The Irish Remembered at the Bytown Museum

Published: Aug. 4, 2019, noon

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After \\u201cconsiderable talk among the ladies of the city\\u201d about the preservation of Ottawa\\u2019s rich cultural heritage, the Women\\u2019s Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa was formed in June of 1898. With the motto of \\u201cLove Thou Thy Land\\u201d their goal was \\u201cto encourage the collection and preservation of Canadian historical records and relics and to foster Canadian loyalty and patriotism.\\u201d The WCHSO laid the foundation for what would later become the BYTOWN MUSEUM.The early years of the WCHSO consisted of the writing historical papers, regular meetings and \\u201cLoan Exhibitions\\u201d \\u2013 displays that brought together artefacts from the private collections of the members and local history enthusiasts. By 1917 the burgeoning WCHSO was in dire need of a permanent home. After years of wandering, the former City Registry Office, located at 70 Nicholas Street, was acquired and renamed the Bytown Historical Museum. The Museum was opened on October 25, 1917 by Mayor Harold Fisher as \\u201ca museum for relics and souvenirs;\\u201d celebrating the occasion with its most comprehensive loans exhibition yet. Many of the items loaned would become some of the first permanent accessions into the collection, allowing the WCHSO to finally begin to fulfill its original mandate to collect and preserve.After years of collecting, with a boom in the 1930s, the WCHSO was once again on the lookout for a larger more suitable home. In 1948 the Commissariat at the Ottawa Locks was proposed. Significant funds were raised to make urgent repairs to the dilapidated building and the WCHSO took possession of the building in September of 1951. Despite being described as \\u201cencrusted with century-old dust and grime\\u201d with deteriorated plaster, a leaking roof and an inadequate electrical system, the Building Committee report described the Commissariat as the \\u201cperfect setting for the BYTOWN MUSEUM.\\u201d After much needed renovations, the BYTOWN MUSEUM opened its doors in the Commissariat (our present location) on June 27, 1952. The Society opened its membership to men and changed its name to the Historical Society of Ottawa in 1956.unescoThe 1980s was an era of exciting growth for the HSO; first with the inaugural publication of the Bytown Pamphlet Series and later, under the leadership of their new landlord, Parks Canada, the complete renovation and restoration of the Commissariat between 1982 and 1984. When the Museum reopened in 1985 BYTOWN MUSEUM Treasures highlighted key artefacts and recent acquisitions including some of our most iconic pieces.

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