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PO Box 523, Station B,
Ottawa, ON, K1P 5P6

PO Box 523, Station B, Ottawa, ON, K1P 5P6
About

About (18)

Thursday, 02 January 2020 15:29

Directors and Committees

Kathy Krywicki

The Society is managed by its members through a volunteer Board of Directors elected each year at the Annual General meeting.

Directors

Emma Kent, President
Erik Foisy, Treasurer
Dave Kent, Secretary

Richard Collins
Scheherazade Khan
David Martin
Sonja McKay
Abbie Simpson
Amin Zahrai

 
Committees and Working Groups

Awards Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Recognizes the work of local historians on Ottawa and its regions.

  • Roxy Woodward-Whyte (Chair)
  • Emma Kent (Advisor)
  • David Martin (Advisor)
  • Amin Zahrai (Advisor)
  • Erik J. Foisy (Advisor)

 Communications Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

  • David Kent (Secretary)
  • James Powell (Comms Officer)
  • Kirsten Widdes (Blog Administrator)
  • Karen Lynn Ouellette (Volunteer Recruiter)
  • Ariana Bahrampour (Instagram)
  • Lise Perera (Instagram)
  • Ben Weiss (Facebook & Emails)
  • Ivan Tanner (Cumberland Township Historical Society Liaison)

Executive Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Responsible for conducting the affairs of the Society in accordance with the purposes and objectives of the Society and the decisions of its Board.

  • Emma Kent (President)
  • Karen Lynn Ouellette (Past-President)
  • Erik J. Foisy (Vice-President)

French Program | Programmation en français (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Faire rayonner en français l’histoire d’Ottawa et de la région.

  • Christine Matamoros (Speaker’s Series)
  • Fernanda Arenas Suxo (Advisor)
  • Amin Zahrai (Advisor)

Governance Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Tasked with ensuring that a nonprofit’s board of directors is functioning appropriately and efficiently.

  • Abbie Simpson (Chair)
  • Emma Kent (Advisor)
  • Erik J. Foisy (Advisor)

Treasurer Sub-Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Review present finances and propose plans to align with our typical annual income.

  • Erik J. Foisy (Chair)
  • James Powell (Advisor)
  • Noah Rolland (Advisor)
  • Ben Weiss (Advisor)

Seal & Symbol Sub-Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Review of the Historical Society of Ottawa symbol and seal along with the introduction of an alternative logo.

  • Emma Kent (Chair)
  • Ben Weiss (Advisor)
  • Erik J. Foisy (Advisor) 
  • David Martin (Advisor)

Indigenous Program Committee

Working to support HSO in including Indigenous history and perspectives in programming.

  • Emma Kent (Interim Chair)
  • Scheherazade Khan (Advisor)
  • Luc Lacroix (Independent Advisor)
  • David Martin (Advisor)
  • Christine Matamoros (Advisor)
  • Ben Weiss (Advisor)
  • Amin Zahrai (Advisor)

Membership Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Responsible for all aspects of the HSO membership.

  • Sonja McKay (Chair)
  • Beverly Sawchuk (Telephone Tree)
  • Erik J. Foisy (Advisor)

Nominating Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Responsible for the nominations for directorship at the Annual General Meeting.

  • Erik J. Foisy (Chair)
  • David Kent (Advisor)
  • David Martin (Advisor)

Outreach Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Responsible for recruitment of volunteers and ensuring that our presentations, publications, and activities consider diverse cultural perspectives and address past and present injustices.

  • Amin Zahrai (Chair)
  • Jenny Armina (Advisor)
  • Sonja McKay (Advisor)
  • Karen Lynn Ouellette (Advisor)
  • Irene Perry (Advisor)

Publication Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Responsible for all HSO publications, in all mediums, whether virtual or physical.

  • Erik J. Foisy (Chair)
  • David Martin (Deputy Publications Director)
  • Christine Jackson (Pamphlet Series Editor)
  • Richard Collins (Newsletter Editor)
  • Allison Smith (Newsletter Writer)
  • Ariana Bahrampour (Newsletter Photojournalist)
  • Kathy Krywicki (Website Editor)
  • John Leefe (Memory Project)
  • Sadie Cann (Memory Project)

Editorial Review Sub-Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Reviewers for any publication, focusing primarily on the pamphlet series.

  • Scheherazade Khan (Editorial Reviewer)
  • Richard Collins (Editorial Reviewer)
  • Shawn Tallon (Editorial Reviewer)
  • Emma Kent (Editorial Reviewer)
  • Amin Zahrai (Editorial Reviewer)
  • Kirsten Widdes (Editorial Reviewer)
  • David Martin (Editorial Reviewer)
  • Ben Weiss (Editorial Reviewer)

Regular Events Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

  • Scheherazade Khan (Speakers Series Chair)
  • Georgette Souaid & Jacob Salloum (Zoom & Technical Team)
  • Ben Weiss (Advisor)
  • Karen Lynn Ouellette (In-House Speakers Series / Museum Club)
  • David Kent (Museum Club Chair)
  • Erik J. Foisy (In-House Speakers Series / Série de conférences Haut-Parleurs)
  • Lise Perera (In-House Speakers Series)

Inventory Review Committee (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

  • Erik J. Foisy (Chair)
  • Bytown Museum (Advisors)
  • Nivethini Jekku (Advisor)
  • Dave Kent (Advisor)
  • Emma Kent (Advisor)
  • Kathy Krywicki (Advisor)
  • Dave Mullington (Advisor)
  • Connie Wren-Gunn (Advisor)
 
Contact Info
  • To reach the Historical Society of Ottawa President: email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • To reach the Vice President: email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • To reach the Treasurer: email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • For inquiries about publications: email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • For inquiries about membership: email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • For inquiries about community outreach: email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • For inquiries about events: email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • For inquiries about the blog: email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • For general inquiries or to contact any of the directors: email The Historical Society of Ottawa at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Thursday, 02 January 2020 14:59

Membership in The Historical Society of Ottawa

Super User
Welcome!

Membership in The Historical Society of Ottawa is open to all. We are students, researchers, authors, retired people and working people from all walks of life and backgrounds. We are a diverse group with one thing in common—a love of history, especially Ottawa history!

By becoming a member of The Historical Society of Ottawa, you are contributing to the preservation and sharing of Ottawa’s rich historical heritage.

Your membership fees and donations help fund the many activities of the Society which include our popular series of afternoon and evening presentations, our support of youth through our awards programs, the publication of historical research, and other Society activities.

Members also receive, free of charge, a print-copy of current Bytown Pamphlets published by the Society, as well as the quarterly newsletter, the Capital Chronicle. As an added bonus, members receive special pricing on Society sponsored books and activities.

Best of all, membership provides an opportunity to join with others who have a passion for Ottawa history! Regular outings are organized for members and guests to places of historical interest in the Ottawa Valley. Members receive special pricing on all of our outings.

To allow persons on a budget to join the Historical Society of Ottawa and to participate fully in the Society’s activities, a Bursary Fund has been established to reduce membership fees and other expenses. If you are in this position, please contact the Society at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

So, please join us. We’d be delighted to welcome you as a member!

Membership Renewal

To renew your membership electronically, please choose the online Membership Form and follow the instructions. Memberships can also be renewed via mail or in person with a cheque, but please fill out and include a copy of the membership form to ensure that you continue to receive documents and communications with the Society in the form you desire. Many thanks for your continued support!

Membership Fees

  • Single $35.00
  • Family $50.00
  • Student $10.00
  • Life Membership $350.00

Use our secure online membership form

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OR

Download our Membership form and make cheques payable to:
"The Historical Society of Ottawa"

Mail your cheque along with the membership form to:

The Historical Society of Ottawa,
P.O. Box 523, Station "B",
Ottawa, ON K1P 5P6

 Donations

The Historical Society of Ottawa is a registered charity.

Our Registration Number is BN 10748 4081 RR 0001.

Use our secure online donation form

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OR

Download our Donation form and make cheques payable to:
"The Historical Society of Ottawa"

Mail your cheque along with the donation form to:

The Historical Society of Ottawa,
P.O. Box 523, Station "B",
Ottawa, ON K1P 5P6

Thursday, 02 January 2020 14:16

Our History

Super User

(Drawn from Mullington, Dave, 2013. “To Be Continued…A Short History of the Historical Society of Ottawa,” HSO Publication No. 88.)

matilda edgar1Lady Matilda Edgar, née Ridout, (1844-1910), wife of Sir James Edgar, Speaker of the House of Commons, chaired the inaugural meeting of the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa in 1898. Library and Archive Canada, PA-025868On June 3, 1898, thirty-one Ottawa women, united by a desire to preserve and conserve Canada’s historical heritage, assembled in the drawing room of the Speaker of the House of Commons located in the old Centre Block on Parliament Hill. Chairing the meeting was the prominent author and early feminist Lady Matilda Edgar (née Ridout) wife of Sir James Edgar, the Speaker. The cream of Ottawa society attended the meeting, including Lady Zoë Laurier, the wife of the then Liberal Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Mrs Adeline Foster, the wife of the prominent Conservative politician Mr (later Sir) George Eulas Foster, and Mrs Margaret Ahearn, the spouse of Mr Thomas Ahearn, the famous Ottawa-born inventor and businessman. The ladies agreed to form the Women’s Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa. As reported by the Ottawa Journal, they hoped “to resurrect from oblivion things of interest to every patriot Canadian woman, and preserve such things that are already treasures.”

Under its original 1898 Constitution, the objective of the Society was to encourage “the study of Canadian History and Literature, the collection and preservation of Canadian historical records and relics, and the fostering of Canadian loyalty and patriotism.” The Constitution also stressed that “neither political parties nor religious denominations” would be recognized. Adeline Foster was elected as the Society’s first president. Lady Aberdeen (née Ishbel Maria Marjoribanks), the wife of the Governor General, consented to be the Society’s patron, thereby establishing a link to Rideau Hall that continues to this very day. The annual membership fee was set at fifty cents. Initially, the Society was a women-only organization, though men sometimes participated as honorary members. This situation continued until 1955, when men were allowed to join the Society as full members.

zoe laurier1Lady Zoé Laurier, née Lafontaine, (1841-1921), wife of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Prime Minister of Canada, was a founding member of the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa in 1898. Library and Archives Canada, PA-028100During the early years of the Society’s history, particular attention was paid to the collection and preservation of important artifacts and historical documents. The Society put on its first exhibition of historical objects in 1899. This collection, which was to expand greatly over the coming decades, went on permanent display with the opening in 1917 of the Bytown Historical Museum, located in the old Registry Office on Nicholas Street. The museum was staffed and operated by Society volunteers. Other activities included regular lectures and the publication of historical research. The Society was also instrumental in the erection of the statue of the French explorer Samuel de Champlain at Nepean Point in 1915. To celebrate Ottawa’s centenary in 1926, the Society unveiled a memorial to Lieutenant-Colonel John By, the Royal Engineer responsible for the construction of the Rideau Canal, and the founder of Bytown. A replica of his house, which had been destroyed by fire years earlier, was also built at Major’s Hill Park.

adeline foster1Mrs Adeline Foster, née Chisholm, (1844-1919), wife of Mr (later Sir) George Eulas Foster, Conservative politician, first president of the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa. Library and Archives Canada, Mikan No. 3423435During the lean years of the Great Depression, the Society was forced to tailor its activities to suit the straitened financial circumstances. Its publications were cut back, and a ten cent fee began to be charged for museum entry. In 1930, the annual membership fee was also increased to one dollar. Notwithstanding the difficult economic situation, the Society continued to flourish. Its collection of historical artifacts and books expanded. Meetings, historical outings, and presentations were held regularly. In 1937, the Society was officially incorporated by the Province of Ontario. With the outbreak of World War II, Society activity slowed to allow members more time to support the war effort. The museum was closed for the duration. Nonetheless, membership meetings continued to be held, and the Society’s collection of antiquities grew through donation. Members also raised money for deserving wartime causes.

bytown museum1The Bytown Museum, formerly the Commissariat building, was built in 1827 and is the oldest stone building in OttawaFollowing the conclusion of the war, Society activities picked up. Particular attention was paid to finding a new home for the organization’s growing collection of historical artifacts and books; the old Registry Building was no longer adequate. In 1951, the Society leased premises from the federal government for a nominal fee in the Commissariat building adjacent to the Rideau Canal locks. The building, the oldest stone structure in Ottawa, was built by Scottish stonemasons hired by Colonel By during the construction of the Rideau Canal during the 1820s. Unfortunately, it was in a poor state of repairs; the building’s restoration and renovation occupied a considerable portion of the Society’s time, effort, and resources over coming years.

In 1955, there was a dramatic shift in the life of the Society. After vigorous debate, men were permitted to become full members of the Society in order to build a broader and stronger organization. The following year, the Society’s new name—the Historical Society of Ottawa—was officially adopted to reflect that change. Mr H. Townley Douglas, who had been previously active as an honorary member was elected as the Society’s first male director.

col john by1In Major's Hill Park stands the statue of Col. John By, Royal Engineers, who was responsible for building the Rideau Canal and the founding of Bytown, later renamed OttawaWhile the Bytown museum remained at the centre of the Society’s activities, the 1960s, under the leadership of Dr Bertram McKay, saw the HSO working hard for the erection of a statue in honour of Colonel By. Although Ottawa’s mayor at the time, Dr Charlotte Whitton, and City Council were supportive, it was up to the Historical Society to come up with the necessary funds. Raising $36,500 by 1969 (equivalent to more than $233,000 in today’s money), the Society hired the Quebec-born sculptor Joseph-Émile Brunet. On August 14, 1971, Governor General Roland Michener unveiled the bronze statue of Colonel By in Major’s Hill Park. Fittingly, the statue overlooked the Rideau Canal, itself a lasting memorial to the Colonel’s engineering abilities.

In 1981, the Society took a new step in its effort to increase public awareness of Ottawa and the Ottawa Valley’s rich history with the launch of a pamphlet series dedicated to that purpose. Its first publication was titled John Burrows and Others on the Rideau Waterway by a former Society president Charles Surtees. The pamphlet series continues to be an important feature of the Society’s efforts to increase public awareness about the history of Ottawa.

Through the 1980s and 1990s, the museum became an increasing preoccupation and concern for Society members. Forced to relocate temporarily due to restoration work conducted by the federal government at the Commissariat building and Rideau locks, attendance plummeted. Even when the Bytown Museum reopened at the Commissariat Building, the number of visitors was subsequently adversely affected by the reconstruction of Plaza Bridge. Declining membership, fewer volunteers, and rising costs owing to inflation also strained the Society’s ability to sustain the Museum in the manner it deserved. After considerable soul searching and debate, the difficult decision was made in 2003 to transfer the Bytown Museum to a separate not-for-profit organization. Roughly half of the artifacts and rare books collected over more than a century were loaned to the Museum; the loan became a permanent gift two years later. Considerable funds were also transferred to the new Museum Board to help launch the new organization.

Although now legally separate from the Historical Society of Ottawa, the Museum and the Society continue to cooperate closely. Over the following years, the Society transferred its remaining collection of items to other heritage organizations, most importantly the City of Ottawa Archives. A large collection of military medals was also offered to Canadian museums. Those medals that could not be placed were subsequently sold. In 2011, the proceeds of the sale helped to launch the Historical Society of Ottawa’s Research and Development Fund to support research into Ottawa’s history.

In 2013, the Society reviewed and approved revised “purposes and objectives” (Article 2 of its Constitution) in light of the many changes to the organization in recent years. Remaining true to the spirit of its founding members, the Society remains focused on increasing public awareness and knowledge of the history of Ottawa, the surrounding region, and their peoples. In cooperation with other heritage organizations, it also works to conserve archival materials, supports and encourages heritage conservation, and preserves the memory of Colonel By.

Thursday, 02 January 2020 14:07

What We Do

Super User

The Historical Society of Ottawa (HSO) is Ottawa’s oldest historical organization. It was founded in 1898 by a group of prominent Ottawa women interested in the preservation of Canada’s rich historical heritage at a time when there were few Canadian museums and little government funding for such activities. Initially known as the Women’s Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa, the Society changed its name in 1955 when men were allowed to participate as full members.

The Society’s objective is to preserve and increase public knowledge of the history of Ottawa, including its people and places, through publications, meetings, tours, awards, sponsored research, participation in local heritage events; and to support and encourage heritage conservation.

At monthly meetings, held from September to June, guest speakers inform and engage members in a wide range of topics related to the history of Ottawa and the Ottawa Valley. The monthly meetings are open to the general public as well as to members at no cost. Society members also receive a quarterly newsletter, and copies of HSO’s “Pamphlet Series” that examine local historical issues. The Society also organizes one-day bus tours for its members and guests to historic sites in Eastern Ontario and Western Quebec.

The Society is the official patron of the Ottawa Regional Heritage Fair for area youth (Grades 5-9) which is held annually. At the Fair, the Society presents the Sir Richard William Scott Historical Society Award in recognition of research excellence in a subject relevant to Ottawa’s history. The Society also presents annually the Algonquin College Award to a student in the College’s Applied Museum Studies Program, and the Colonel John By Award to a university undergraduate or graduate student who writes the best history paper on a topic of relevance to Ottawa or the Ottawa Valley. 

The Society welcomes everybody with a love of history and an interest in Ottawa’s heritage, irrespective of race, religion, sex, age, country of origin, or any other attribute. 

The Historical Society of Ottawa is a non-profit organization and a registered charity - Registration no.: BN 10748 4081 RR 0001. To make a donation, see our online donation form. Many thanks! A charitable receipt for income tax purposes will be issued for donations. Please note that a receipt for tax purposes cannot be issued for membership fees.

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