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Expanding the narrative
This is part of a broader conversation about whose history is being told, about gender, people of colour and the economically disenfranchised, and others whose stories have been overlooked or intentionally omitted from the authorized discussion. - Food
- Francophone heritage
- Indigenous heritage
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Intangible heritage
Intangible cultural heritage includes language, traditions, music, food, special skills, etc. - Medical heritage
- Military heritage
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- Women's heritage
Homer Watson: Ontario’s pioneer artist
Homer Watson’s paintings and drawings captured the spirit of pioneer Ontario much as, in a later generation, the work of the Group of Seven captured the spirit of the more northerly parts of Canada.
Born in the village of Doon in the Grand River Valley, Watson – a self-taught artist – drew inspiration from the landscapes, people and activities of the valley. His pictures reflect his deep roots in this community and his love of nature with which it imbued him. His work is distinctive, depicting the essence of a particular place at a particular time. But it also records superbly the pioneer settler experience.
Watson was himself a pioneer in the way in which he made use of form in his art, often invoking heavy and massy interpretations as he documented the processes in which landscapes turned during his lifetime from forest into homeland. In his work, he moved beyond the simple use of design in his own quest for artistic realism, capturing the power and forcefulness present in nature.
Watson’s artwork has contributed significantly to the remembering and understanding of the pioneer heritage of Ontario. As a student and teacher of Canadian History, I am grateful to Homer Watson for this as well as for his admirable art.
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- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Buildings and architecture
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- 08 Sep 2017
- Intangible heritage
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My interest in textiles and embroidery started with an interest in drawing and, even more specifically, an interest in line. While I was studying drawing...
- 08 Sep 2017
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- Buildings and architecture
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The term symbolkirchen can roughly be translated as a “symbol bearing church.” Such churches point to living realities beyond ourselves and hold the potential to...
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- MyOntario
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In 1963, a firefighter named Ted Szilva entered a contest organized by the Canadian Centennial Committee in Sudbury. The committee asked residents of the city...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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Afloat at dawn and inhaling the misty rays of rising late-summer sun. Other days, it might be a sunset paddle with a Thermos of coffee...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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The photo became an heirloom in our family: a picture of Her Majesty the Queen at Kew Gardens in The Beach, escorted by Toronto Maple...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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I’m proud to be a Canadian. I’m also proud to be an Ontarian. Going one step further, I’m proud to be a Falcon. In 2014...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Black heritage
MyOntario - Author: Holly Martelle,
Hopes for the future
My life as an archaeologist often consists of hour upon hour of painstaking analysis of small bits and pieces of everyday life. But last year...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Indigenous heritage
Archaeology
MyOntario - Author: Jean-Luc Pilon,
The gift of time travel
In the summer of 1982, I was carrying out archaeological research near the shores of Hudson Bay on the Severn River. One of the sites...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Buildings and architecture
MyOntario - Author: Georges Quirion,
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Northern Ontario has unique structures, not familiar to many, spread out through small northern communities, reflecting its rich history and its vast wealth of precious...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Indigenous heritage
MyOntario - Author: Konrad Sioui,
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There are many stories that we can share. Well, first of all, the word “Ontario” itself. Many people don’t know what it means. People try...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Expanding the narrative
MyOntario - Author: David Rayside,
Making history
At 6 p.m. on December 2, 1986, Ontario’s legislative assembly was scheduled to vote on adding “sexual orientation” to the province’s Human Rights Code. Ten...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Archaeology
MyOntario - Author: William R. Fitzgerald,
A divine intersection of history and archaeology
Suspicion, fear, and intimidation met Jesuit priests Jean de Brébeuf and Pierre-Joseph-Marie Chaumonot during their Mission of the Angels to “la Nation Neutre” between November...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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- 17 Feb 2017
- Natural heritage
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Heaven on earth
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- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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Underwater archaeology
I’ve always had a passion about archaeology and also about water. I love being on the water and under it. So, what better way to...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Natural heritage
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My first visit to Ontario, from Québec, was at about age 8. I have a distinct memory of arriving by car down the Don Valley...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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Ontario’s rich diversity
When I think of Ontario, I think of inclusion, diversity and the resulting richness it brings to our province. In a world that is becoming...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Indigenous heritage
MyOntario - Author: Josephine Mandamin,
Walking with the water
When we walk with the water, we pray for the water. The water that we carry, we pray for it, and we pray to it...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Francophone heritage
MyOntario - Author: Joëlle Roy,
Descendants de la Vallée du Saint-Laurent
Il est parti au chantierY avait à peine 15 ansY a moyen de s’en sortirPour ça, faut faire d’l’argentY en a en Ontario sous la...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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Celebrating the history of Toronto’s Jewish cemeteries
Over the past decade, I have developed a passion for cemeteries. It started during my tenure as Director of the Ontario Jewish Archives, when I...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Archaeology
MyOntario - Author: Dr. Patrick Julig,
Reflections on ancient quarry sites of northern Ontario
In the 1980s-90s, I excavated at Cummins and Sheguiandah National Historic Site quarry/ workshops in northern Ontario – in addition to many neat places elsewhere...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
- Author: The Honourable Elizabeth Dowdeswell,
The conscience of our province
Ontario’s Legislative Building, completed in 1893, is a magnificent structure filled with stories from the most significant moments in our province’s modern history. The place...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Indigenous heritage
Buildings and architecture
MyOntario - Author: R. Donald Maracle,
Christ Church, Her Majesty’s Chapel Royal of the Mohawk – Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory
During the American Revolution, the Mohawks were forced to flee their homeland in upper New York State. In 1784, after spending several years in Lachine...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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My first views of Ontario were from a passenger train 45 years ago. In 1972, I crossed the border at Detroit and took a train...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Natural heritage
MyOntario - Author: Joseph Desloges,
Celebrating the Chinguacousy Badlands
The Chinguacousy (“land of the young pines”) Badlands have been visited by hundreds of thousands of Ontarians. This rapidly eroding clay-shale bedrock at the foot...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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An enduring landscape
Each morning, I open the door of our farmhouse and step into an enduring landscape of beauty, shaped by horse and man. Sheep dot the...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
- Author: David P. Silcox,
My Ontario is …
MY ONTARIO IS: RosalieAbella, RobertAitken, AndréAlexis, LouApplebaum, MargaretAtwood, IainBaxter&, StanBevington, BillBissett, JeanBoggs, DaveBroadfoot, EdBurtynsky, JackBush, JackCostello, DavidCrombie, KikiDelaney, LouiseDennys, MichaeldePencier, RamsayDerry, RupertDuchesne, BuddFeheley, MaureenForester, DavidFrench...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Black heritage
MyOntario - Author: Adrienne Shadd,
Reflections on my hometown
In the year of the 150th birthday of Canada, I would like to pay tribute to my hometown. North Buxton started out in 1849 as...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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R.C. Harris Water Filtration Plant
Whenever I have visitors to Toronto, I take them to the Harris Filtration Plant. This beautiful complex is one of the few remaining examples of...
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- Indigenous heritage
MyOntario - Author: M. Margaret Froh,
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Métis youth leader Katelyn LaCroix was recently asked what being Métis meant to her. She replied that “like the sash, we are two cultures coming...
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- Indigenous heritage
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- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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Edwardian home photos
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- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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Stepping back in time to Old Ontario
My Ontario is the Rideau Canal region between Smiths Falls and Kingston. Having spent many years as the planner for the Rideau Canal – and...
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- Expanding the narrative
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- Arts and creativity
- Author: Marshall Pynkoski,
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- MyOntario
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- 17 Feb 2017
- Indigenous heritage
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- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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Gateway to Ontario
Toronto’s Chinatown East has a beautiful gateway – a Chinese architectural tradition first introduced in British Columbia in the 1880s. As a writer and Chinatown...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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You can go home again
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- 17 Feb 2017
- Arts and creativity
MyOntario - Author: Todd Stewart,
Highway 11, near Hearst
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- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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Honouring our past, embracing our future
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- 17 Feb 2017
- Black heritage
MyOntario - Author: Karolyn Smardz Frost,
Digging for the Promised Land
In 1985, the Toronto school board and Ontario’s culture ministry created the Archaeological Resource Centre. There, schoolchildren and volunteers could dig into their own city’s...
- 17 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
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My Muskoka – Winter 1949
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- 17 Feb 2017
- Sport heritage
MyOntario - Author: Philip Pritchard,
Ontario and the Stanley Cup
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- 17 Feb 2017
- Black heritage
MyOntario - Author: Dr. Afua Cooper,
The Black history of Ontario inspires me and defines who I am
Peggy Pompadour haunts me. I walk through the streets of Ye Olde Towne Toronto and I feel her presence – this Black enslaved woman who...
Telling the stories of Chinese Canadians
I am inspired by something intangible: the past, especially the history of Chinese Canadians. I grew up in Vancouver, knowing little about it. But once...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Natural heritage
MyOntario - Author: Michael Runtz,
Drawn back to Algonquin
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- 01 Feb 2017
- MyOntario
- Author: Sam Steiner,
The cloud of witnesses
As a historian of Mennonites in Ontario, I have always enjoyed wandering through Mennonite and Amish cemeteries. Whether plain Old Order Amish or Old Order...
- 14 Feb 2014
- Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity
Adaptive reuse - Author: Janet Gates,
One hundred years of entertainment
Birthdays are about celebration and, in the case of Toronto’s Elgin and Winter Garden theatres, a toast to 100 years of entertainment history. In 2013...
- 06 Sep 2013
- Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity - Author: Erin Semande,
Partnering for conservation
The Ontario Heritage Trust has a number of conservation tools available to protect and preserve heritage throughout the province. Conservation easements are voluntary legal agreements...
- 06 Sep 2013
- Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity
Adaptive reuse - Author: Thomas Wicks,
Treading the boards
Performance venues command an important presence in Ontario communities. They tell us about the aspirations of the people who built them, and they reflect the...
- 06 Sep 2013
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Ontario Heritage Trust,
Resources: Ontario’s theatrical heritage in the spotlight
... the shelf The Opening Act: Canadian Theatre History 1945-1953, by Susan McNicoll. Ronsdale Press, 2012. The conventional opinion is that professional Canadian theatre began...
- 06 Sep 2013
- Arts and creativity
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- 06 Sep 2013
- Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity
Adaptive reuse - Author: Pamela Cain,
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Since the early 1970s, Magnus Theatre in Thunder Bay has made a commitment to urban renewal and the reuse and repurposing of community buildings. The...
- 06 Sep 2013
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Ellen Flowers and Gordon Pim,
From Stratford to Shaw: Transforming smalltown Ontario
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- 06 Sep 2013
- Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity - Author: Wayne Kelly, Romas Bubelis, Brett Randall and Beth Hanna,
Perspectives: The Elgin Theatre at 100
Looking back by Wayne Kelly When theatre entrepreneur Marcus Loew brought Loew’s Theatrical Enterprises to Toronto in 1912, he envisioned an “intricate, moneymaking machine,” a...
- 06 Sep 2013
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Ellen Flowers and Gordon Pim,
The evolution of the panto
It is always entertaining to watch a troupe of actors sing, dance and throw their audiences into hysterics. This is something we witness every year...
- 15 Feb 2013
- Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity - Author: Bruce Beaton,
Off the wall
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- 15 Feb 2013
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Faith Hieblinger,
The world according to Homer
The local newspaper writes: “In this new world, great painters are fewer than in older countries, but it may be said of Homer Watson that...
- 15 Feb 2013
- Archaeology
Arts and creativity - Author: Katherine McIntyre,
Archeological treasure in a provincial park
Reprinted with permission (Windspeaker, Volume 28, Issue 4, 2010) North America’s largest collection of petroglyphs remained undisturbed for centuries. Then in 1954, three geologists out...
- 15 Feb 2013
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Sam Wesley,
Painted Ontario
Paintings are valuable sources of information for anyone interested in exploring our heritage. We can use them to glimpse into the past – to extract...
- 15 Feb 2013
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Ontario Heritage Trust,
Resources: Painted Ontario
What's on the shelf A Concise History of Canadian Painting, 3rd edition, by Dennis Reid. Oxford University Press, 2012. For more than 30 years, Dennis...
- 15 Feb 2013
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Lani Wilson,
Collections for the people: The Government of Ontario Art Collection
Of outstanding national and provincial significance, the Government of Ontario Art Collection at the Archives of Ontario began in the mid-19th century. It is comprised...
- 15 Feb 2013
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Beth Anne Mendes,
Communities embracing our landscapes
Ontario has been home to Canadian artists of all disciplines. Since the mid-19th century, painters particularly have worked to capture Ontario’s unique sense of place...
- 18 May 2012
- Arts and creativity
Francophone heritage - Author: Johanne Melançon,
Arts and culture in francophone Ontario
In the 19th century and the first half of the 20th, Ottawa was the centre of francophone cultural and literary life in Ontario. Live theatre...
- 17 Feb 2012
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Ellen Flowers,
Not just another opening
It’s Monday, December 15, 1913 and the city of Toronto is abuzz with excitement over the opening of a new theatre. Loew’s Yonge Street Theatre...
- 28 Jan 2011
- Women's heritage
Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity
Adaptive reuse - Author: Catrina Colme,
Doris McCarthy’s Fool’s Paradise will inspire future generations of artists
With the passing of Doris McCarthy on November 25, 2010, the country lost a revered and talented artist, best known for her landscape paintings. McCarthy’s...
- 11 Feb 2010
- Arts and creativity
- Author: Ontario Heritage Trust,
Resources: Exploring Ontario’s southern peninsula
What's on the shelf University of Toronto: An architectural tour, by Larry Wayne Richards Princeton Architectural Press. Originally built in the 19th century in a...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
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The music of worship
Goethe said that “architecture is frozen music,” but why did he say this? Was it because Christian church interiors, with their columns and arches, seem...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity - Author: Erin Semande,
Art in the church and the church in art: Work of the Group of Seven
Talented and renowned artists have long been commissioned to decorate the interiors of places of worship, where they often turn the walls and ceilings into...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity
Cultural objects - Author: John Wilcox,
Adventures in light and colour
Light is a fundamental aspect of all architecture, especially places of worship. Light has always been considered a manifestation of the spirit, providing guidance, comfort...
- 14 Feb 2008
- Buildings and architecture
Arts and creativity
Adaptive reuse - Author: Gordon Pim,
Raising the curtain: How the Winter Garden Theatre was rediscovered
In December 1913, Loew’s Yonge Street Theatre – the Canadian flagship of the mighty Loew’s empire – opened in Toronto. Two months later, the opulent...
- 07 Sep 2006
- Women's heritage
Arts and creativity
Natural heritage - Author: Gordon Pim,
Literary giants
Catharine Parr Traill is one of Canada’s literary luminaries. Her life story spans most of the 19th century, crossing oceans, battling cholera and journeying through...
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- Privacy statement
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- Photos © Ontario Heritage Trust, unless otherwise indicated.