More images of the country's centennial year are seen here.
Canadian accomplishments on the world stage. Northern Dancer was a Canadian horse, one of the great horses in racing history, and the first Canadian to win the Kentucky Derby. Retired to sire more horses, his legacy is still present among racehorses today. In center, a suitcase belonging to Glenn Gould, the Canadian classical pianist who was deemed a virtuoso of the industry. And Nancy Greene is one of the country's greatest Olympic athletes.
Terry Fox left a big legacy behind that endures today. He was a runner who lost a leg to cancer, decided that he would raise money for the Canadian Cancer Society by running across the country from east to west. He started in St. John's, Newfoundland in April 1980, running the equivalent of a marathon a day, before cancer returned and cut his journey short near Thunder Bay in Ontario. He would die of cancer the following year, but each year, millions of people around the world follow his example to raise money in the fight against cancer, running in Terry Fox Runs.
This is a prototype of his prosthetic leg.
Our relationship with our southern neighbours is one that has a big influence on us- for good and bad. SCTV was a comedy series of the late 70s and early 80s that also got broadcast south of the border. Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas played off the differences between countries in their characters, the Mackenzie Brothers.
On September 11th, 2001, the country offered shelter to incoming planes from around the world as America closed down its airspace after the terror attacks, taking in travelers who would have understandably been in a state of shock after that. This photograph dates to a ceremony one year after that day.
We move into an area that looks at Canada through a series of themes. The first being the First Peoples, and it is a troubled one. Following Confederation, the government chose the wrong courses of action. Instead of treating as a partner, the choice was that of subjugation.
Inuit statues, but with a dark story to them. Tuberculosis outbreaks in the Far North in the 1940s and 50s required medical evacuations of patients to the south. Their families were often not even informed that their loved ones had died.
The residential school program was the darkest aspect of this oppression, with the intent to simply "civilize the Indian". Children were sent to boarding schools run by religious organizations, separated from families without understanding why, treated with neglect or abuse, and traumatized in ways that left lasting scars. This was a decades long scar on the country, with the last schools only closed in the 1990s.
This quote, by one of the missionaries involved in the program, spoke for itself.
Every dot on this map represents one of the residential schools. With the exception of Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick, each province and territory had them.
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was active from 2008-15, tasked with documenting the history of residential schools and their impact on people across the country, gathering testimony and evidence, and making recommendations on how to right this terrible wrong. It was led by Murray Sinclair, an Ojibwe lawyer, judge, professor, and politician. His quote printed here is very wise.



















































