Monday 17 February 2014

Transition

For the past 5 years, I've lived here (well, this is what it looked like in 1902 courtesy of the LAC's fire insurance map collection...): 



In Ottawa, these few blocks are known as Mechanicsville. Most in the city only have a vague sense of where it's actually located. "Isn't that a bad part of town?" is a typical question when I say that it's the small neighbourhood around Scott St. just east of Parkdale. The area's reputation is one that, for a long time, was well deserved, and shared with the surrounding neighbourhoods. 


Today, just like the rest of the Hintonburg and West Wellington, this is a transition zone. This fairly broad area, covering everything north of the Queensway from Island Park Drive to the train line which is today the O-Train, has been developing at in increasingly fast pace. New shops and restaurants are replacing old ones, new people are moving to the 'hood, and new buildings are sprouting up, with dozens of new condo towers slated to be built.


Urban development, also called "gentrification" when its applied to struggling communities, must include the destruction or re-purposing of extant building stock. Sometimes, whole buildings or even entire blocks, are demolished to make way for new higher density buildings that mix residential with commercial. In other cases, specific historical features of a building are kept and incorporated into the new structure. 


The  Hintonburg-West Wellington-Mechanicsville zone is no exception. In the 500 metre radius around my house, there are examples of both of these approaches. On the corner of Scott and Parkdale, the entire block is slated for demolition (here are some details). Just a few blocks away at Stirling, the original building of the école St-François for boys, which until recently housed the Odawa Native Friendship Centre, will become part of another condo development but the original part of the school will be incorporated into the new construction. 


Luxury condos on hold, city proposes to let builder put offices into former Odawa building

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Luxury+condos+hold+city+proposes+builder+offices+into+former+Odawa+building/9133688/story.html - accessed 17-02-2014

Some of these proposed development projects have been strongly opposed by the community (you can have a look at the Hintonburg Community Associations comments on all the proposals here). Arguments range from the destruction of the community to developers ignoring the interests of residents to support for a new and modern residential units. From my perspective, cities are living entities. They grow, they change and they are in constant movement. Consequently, parts of the city must also change - buildings must disappear, brownsites must be cleaned, skylines must change. As has been witnessed in other North American cities, this rate of change is often done so very quickly, that public memory is also altered. We forget why streets are called "Bayview" as at it does view is an empty lot once used as a snow dump (answer: the shore line of the Ottawa River used be much further south than it is today). We forget why  a short stretch of road is called "Forward Avenue" on one side of Scott St and "Pinehurst Avenue" on the other (answer: Scott St was the dividing line between Ottawa and Hintonburg, therefore different municipalities, different names...).


As these sites are developed, I will use this space to document those buildings slated for development. Where I can find information, I'll write up a a short "bio" of the building and and post any historical images that I can find (I also plan on using the Historypin app to populate images of days gone by). Here's a photo I took last week of the early demolition of the St-François school/Odawa Centre:


Ultimately, I can't do this alone and I truly hope the community (#Hintonburg, #Mechanicsville, #Westwellington) will help out in whichever way it can. I can be reached via the Twittervers at @jp5morin.


Friday 7 February 2014

Yes, you heard me, an historian...

Every now and again, someone will ask "and what do you do?" I always have the same short answer: I'm an historian. Invariably, I only get one of two reactions: 1- "oh..." with a blank stare showing that the hamster in their head is frantically trying to figure out a way to understand what that means; or 2- "wait? I thought you worked for government?"

With reaction 1, the topic of conversation quickly moves off towards another topic and never do we speak of my work again. With reaction 2, things are a little different. I always have to say, yes, I do work for government and I'm the departmental historian. Said person will then always say "I didn't know there were any historians in government". Well, there are, not many, but there are some scattered through a few departments and we have next to no contact with each other.

While I know that that we're few and far between, I've never really understood the surprised reaction upon learning that there are historians in government. Do people really think that their only habitat is the university and the museum (they never realise that historians in national museums are historians too...)? Maybe it's because of the fact that I was raised in the world of Parks Canada where we toured national historic sites on a regular basis or that I would meet the historians working there whenever I'd stop by my father's office. To me, government historians were normal. When I was 12, I decided that I was going to be an historian for the government (ok, I admit that's a bit weird...but I am a nerd andi was never cut out for academic life).

I'm rather perplexed that many still question the need to have historians in government - especially here in Canada where we're all about commemorating our history and celebrating our achievements. There seems to be a sense that having an historian on staff is a luxury and that the skills that an historian brings to the work place can easily be done by any average policy analyst. 

Being a government historian isn't like being an academic or consulting historian. I dont get to be "just" an historian - I'm also a manager, and policy analyst, and programme officer, and fact checker, and copy editor - but I'm always an historian first. It is who and what I am. 

These pages aren't just to be some random collection of thoughts and musings but rather be my interpretation of what it means to be a "government historian" here in Canada. 

Wednesday 5 February 2014

Once more, into the breach...

OK, I'm going to try again. I said last time that I wasn't going to do this, but I can't fight the growing need within me to start it up again. 

So, here goes...I'm starting up a blog...again....for the third time. Hopefully, this time it will stick. At worse, all of this will just get deleted and vanish into the huge internet memory of Google.

And if you're now scratching your head at this picture, well, this is me...in sock puppet form.