The Great Canadian Trivia Book 2
By Randy Ray and Mark Kearney
()
About this ebook
Did a Canadian kill famed escape artist Harry Houdini? Are the streets of Yellowknife really paved with gold? What was Canada’s connection to those famous "Paul McCartney is dead" rumours of the late 1960s? And just how long does it take a drop of water to flow from Lake Superior to the Atlantic Ocean?
The Great Canadian Trivia Book II brings you all these answers and more. In the much-anticipated sequel to their bestseller, The Great Canadian Trivia Book, award-winning writers Mark Kearney and Randy Ray dig even deeper into Canada’s curious characters, storied past, natural phenomena, cultural idiosyncrasies, and the peculiarities of our leisurely pursuits.
In the pages of this intriguing book, you’ll discover the Canadian who was responsible for introducing the glove to professional baseball, the story behind Canada’s blue two-dollar bill, how the robbery phrase "hands up" was connected to Canada, and whether a goalie can take a face-off in a hockey game.
Think it’s unlikely a Canadian might have been president of the United States? That Sir John A. Macdonald was the only one in his family to achieve political fame? Or that a Canadian rock group would turn down a chance to play at the famous Woodstock festival of 1969? The Great Canadian Trivia Book II will have you thinking again. And again.
Randy Ray
Randy Ray is a freelance writer, author and publicist. He worked as a reporter with The London Free Press for 13 years, including three years as the newspaper's Parliament Hill correspondent. He lives in Ottawa.
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The Great Canadian Trivia Book 2 - Randy Ray
writer.
Our Storied Past
What can you say about a country that buried one military hero four times and another legendary figure standing up? Canada may have become a country in a relatively peaceful way, but that doesn’t mean we haven’t had our share of historical peculiarities along the way.
We trained spies for World War II, had a Victoria Cross winner who didn’t even fight in a battle and another VC who was the president of the Toronto Maple Leafs; we welcomed American draft dodgers to Canada in the sixties — the 1860s, that is — and came up with three last spikes
to hammer into our cross-country railroad.
And let’s not forget the American president who just may have been a Canadian.
Why was Sir Isaac Brock, hero of the War of 1812, buried four times?
It does seem a bit excessive, doesn’t it? Here’s the story: When Brock was shot and killed at the Battle of Queenston Heights on October 13, 1812, his body was taken to Government House in what is now Niagara-on-the-Lake, where it lay in state until October 16.
According to the book Burying General Brock by Robert Malcomson, Brock was taken from there with great pomp and ceremony and buried in a bastion in the northeast corner of nearby Fort George. His colonial aide-de-camp, Lieutenant Colonel John Macdonell, who was killed in the same battle, was buried with him. A twenty-one-gun salute was fired when the two caskets were lowered in their graves, and Americans at Fort Niagara offered a similar salute. Even though Americans captured Fort George in 1813, the graves remained undisturbed.
The legislature for Upper Canada decided in 1814 that a monument should be erected near Queenston where Brock fell. It took some time to raise money for the monument, and though it wasn’t completed yet, Brock’s second burial took place there on October 13, 1824. A crowd of about eight thousand were on hand to see Brock and Macdonell’s bodies moved from Fort George to the monument ten kilometres away. It was said that as many Americans as Canadians witnessed the event. The monument was never completed to its original design but still stood forty-one metres high with a base six metres square and six metres high.
On April 17, 1840, an explosion shook the tower and severely damaged it. The mastermind behind the explosion was Benjamin Lett, an Irish-Canadian who had been involved in the Rebellion of 1837 and was seeking revenge against the British. He was arrested in the United States on other charges and eventually went to prison.
By 1842, officials decided a second tower should be built, with plans calling for it to be the second tallest structure of its kind in the world, behind a tower honouring the Great Fire of London in 1666. Work began in 1853, and it was necessary to remove the remains of Brock and Macdonell again and place them in temporary graves in a small cemetery in the village of Queenston.
The fourth and final burial took place on October 13, 1853, with about fifteen thousand people attending, including veterans of the War of 1812. Work on the tower continued until 1858, and the structure was officially inaugurated on October 13, 1859.
Is it true that Gabriel Dumont, commander of the Métis forces during the North-West Rebellion, was buried standing up?
Legend has it that Dumont was buried vertically in the Batoche cemetery in Saskatchewan on the banks of the South Saskatchewan River. Why? Because it would allow him to see the enemy coming from the river side, author Nancy Miller writes in her book Once Upon A Tomb: Stories From Canadian Graveyards.
Another explanation is that he wanted to face the river because it was one thing the white people he despised couldn’t change. The grave is marked by a great slab of rock, the biggest individual marker in the cemetery, according to Miller.
The Batoche cemetery was the scene in 1885 of a key battle in the North-West Rebellion, which had been caused by conflicts over land issues. It pitted Métis Leader Louis Riel, Dumont and Métis fighters against 800 to 900 Canadian government soldiers led by Major General Frederick Middleton. The Métis forces were soundly defeated, which effectively ended the rebellion. Plain wooden crosses at Batoche mark a mass grave for the Métis who died in the skirmish.
After the battle Dumont fled to the United States. He died in 1906, after returning to Saskatchewan to resume life as a hunter.
Métis leader Gabriel Dumont is buried standing up.
[NAC/C27663]
I’m told that Newfoundland entered Confederation on April Fool’s Day. Is this another Newfie joke?
Whoever told you is almost right. Apparently, Newfoundland was scheduled to officially join Canada on April 1, 1949. That date was chosen because it is usually the beginning of the fiscal year for government and most businesses. However, Newfoundland premier, Joey Smallwood, vetoed that date.
He said that after all the work it took to join Canada, he didn’t want anyone joking about the new province linking up on April Fool’s Day. The official joining was pushed back a few hours and Newfoundland became the tenth province on March 31.
Confederation and April Fool’s Day didn’t mix for Premier Joey Smallwood.
[NAC/PA117105]
Who is Canada’s most decorated war hero?
Other Canadians, including flamboyant pilot Billy Bishop, have received more medals, but the hero who received the most decorations for gallantry before the enemy (as in U.S. military tradition), is Lieutenant Colonel William Barker. In fact, in his book Barker VC, William Barker, Canada’s Most Decorated War Hero, author Wayne Ralph describes Barker as the most decorated hero not just of the First World War but of all our wars.
Gallantry awards won by the prairie farmer’s son from Dauphin, Manitoba, are: The Victoria Cross; the Distinguished Service Order and Bar; the Military Cross and Two Bars; the French croix-de-guerre; two Italian Silver Medals for Valour, plus three Mentions-in-Despatches. The Canadian Daily Record of the Overseas Military Forces of Canada once wrote that Barker, the third Canadian airman to win the VC … holds the record among Canadians for fighting decorations won during the war.
In all, Barker was recognized twelve times for gallantry while flying with Britain’s Royal Flying Corps and later with the Royal Air Force. This number of awards probably makes him the most decorated military hero in what was the British Empire.
Barker developed a love for flying while watching demonstration flights at industrial exhibitions in Winnipeg between 1910 and 1914. He won his Victoria Cross on October 27, 1918, for single-handedly taking on between fifteen and thirty German flyers in Fokker D.VII scout planes while piloting a Sopwith Snipe over the Mormal Forest in France. He was credited with destroying four enemy machines but was shot down in the battle and almost died. In total, he had victories over fifty enemy aircraft during his air force career, forty-six while piloting the same aircraft, Sopwith Camel B6313.
At reunions long after the war, Barker’s former air force pals remembered him as a god-like, larger than life warrior,
writes Ralph, a Newfoundlander based in White Rock, British Columbia. Ottawa historian Fred Gaffen, head of publishing at the Canadian War Museum, describes Barker as a hero and an idol … a daring type of guy.
Canadian air ace Bishop, a lieutenant colonel who was born in Owen Sound, Ontario, was credited with seventy-two victories and was awarded eight gallantry awards, plus two Mentions-in-Despatches, including the Victoria Cross for his single-handed attack on a German airfield on June 2, 1917. At the end of World War I, Barker had logged more than nine hundred flying hours, Bishop about four hundred. Bishop won another award, the Commander of the Bath, in World War II but it was for his contributions to the war effort, not for gallantry.
After the war, Barker and Bishop ran an aircraft company in Toronto; it had financial difficulties and folded in 1922. Barker joined the Canadian Air Force as wing commander in 1922 and was acting director of the Royal Canadian Air Force when it was created on April 1, 1924. He stayed with the RCAF until 1926, and while he was there he was one of those who were instrumental in having parachutes introduced to both the RCAF and the RAF.
In 1926, with his ambition to head the RCAF stalled, and plagued by post-traumatic stress disorder and physical pain from his combat wounds, he turned to alcohol. He served briefly as president of the Toronto Maple Leafs hockey team, likely in 1927–28, and later was employed as vice-president and general manager of Fairchild Aircraft Limited.
He died on March 12, 1930, at age thirty-five, in a peacetime air crash at Rockcliffe, Royal Canadian Air Force Ottawa Air Station. The tragedy occurred while Barker was demonstrating an open cockpit biplane known as the Fairchild KR-21. The newspapers reported that his state funeral in Toronto on March 15, 1930, was attended by fifty thousand people, and described it as the largest in the city’s history up to that date.
William Barker poses with a captured Fokker D.VII aircraft at the Hounslow Aerodrome in London, England in April 1919.
[NAC/PA-006070]
Is it true that North American Natives did not invent scalping but learned it from white settlers?
Yes. Although old Hollywood movies would make you think otherwise, the practice of scalping goes back at least 2,500 years to the Scythians of southern Russia. According to the book Heritage of Canada, scalping in North America probably began with a governor of the New Netherlands colony who wanted Native people killed. He paid for the scalps, considering them proof of the Natives’ death.
By the eighteenth century, apparently, the British were paying for French scalps, and vice-versa, and both paid for Natives’ scalps.
Natives took up the practice and in some tribes the taking of scalps became a symbol of warrior status. Scalps were usually taken from the dead, but occasionally people were scalped and still lived. Some people were then allowed to return home as a warning of what could happen.
I know Canadians fought in the American Civil War, but is it true some fought on the side of the South?
Almost fifty thousand people from what would become Canada fought in the U.S. Civil War, primarily for the North. In fact, many Canadians were awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor, America’s highest military honour, for their participation.
However, as many as two hundred enlisted for the South. Thomas Brooks, author and amateur historian who has researched Canada’s involvement in the Civil War extensively, explains that the side on which soldiers fought was often related to where they lived. New Orleans, for example, was a busy port, and many foreigners, including those from what is now Canada, lived there when war broke out.
Others may have drifted to the South to find work and joined up when the war erupted in 1861. In fact, Brooks has written a history of the Tenth Louisiana Infantry, which was called Lee’s Foreign Legion
because soldiers from around the world fought in it.
Friends of these people were signing up to fight and that certainly is a motivation in any war, that sense of adventure,
Brooks says.
One of the more famous Canadians who chose to fight for the South was Dr. Soloman Secord, who was a great-nephew of Laura Secord. He left his home in Kincardine, Ontario, and travelled to Georgia where he enlisted in the Twentieth Georgia Infantry as a surgeon.
There was a touch of irony to this because Secord was known as an abolitionist (that is, he opposed slavery) and, in fact, almost got hanged in Georgia several years before for speaking out against slavery, Brooks points out. But Secord had many friends in Georgia and probably signed up to help these people out.
Secord was captured at Gettysburg on July 5, 1863, became a prisoner of war in Maryland, but escaped in October of that year and joined up with his regiment in Tennessee. He finally resigned his commission in late 1864, and returned to his Kincardine home.
Secord was a highly respected doctor in the community, and when he died in 1910 a monument was erected in his memory. Brooks believes this is the only monument to a Confederate officer in Canada.
Another connection between Canada and the South is that the last acknowledged survivor of Pickett’s Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg is buried in Canada. William Hatcher Barnett had come from Virginia to visit his sons, who had immigrated to Alberta, and he died of a heart attack in Bottrell, Alberta, in 1934. He’s buried in a small cemetery about fifty miles from Calgary.
It has often been written that, when John Cabot landed in North America, cod off the coast of Newfoundland were plentiful enough to impede the progress of his ship and could be caught with baskets. Is this true?
A. In his book The Cabot Voyages and Bristol Discovery Under Henry VII, author James A. Williamson makes it clear there was an abundance of fish in the waters of the Atlantic as the Italian explorer approached the shores of Newfoundland in 1497. But whether the fish were so thick that they slowed his ship the Matthew, and whether they were cod, is another