosion

Gordie Howe

Joseph Howe

Henry Hudson

Hudson’s Bay Company

Imperial Conference

Jesuits

Henry Kelsey

William Lyon Mackenzie King

Klondike Gold Rush

Sir Wilfrid Laurier

La Verendrye

League of Nations

Literature, Canadian

Loyalists

John A. MacDonald

Thomas D’Arcy McGee

Alexander Mackenzie

Jeanne Mance

Montcalm

New France

NORAD

North West Company

North-west Passage

North West Rebellion

Painting, Canadian

L.B. Pearson

Plains of Abraham

Port Royal

Quebec Act

Queenston Heights

Radisson

Red River Colony

Red River Rebellion

Regina Tornado

Louis Riel

St. Lawrence Seaway

Second World War

Seigneurial system

Seven Oaks Massacre

Seven Years War

Joey Smallwood

David Suzuki

Ken Taylor

Tecumseh

David Thompson

Treaty of Paris

Pierre Trudeau

Sir Charles Tupper

Union Nationale

George Vancouver

William Van Horne

Voyageurs

War of 1812

Winnipeg Strike

………………….

How well do Canadian kids, new Canadians, and Canadians under 60 know the history of our country? How well do they know, understand, and appreciate the broader, big-picture sweep of our country’s culture and its most famous and important people and events? Many have little or no sense of pre-2020 Canadian history back to the Viking visits in Newfoundland in the 11th century. *That’s 10 centuries of ignorance about our country, basically. A major cultural vacuum.

* It’s interesting, with all the new incoming First Nations curricula, how little attention is now being paid to the rest of Canada’s history as fostered and generated mainly by the English, the French, the Scots, and European immigrants before 1967 in nine of those 10 centuries–the actual industrious millions who physically built this country as we know it  (and often take for granted) and made it relatively peaceful, educated, and civilized before recent heavily agenda-ed and political times.

……………………………………………………………………….

Charlottetown statue of Sir John A. Macdonald covered in red paint -  Vancouver Is Awesome

(Decent, well-informed, grateful, conscientious, patriotic citizens remove mindless dumb-ass spray-painted vandalism from a statue dedicated to the Father of Confederation, who was instrumental in first uniting this country back in the 19th century and keeping it from being absorbed by the U.S.)

Further: The past is now more forgotten and slighted than ever these daze. The ironic result of this is that few people under 50 and most newcomers to Canada have little or knowledge of this country’s history and the process which led us all here to now. No context and no large significant frame of reference for viewing things. This is yet another reason why politically-correct types have run amok with zero facts, perspective, context, understanding, and appreciation of the past. The sort of recklessness, nastiness, and vandalism, for instance, that has resulted with historical statues and monuments being vandalized or removed is often blind and cases of reverse discrimination (something seldom discussed when political correctness is being cited or played as a trump card).

  • For more on a more fair, balanced, and truthful picture of MacDonald, Google Greg Piasetzki’s July 2023 National Post article about Sir John relative to indigenous culture.

The basic textbook of Canadian history that generations of Canadian elementary students of the past learned from in the twentieth century. It had a run from 1928 into the 1960s. I studied it in grade 5 (1959-60) and many of the names and events listed above were encountered for the first time then. It was a romantic take on Canadian history told in narrative form, but it was reasonably fact-based nonfiction. 

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