Chapter 6 - Society of Camp Directors
Transcription
Chapter 6 - Society of Camp Directors
192 Chapter VI Reviving Hiawatha: Representations of the Primitive at Camp In 1874, at the age of 14, Ernest Thompson Seton started to build a small cabin near the Don River in Toronto. Born in England, Seton had always been attracted to animals and the wilderness. Living in busy and populated Toronto left Seton in need of an escape, leading him to the outskirts of the city. Every Saturday, Seton worked on his cabin, which took most of the year to complete. Once finished, he gathered shells, feathers, and other objects from nature and proudly displayed them on shelves in the cabin. He fancied himself a representative of Robinson Crusoe and Swiss Family Robinson.1 Alone in the ZRRGV6HWRQ³SOD\HG,QGLDQUDQDERXWZLWKRXWDQ\WKLQJRQEXWP\ERRWVVRDV WRJHWVXQEXUQHGEURZQ´2 +H³KRSHGVRPHGD\WRUH-establish Indian life in VRPHIRUP´ 3 To aid in his play, Seton made moccasins out of a fold of sheep leather, stuck feathers in his hair, and made a hunting and scalping knife.4 Young Seton was fascinated with primitivism, or archaic cultures and ways of living, and turned to Aboriginal culture as an escape from modern, industrialized life in Toronto± a practice that became common in the camping movement. 3ULPLWLYLVPDQGWKHLGHDRIWKH³QREOHVDYDJH´were incorporated into early FDPSVWKURXJK³,QGLDQORUH´- Aboriginal symbolism, legends, dances, songs, and Council ring. ,QKHUDUWLFOH³Totem Poles, Teepees, and Token 7UDGLWLRQVµ3OD\LQJ ,QGLDQ¶DW2QWDULR Summer Camps, 1920±1955´ Sharon Wall suggests that the integration of Aboriginal traditions at camp was part of a broader inclination 193 toward anti-modernism in twentieth century Ontario.5 What society perceived to be the primitive life of Native people, contrasted with the progressive changes occurring in the city. Temporarily escaping city life for the wilderness was precisely the experience that upper- and upper middle-class parents sought for their children. The incorporation of Indian lore at camp is another important element in the creation of a unique camp culture and temporary society. Aboriginal symbolism made camp all the more exciting and adventuresome for campers as it was clearly different from anything they experienced in the city. Ahmek, Kilcoo, Wanapitei, Tanamakoon, Wapomeo, and GBC included Indian lore and Council ring. While Camp Temagami did not seem to use the tribe system or have Council ring, the campers did interact with Aboriginals from nearby Bear Island. Camp Northway did not have Indian lore or Council ring. The focus of this chapter is on Camp Ahmek and Glen Bernard Camp as there is the most information about Indian Lore at these camps and their directors, Taylor Statten and Mary Edgar, were passionate about Aboriginal lore. The final strand of literature that is significant for the development of the unique private Ontario youth camps society is the incorporation of Aboriginal symbolism and tradition into the camp culture. This chapter examines representations of the primitive in Canadian history, to illustrate how these defined the tension between Euro-Canadian values and culture and those of the Aboriginals. 7KHWHUP³LQYHQWHG´$ERULJLQDOZLOOEHXVHGWRUHIHUWR$ERULJLQDO representation at camp and in Canadian society. This term is similar to that of 'DQLHO)UDQFLV¶LPDJLQDU\,QGLDQIURPKLVERRNThe Imaginary Indian. The 194 invented Aboriginal refers to the Aboriginal that was not real or grounded in history. Rather, it represented the Aboriginal that non-Aboriginals created to represent an idealized anti-modern hero for the benefit of non-Aboriginal peoples at camp and in Canadian society. Euro-Canadians, or the first white settlers in Canada, idealized the invented Aboriginal, not the modern Aboriginal. Francis explains, ³(XURSHDQVKDYHWHQGHGWRLPDJLQHWKH,QGLDQUDWKHUWKDQWRNQRZ Native people, thereby to project onto Native people all the fears and hopes they KDYHIRUWKH1HZ:RUOG´6 This influenced the incorporation of Indian lore and Council ring into private Ontario camp programs. While on the surface, camp directors included Indian lore into camp to pay respect to Aboriginal people who had lived on the same land in the past, in practice, camp directors used Indian lore to assist in the establishment of a temporary camp society that separated camp from the city. All of these elements served to create clear distinctions between mainstream dominant culture and Aboriginal culture, despite being positioned as acts of respect and appreciation. The Primitive in Canadian History Much like Euro-&DQDGLDQV¶SHUFHSWLRQRIWKHZLOGHUQHVVWKHSHUFHSWLRQRI Canadian Aboriginals changed over time. These perceptions were largely dependent on shifting values associated with the process of modernization.7 Thus, when Aboriginals threatened their prominence, Euro-North Americans viewed them negatively. When French fur traders first came to Canada, they relied on the local Aboriginals to teach them survival techniques in the cold, harsh climate.8 Aboriginals taught the French how to canoe, snowshoe, 195 navigate, and find and grow food.9 A good relationship between the French traders and Aboriginal hunters and trappers was integral to the success of the trade.10 By the time Euro-Canadians colonized Canada, they were less reliant on Aboriginals since they had already learned hunting, trapping, and survival skills from the Aboriginals in the fur trade. This meant that Aboriginals became less important. Over time, relations deteriorated between Aboriginals and EuroCanadians and Euro-Canadians demonized Aboriginals as they posed a threat to the Euro-Canadian dream ± to conquer and industrialize the land.11 They viewed Aboriginals as primitive and savage.12 Euro-Canadians and Aboriginals viewed nature differently and this led to tension between the two groups. While Aboriginals believed in incorporating nature into their lives and respecting living things, Euro-Canadians believed that dominating nature led to progress and a superior society.13 It is not surprising then, that Euro-Canadians often equated Aboriginality with wilderness or being of the wilderness and, therefore, available to conquer. Once the Euro-Canadian way proliferated, Aboriginal culture was no longer a threat. As Euro-Canadians did not expect that Aboriginal culture could adapt to the modern world, assimilation became the answer.14 As a result, Aboriginals faced pressure from the dominant culture to abandon their culture in favour of the attitudes, values, and language of Euro-Canadians. This Eurocentric perception of Indigenous culture served as a reference point through which Eurocentric society could measure its own progress. Euro-Canadians endorsed European culture as progressive, while non-European culture was considered stagnant and unchanging.15 196 Duncan Campbell Scott, the superintendent of Indian Affairs in the early 1900s, advanced assimilation as the only strategy for Aboriginals to be modernized. He encouraged intermarriage, Christian values, and the abandonment of KXQWLQJILVKLQJDQGWUDSSLQJIRUPRUH³PDLQVWUHDP´ employment. The authorities restricted Aboriginals to reserves ± compromised their land and livelihood, put children into residential schools, and forced them to learn Euro-Canadian teachings and language and to abandon their own roots.16 By this time, the dominant image had changed and Euro-Canadians no longer regarded Aboriginals as primitive savages since most lived on reserves.17 At the same time, an interesting phenomenon occurred. With industrialization, urbanization, and the resulting distance from wilderness and outdoor life, North American society began to idealize the image of a primitive Aboriginal.18 +HQU\:DGVZRUWK/RQJIHOORZCV³7KH6RQJRI+LDZDWKD´(1855) was an early expression of this idealized vision of the Aboriginal. It told the tale of the marriage of Hiawatha, the Ojibway hero, WR0LQQHKDKDKLVSHRSOH¶VULVHDQG decline, and the arrival of Europeans. As he prepared to leave for Keewaydin, the land of the northwest wind, he welcomed missionaries who had come to the village.19 The poem illustrates a Eurocentric vision of a glorious Ojibway past and the perception of Natives as trapped in history.20 This idealized vision of the Aboriginal that persisted once Canada was settled was that of the historical Aboriginal who could not be modernized.21 This constructed image of the Aboriginal was perpetuated in many ways, one of which was through Aboriginal orators who turned to the stage to make a 197 living. Pauline Johnston, poet and daughter of a Mohawk chief, was one of an acclaimed group of entertainers at the end of the nineteenth century. 22 In 1899, Johnson visited Sundridge, Ontario and stayed in the home of Mary Edgar when Edgar was a child.23 7KHYLVLWZDVGHVFULEHGE\(GJDUDV³RQHRIWKHPRVW H[FLWLQJKDSSHQLQJVRIP\FKLOGKRRG´24 During her Sundridge performance she: Swept onto the platform in her picturesque Indian costume of beaded doeskin... She wore a beaded head-band with an eagle feather and a neckODFHRIEHDU¶VFODZV+HUIDFHZDVH[SUHVVLYHZLWKIODVKLQJEODFNH\HV Her voice had a dramatic quality which gripped her audience as she recited in verse the legends of her own people. She responded JHQHURXVO\WRWKHPDQ\FDOOVRI³(QFRUH´ 25 Johnson had a great influence on Mary Edgar and the incorporation of Indian Lore and Aboriginal stories into camp life at GBC. -RKQVRQ¶VERRNFlint and Feather was always in the GBC library and this type of writing inspired Edgar to write her own Indian legends.26 )UDQFLVDUJXHVWKDW-RKQVRQZDVD³ZKLWHPDQ¶V,QGLDQ´ 27 Her mother was white and Johnson grew up in a colonial mansion on the Six Nations Reserve in Brantford.28 Audiences admired traits in her that they perceived to be typical of Aboriginals, such as storytelling skills that listeners assumed were derived from oral tradition. However, at the same time, she displayed the polished manners of a middle-class Victorian woman.29 During her recitals she performed non-Indian poems for which she changed into a dinner gown displaying her conformity to Canadian culture.30 Grey Owl is another example of the invented Aboriginal in Canada. He claimed to be an adopted Ojibway trapper from northern Ontario who gave up trapping under the influence of his Iroquois wife and became a conservationist. In 198 1931, he published his first book, Men of the Last Frontier. In it he warned that wilderness areas were disappearing. He became a popular speaker on the lecture circuit and dressed in a buckskin jacket, his hair in two long braids.31 He argued that people belonged to nature and that people had lost touch with the natural world and, in turn, had lost their true selves.32 Even the Canadian government took an interest in Grey Owl and made films of him at work with tame beavers.33 In 1939, Grey Owl died and within a week newspapers discovered the truth behind his façade. He was not of Native ancestry at all; in fact, his real name was Archie Belaney, born and raised in England. Much like Seton, he was a solitary boy who played in the woods and read about the North American ,QGLDQ,QKHOHIW(QJODQGIRU&DQDGDWROLYHWKHOLIHRID³ZLOGHUQHVVPDQ´ In northern Ontario, he apprenticed himself to an Ojibway guide and trapper and soon became an accomplished woodsman.34 With this knowledge, he adopted Aboriginal ways and used the image to spread his ideals of conservation to Canadians. In reality, Canadians did not much care about the true identity of Grey Owl as he affirmed the perceived identity of the Canadian Aboriginal.35 The image of Aboriginals has evolved from the time of the fur trade, depending on Euro-Canadian values and perceptions. The popularity of Grey Owl and Pauline Johnson shows the desire of non-Aboriginal Canadians to understand and admire what they recognize as virtues of Aboriginals. At the same time, the negative effects of the industrial revolution idealized the character and culture of Aboriginals. Aboriginals represented freedom, health, and connection to the natural world ± qualities that industrialized Canada 199 compromised.36 Further, because Euro-Canadian culture had successfully suppressed Aboriginal culture, it was not threatening. Famous Aboriginals did not challenge values of mainstream Canadian society and, in fact, utilized the stereotypical image of the Aboriginal themselves. In turn, society accepted them. They delivered messages Canadians were prepared to hear ± messages that revolved around the invented Aboriginal, not the modern-day Aboriginal.37 Thus, as Francis points out, dominant culture set the agenda and terms of acceptable discussion.38 6HWRQ¶V:RRGFUDIW,QGLDQV Ernest Thompson Seton carried his passion for nature and fascination with playing Indian into his adult life. He became a famous wildlife artist, author, and QDWXUDOLVWDQGDOVRKHOGILUPWRKLVDPELWLRQDVDIRXUWHHQ\HDUROG³WRUHHVWDEOLVK,QGLDQOLIHLQVRPHIRUP´39 In 1902, in the Ladies Home Journal, he formally announced the formation of a youth organization - the Woodcraft Indians. As part of the Woodcraft Indians, he organized boys into tribes that participated in Native-inspired rituals and lore. In addition, boys learned a wide range of skills required to live in the woods. As they mastered these skills, they HDUQHG³FRXSV´that led to promotion in rank.40 Each member of the group had a head band, which served as a war-bonnet or headdress with places for 24 feathers. Council awarded a feather for each success.41 In addition, each boy had a scalp of horsehair that he could wager against another in competition.42 Games revolved around wilderness skills such as the bear hunt, where six boys hunted a bear played by one of the boys with a club made of straw.43 The 200 Apache relay race pitted tribes against each other to see who could carry a message and bring a reply back the fastest. The objective of the waterboiling contest was to determine who could boil water fastest with a hatchet, knife, and one match.44 These games anGFKDOOHQJHVLOOXVWUDWH6HWRQ¶VSHUFHSWLRQRI Aboriginal peoples¶GDLO\OLYHVin the wilderness. At camp, Seton insisted on the incorporation of Aboriginal symbols and lore. Seton used totem poles to display the emblem of the camp and for posting notices.45 The Council-ILUHFLUFOHZDV³XVHGVHYHUDOWLPHVHDFKGD\HLWKHUIRU FRXQFLOVRUIRUJDPHVGDQFHVDQGSHUIRUPDQFHV´46 At one side of the ring was the place for the Chief, opposite the Chief was a totem pole, and in the centre was the council fire.47 Campers said ³+RZ+RZ´PHDQLQJ³LWLVVR´LQ congratulations or agreement instead of clapping.48 By this time, Seton was wellknown, giving his youth organization a launching pad and credibility.49 In his book Playing Indian, Philip J. Deloria contends that, LQ6HWRQ¶VKLHUDUFKLFDO organization, boys lived out primitive fantasies that aimed to prepare them for the modern world.50 Seton based his organization on his own ideas of Indigenous culture learned through books. He moulded the ideal Aboriginal into a figure that would teach boys the lessons Seton thought were important and reflected 6HWRQ¶VGLVWDVWHIRUPRGHUQLVP. In the same year that he launched the Woodcraft Indians, Seton published Birch Bark Roll of the Woodcraft Indian in which he described his ideas for outdoor life. These ideas were later adopted by many camps.51 According to Seton, a degeneration occurred in the North American people and to temper this 201 KHDGYLVHGSHRSOHWROLYH³«QHDUWKHJURXQG«OLYHWKHVLPSOHOLIe in primitive WLPHV´52 He wrote WKDW³WKHZKLWHPDQKDVGHYHORSHGWKHZKLWHSODJXHVLQFHKH became a house animal, and the natural cure of open-air life should be DVVLGXRXVO\FXOWLYDWHG´53 Seton was critical of modernity and considered ³savagery´ to be a useful antidote to modernity and a way of protecting robust, manly, self-reliant boyhood.54 In his book, The Gospel of the Redman, Seton stated³,KDGDYLVLRQIRUP\SHRSOH,GUHDPHGRIDPDQZKRVKRXOGEHFOHDQ manly, strong, unsordid, fearless and kind, gentle with his strength, dignified, VLOHQWDQGIULHQGO\«ILOOHGZLWKUHOLJLRQWKDWZDVEXLOWQRWRIERRNV«EXWRIDGHVLUH WRKHOSWKRVHZKRKDGQHHGRIKHOS«DPRQJXV- here- now- WRGD\´55 After searching for a model to fulfill his vision of ideal manhood and outdoor life, Seton settled on the North American Indian.56 He explained³%\DOOWKHHYLGHQFHDW hand, his was a better system, a better thought, because it produced far nobler, better men. He, more than any type I know, is the stuff that fires our highest GUHDPVRIPDQKRRGUHDOL]HGFRPSOHWH«RXUWUDYHOJXLGHRQWKHIRXU-fold way WKDWOHDGVWRSHUIHFWPDQKRRG´57 Seton endeavoured WRXVHWKHLPDJHRIWKH³5HGPDQ´DQGWKHYDOXHV associated with that image to guide the development of a primitive outdoor life for young people. His goal was to influence North Americans to live an outdoor life for one month each year. He began with youth.58 6HWRQ¶VSKLORVRSK\is indicative of early twentieth century anxieties about modernism. A backlash against modernism occurred as early as the Romantic Movement in which the antimodern aspect of the wilderness was idealized. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, an 202 eighteenth century French philosopher, was one of the first critics of modernism. A primitivist, Rousseau argued that humans should incorporate primitive qualities into their civilized lives.59 He considered pre-modern cultures that lived amongst nature to be more virtuous than progressive civilizations. Rousseau and Seton EHOLHYHGWKDWWKH³noble savage´uncorrupted by the influences of civilization, was more worthy and noble than any product of modern civilization. 60 While society looked upon the invented Aboriginal favourably at this time, it viewed contemporary Aboriginals stereotypically as being drunk and lazy. SHWRQ¶VERRNVDQGZRRGFUDIWPRYHPHQWZHUHXQLTXHEHFDXVHWKH\SURPRWHGWKH Aboriginal -albeit the invented Aboriginal - as a role model for North American youth.61 6HWRQ¶VHQGRUVHPHQWRI1DWLYHZD\VPHDQWWKDWKHFRQstantly defended their position: ³,QVSHHFKDIWHUVSHHFK,KDYHIRXJKWWKHLGHDWKDW,QGLDQVZHUH cruel or lazy or vicious, and dwelt on their positive virtues - among these their VHQVHRIKXPRUDQGWKHLUGHHSUHYHUHQFH´62 Deloria points out that in order for Aboriginals to be authentic, they could not exist within modern society.63 To reaffirm modern identity, people had to experience the opposite of modern, which was the primitive.64 6HWRQ¶VSKLORVRSK\LOOXVWUDWHVDUHVSRQVHWRDFULVLVLQLGHQWLW\ in which he employed the invented AboriJLQDODVWKHDQWLGRWH2IFRXUVH6HWRQ¶V philosophy would have been quite different had Aboriginal peoples not already been colonized, and their land conquered. They posed little threat to the dominant culture, and, because of this, 6HWRQ¶VLGHDVDERXWSUimitive life flourished. It was not long before his ideas made their way into Ontario camps. 203 Constructing a Temporary Society Representation of the primitive at camp emphasized two main things: the difference between camp and the city and the connection between camp and the wilderness. The atmosphere at camp was that of a different world to the campers, with camp names taken from Aboriginal languages, totem poles, tepees, tribes, and Indian Council ring. These symbols were significant for creating a temporary society at camp. Indian lore was a convenient framework through which to foster the following attractive features at camp: make-believe and fantasy, adventure and fun, primitive life and connection to the land, and finally, spirituality and belonging. Each of these features added to the polarity between the city and wilderness and convinced campers that camp was unlike anywhere they had ever been, adding to the list of unique elements of camp discussed in Chapters IV and V. Aboriginal symbolism was also used as a way to UHSUHVHQW&DQDGD¶VXQLTXHQHVVFRPSDUHGWR(XURSH, as Europe did not have Aboriginal people. 6HWRQ¶VFDPSFUDIWERRN influenced many camp leaders, Taylor Statten among them. ,QIDFWLQZKHQ6WDWWHQWRRNDJURXSRIER\V³RQDJypsy trip IURP7RURQWRWR+DPLOWRQ´KHKDGMXVWUHFHLYHGDFRS\RI(UQHVW7KRPSVRQ 6HWRQ¶Vbook2QWKHWULSKH³WULHGWRDZDUGFRXSVDQGJUDQGFRXSVLQWKHVKDSH RIIHDWKHUVIRUHYHU\FRQFHLYDEOHW\SHRIDFWLYLW\´DV6HWRQUHFRPPHQGHG65 When Statten established Ahmek, he intended it to be a training centre for potential Canadian leaders, and set it up as a woodcraft camp with an emphasis on Indian lore. In 1922, a very excited Statten welcomed Seton to Ahmek for ten 204 days, at a generous salary of twenty dollars per day. He taught the campers how to construct a sweat lodge and conduct Council ring.66 According to Chick Hendry, an Ahmek Staff member in the 1920s and 1930s, ³+LVUHSXWDWLRQ preceded him and he most certainly lived up to the dramatic personage he was. He moved about the camp as a mysterious presence, everyone in awe of him. He was a strong, silent man who communed with nature more comfortably than ZLWKKLVIHOORZPHQ´+HOLYHG in a large tepee in Wigwam Bay that later became a centre for the entertainment of dignitaries visiting the camp from time to time. 67 Overall, 6WDWWHQ¶VFDPSLPSUHVVHGSeton. As Seton recommended, Statten incorporated both totem poles (See Figure 6.1) and a Council ring at camp. At a talk given to the &DPS'LUHFWRU¶VAssociation at Columbia University in 1925, Statten declared: ³The camp Ideal may be visualized by means of a huge totem pole which will tell in symbolic language the traditions and aims of the camp. A comfortable and well-constructed Council ring is indispensable. It will provide not only an arena, but also an atmosphere for many projects´68 ³:HLUG Indian Totem Poles´IURP%&RUPDGHDWWKH5LGSDWK¶V&DELQHW6KRS³help to stimulate the imagination and give character to the surroundings.´69 Further, it was LPSRUWDQWWKDW³ZHLUGDSSHDULQJ\HWPHDQLQJIXOV\PEROL]HGGHVLJQVSDLQWHG in bright colors on the buildings are full of interest and help to emphasize the fact that we are away from the common-SODFHWKLQJVRIFLYLOL]DWLRQ´ 70 Much like the deliberate emphasis on rustic buildings at camp, Aboriginal symbolism reinforced to campers that they were in the wilderness and not in the city. 205 During his stay at Ahmek, Seton helped to establish the Council ring. According to Adele Ebbs6WDWWHQ¶VGDXJKWHU ³+HVFDUHGPHVLOO\+HKDGUXOHV and regulations about Council ring that made it very unpleasant as far as I was FRQFHUQHG´71 $W$KPHN¶VZHHNO\&RXQFLOULQJ³7KH&KLHI´6WDWWHQ¶VQDPHDW camp, dressed in full Indian regalia and campers arrived with their faces painted and wrapped in coloured blankets.72 Figure 6VKRZV$KPHN¶V&RXQFLOULQJLQ 1923, outfitted with a totem pole, Indian tribe names, and Statten in the centre in his headdress. The significance of Council ring is described by an Ahmek staff PHPEHULQZKRH[SODLQHGWKDW³,QGLDQOLIHSOD\VDSURPLQHQWSDUWLQWKH activities of Ahmek. Saturday nights without the Council ring, would be like pork ZLWKRXWDSSOHVDXFH´73 Indeed, Statten was the expert in providing information about camp Indian lore. In fact, camps such as Kilcoo DGRSWHG$KPHN¶V&RXQFLOULQJFHUHPRQ\74 In 1938, Ahmek published a book detailing Council ring procedure in response to the demand from other camp directors.75 Figure 6.3 shows Kilcoo¶V Council ring with a totem pole, campers dressed in blankets adorned with headbands, feathers and face paint, and adults in headdress. A boy in the middle of the picture appears to be smoking a pretend peacepipe ± or perhaps a real one. Bruce Hodgins, whose parents bought the original Wanapitei in 1955, reports VHHLQJRQHSLFWXUHRI&RXQFLOULQJDW$UFKLEDOG¶V:DQDSLWHLLQZKLFKWKHFDPSHUV are wrapped in blankets sitting on the ground in a ring around a fire. Archibald was dressed as the Chief.76 7KH<0&$FDPS:DELQDNLUXQE\+RGJLQV¶IDWKer 206 EHIRUHKHDQGKLVZLIHERXJKW:DQDSLWHLDGDSWHGWKHLU&RXQFLOULQJIURP6WDWWHQ¶V format. :DEDQDNL&RXQFLOULQJ³IROORZLQJDOPRVWWRWDOO\WKH$KPHNDUUDQJHPHQW´ was then transferred to Wanapitei.77 Records indicate that Wapomeo had its own &RXQFLOULQJIRUDWLPHDQGHYHQWXDOO\MRLQHG$KPHN¶V&RXQFLOULQJ*%&DQG Tanamakoon also had Council rings with some of the same principles, but also some differences that are explored later. Figure 6.1: Camp Ahmek, early 1920s. Notice the totem pole in the centre and tepees left and right. Ahmek brochure 1926, Box 1-28, TSCA. 207 Figure 6.2 and 6.3: Ahmek Council ring 1923, Taylor Statten ³&KLHI´LQWKH middle (above). Kilcoo Council ring 1934 (below) 80-014/1/5, TUA; 72-007/1/6, TUA. 208 Figure 6.4: Taylor Statten in Council ring outfit, 1924. 99-1008 Alan Van Every Collection, TUA. 209 6XH(EEV7D\ORU6WDWWHQ¶VJUDQGGDXJKWHUGHVFULEHG6WDWWHQDV³steeped in anything Indian´ and so Council ring and Indian lore fit in very well with his persona (see Figure 6.4).78 6XH¶VPRWKHU$GHOH6WDWWHQ¶VGDXJKWHU, adds ³'DG always loved the theatre and I think this is why [he had] Council ring, because it was a spectacle...It was always done very precisely, well-organized, wellplanned. Some of us were in fear trembling that someone would do the wrong WKLQJDQGVSRLOWKHDWPRVSKHUH´79 In fact, Statten incorporated his passion for Indian lore into all facets of his life. In interviews, both Adele and Sue Ebbs referred to Taylor Statten as ³&KLHI´DQGEthel Statten DV³7RQHNHOD´80 an OjibZD\QDPHPHDQLQJ³\RXILUVW´81 This is an indication that spectacle and fantasy were part of the appeal of Indian lore and especially enticing to Statten, who was a showman at heart. Aboriginal naming was another tool used to help enforce the special camp culture. When Mary Hamilton chose a name for her camp the context of Algonquin Park influenced her decision. SKHWKRXJKW³6LQFHLWZDV$OJRQTXLQ Park an ,QGLDQQDPHVHHPHGLQHYLWDEOH´ 82 She collected 200 possible names from books by Pauline Johnson, Seton, and others.83 Eventually she settled on Tanamakoon meaning "Hail fellow, well met."84 Statten named Ahmek for the 2MLEZD\ZRUGIRU³EHDYHU´DQG:DSRPHR IRU³ELUGVRIVXQVKLQHDQGODXJKWHU´ 85 Wanapitei is the name of the lake at the first site of the camp that meant "oblong body of water, full to overflowing" in Anishnabai.86 The very name of the camps meant the atmosphere was very different from home and connected campers to the wilderness ± in which they, too, played Indian. 210 To add to the personal connection between the Aboriginal and the campers, the leaders organized the campers into tribes. Kilcoo grouped boys into the Senecas, Iroquois, Mohawks, Apaches, and the Blackfeet.87 At Tanamakoon it was the Chikasaws, Ojibways, Siouxs, and Crees.88 The tribes did not necessarily reflect the geographical location of the camp. Mary Northway explained that for the GBC tribes ³none...I believe had the remotest connection ZLWKRXUSDUWRIFHQWUDO2QWDULR´89 At GBC, instead of organizing tribes by age group, girls spanning all ages made up the tribes.90 The campers picked the tribe name each year and the leaders gave them reference books about North American tribes to help them choose. They selected a colour scheme, tribal VRQJWULEDO\HOOOHDGHUVKLSDQGPHHWLQJSODFHFDOOHG³FRXQFLOURFN´ for the tribe.91 The Iroquois tribe of 1924 elected a tribal chief, scroll keeper, water sports captain, land sports captain, firekeeper, and runner. They selected the colours green for the trees and grass and gold for the sunshine. The tribal yell went as IROORZV³:HDUHWKHWULEHRIWKHJUHHQDQGWKHJROG A tribe of Indians brave and bold: I-R-O-Q-U-O-I-S- Iroquois! Rah-Tah!! Rah-7DK´92 According to John *LOFKUHVW0DU\(GJDU¶VQHSKHZZKRHYHQWXDOO\WRRNRYHUGBC, ³The whole camp programme is built around tribal competition, tribal programmes at night for which you gain points, tribal events, so that one was able to announce at the end RIDVXPPHUWKDWDSDUWLFXODUWULEHZDVVXSHULRUWRDQRWKHU´93 Likewise at Ahmek, Statten stated WKDW³(very individual in camp...should be identified with a group or tribe. This is the basic unit in our temporary society. It takes the place of the home. Every member will work for the best interests of 211 WKLVWULEDOIDPLO\JURXS´94 They also used this to create a feeling of unity and belonging and to emphasize democratic principles.95 The Ahmek Council ring represented four tribes, the Oneida, Mohawk, Ojibway, and Seneca, each with a totem or symbol.96 If Ahmek campers showed spirit and superior woodcraft skill, they could be admitted into a special tribe with an Aboriginal name. In 1923, Alan Van Every was admitted into both the Wahtes-Westah, Baby Beaver Lodge of the Ahmek tribe and the Ahmekhonse-Westah, Little Beaver Lodge, of the Ahmek tribe. Van Every was pUDLVHGIRUKLV³WUXH$KPHNVSLULW WRZDUGVFRPUDGHV´DOZD\V³IROORZLQJWKHIRXU-IROGWUDLO´DQGVNLOOLQZRRGORUH DQGFDPSFUDIW)LQDOO\*LWFKLDKPHNRU7D\ORU6WDWWHQUHIHUUHGWRDV³&KLHIRI $KPHN7ULEH´QDPHGKLP1eebaw, PHDQLQJ³,VWDQGXS´VHH)igure 6.5).97 Aboriginal naming and the tribe system allowed for a deeper sense of community and belonging at camp, thereby personally connecting campers to their summer society. Although there was no evidence of a Council ring at Camp Temagami, there was interaction between Aboriginals and the campers, likely due to the SUR[LPLW\RIWKHFDPSWRWKH%HDU,VODQGUHVHUYH&RFKUDQH¶VGDXJKWHUV explained that Cochrane ³RIWHQJRWDYHU\JRRG,QGLDQXSWKHUHWRGHPRQVWUDWH [canoeing]...the boys would be seated on the steps...overlooking...he took the canoe and showed them all the strokes. And they would perform them WKHPVHOYHV´98 In the 1920s, this practice continued as a UCC publication explained that ³&KLHI:KLWHEHDU«ZLOOVKRZWKRVHLQGXVWULRXVO\LQFOLQHG,QGLDQ ways of doing certain things, from making a bow and arrow to building a cabin. 212 :KLWHEHDUDOVRKDVPDQ\³ZULQNOHV´RIZRRGFUDIWZRUWKNQRZLQJ´99 In addition, during the annual Temagami canoe race, the Aboriginals from Bear Island competed showing their proficiency in canoeing.100 At Ahmek, Statten employed Ojibway Indians from the Golden Lake reserve to build an Indian Village at Ahmek as shown in Figure 6.6. A resident Aboriginal from the reserve, dressed in traditional clothing, spent the summer working in the village. Nishanobi (see Figure 6.7), son of a Chief, was one of the resident Aboriginals that Hedley G. Dimock, son of Hedley S. Dimock, one of the authors of Camping and Character, remembers most.101 According to H.G. 'LPRFN³KHZDVWKHUHVLGHQWLQIRUPDWLRQRQ$ERULJLQDOFXOWXUHDQGVNLOOV HVSHFLDOO\SDGGOLQJ´102 Campers helped him to build birch bark canoes, birch bark teepees, an Indian sweat lodge, model snow shoes, totem poles, paddles, D[HKDQGOHVDQG³RWKHUDUWLFOHV,QGLDQVNQRZEHVWKRZWRPDNH´103 As a camper in the 1930s, Dimock used to watch him work and was fascinated. He explains, ³1RZ,¶PDOLWWOHNLG± so somebody making a canoe, somebody making a bow and arrow out of pieces of wood...Taking real bird feathers to glue on an arrow«´104 The Indian Village was open and campers could walk in anytime and get involved or ask him to help with a paddling stroke.105 One can imagine how exciting this would be to young non-Aboriginal boys. In the summer of 1930, Hotan-Tonka (sound-of-the-wind-through-the-pines) son of Migisi, Chief of the La Pointe Band of Lake Superior Chippewas, came to Ahmek. He served in WWI, wrote many articles on Indian lore, and also a book called Ojibway Trails, a collection of Indian legends. He spent the summer at Ahmek showing the 213 FDPSHUV³the habits and customs of the Indian, and how to make such practical things as moccasins, tom-toms, totem poles, costumes, tepees and many other useful and decorative objecWV´106 Interaction with real Native people made camp even more enticing and special to campers. The Aboriginals hired to work at camp represented the invented Aboriginal, not the modern-day Aboriginal because their role at camp did not reflect their authentic lives. Dressing in traditional clothing and making traditional things emphasized the past, not the present. Like Statten, Mary Edgar was passionate about Aboriginal culture (see Figure 6.8 of GBC); however, her enthusiasm came in a different form. Whereas Aboriginal visitors at Ahmek worked on woodcraft projects, visitors to GBC mostly participated in camp life and told stories. In 1934, Edgar read about Dawendine of the Mohawks who recited Indian legends and verses at the Canadian WRPHQ¶V&OXELQ%UDQtford.107 After graduating from high school in Caledonia, Ontario, the town of Brantford invited Dawendine to substitute for a man who was giving an address on Indian craft. This changed the course of her life. From this time on she embarked on a series of lectures and recitals through Ontario and New York.108 Inspired, Edgar invited Dawendine to the Granite Club in Toronto, where she performed in IURQWRIFDPSHUVDQGFRXQVHOORUV³'DZHQGLQH¶V appearance satisfied all our expectations of how a real Indian daughter of a 0RKDZNFKLHIVKRXOGORRNDQGZKDWVKHVKRXOGZHDU´ 109 After this, Edgar invited her to come to GBC for a few weeks in the summer. 214 While at camp, Dawendine welcomed questions from campers and often sat down with them individually or in groups to talk about the things they wanted to know.110 $FFRUGLQJWR(GJDU'DZHQGLQH³heartily approved´RIWKHGBC Council ring ceremony. She attended Council ring each Saturday of her visit and sat with Edgar in the seat of high council. Dawendine contributed to Council ring with either a legend, interpretation of an Indian ritual, or a closing prayer in the Mohawk language. Edgar described her parWLFLSDWLRQDV³WKHhigh-light of the evening´111 3HUKDSVXQOLNHWKHYLVLWRUVDWER\V¶FDPSVFDPSHUVOHDUQHGPRUHDERXW the modern-day Aboriginal at GBC rather than just the historical Aboriginal. Dawendine was proud of her heritage, which could be traced back to the founders of the great Peace League. Her father was Chief Sah-ren-ho-wan-ne of the Mohawks Sachem, the last of an ancient chieftainship line. However, Dawendine sometimes spoke of the hardships of her people, including poverty and restrictions on the reserve. For example, growing up, Dawendine and her two brothers walked a long distance to school. The government banned Dawendine and the other Aboriginal students from speaking their own languages at school and forced them to speak English only. In addition, after the long walk to school, Dawendine and her brothers had wet feet all day. As a result, Dawendine contracted tuberculosis and was confined to bed for six months.112 While Edgar was sympathetic to Dawendine and other Aboriginals who visited camp, what she most loved were the legends and stories of the historical Aboriginal. In a talk she gave in 1971 she explained: 215 Figure 6.5: Alan Van Every, tribal certificate of Indian name, 1923. 99-1008 Alan Van Every Collection, TUA. 216 Figure 6.6 and 6.7: Ahmek Indian Village (above). Nishanobi in the Ahmek Indian Village with Ahmek campers (below). Ahmek brochure 1926, Box 1-28, TSCA; Ahmek brochure, 1937, TSCA. 217 Figure 6.8: GBC 1920s around the camp totem pole. 82-009/3/3, TUA. Governments, churches and many organizations are becoming increasingly aware of the sad plight of many of our Indian citizens. In every part of our land there is a new concern which should result in a better life for them. Yet we hope the Indians will treasure their old legends, customs and traditions and that the white race will learns to appreciate those things that are unique and precious in their culture.113 Despite her good intentions, LWVHHPV(GJDU¶VIDVFLQDWLRQUHVWHG with the invented AboriginDODQGQRWWKH³VDGSOLJKW´RIWKHPRGHUQ-day Aboriginal. The invented $ERULJLQDOIXHOOHG(GJDU¶VDFWLYHLPDJLQDWLRQDQGVWRU\WHOOLQJ skills. Camp leaders used the Aboriginal image as a marketing tool to appeal to the adventurous spirit of boys, in particular. They capitalized on the popularity of the likes of Pauline Johnson and Grey Owl, who embodied the image of the idealized Aboriginal. Figure 6.9 shows Statten dressed in Indian regalia on the 218 cover of the 1955 Camp Ahmek brochure. The symbol of Camp Temagami was the head of an Aboriginal adorned in a headdress, two paddles, and two sturgeon.114 The 1932 Camp Wanapitei information booklet drew in potential FDPSHUVE\DVNLQJ³:KDWER\KDVQRWGUHDPHGRIDGYHQWXUHLQWKHODQGRIWKH Red-Skin"´As a reply, the brochure went RQWRVD\WKDW³&DPS:DQDSLWHLLV situated in the very heart of the old Indian hunting grounds, where the lordly moose and the timid red deer can be seen in the woods or along the shores of WKHULYHURUODNH´$QRWKHUTXHVWLRQ³+DYH\RXHYHURQWKHWUDLOPHWDUHDO,QGLDQ ZLWKKLVELUFKFDQRHRQKLVVKRXOGHUV"´$QGWKHUHSO\³:HOO\RX¶OOVHHPDQ\RI them on your out-WULSVDURXQG&DPS:DQDSLWHL´$QGWKHILQDOVHOOLQJSRLQW ³7KHUH¶VDUHDO,QGLDQ5HVHUYHDQG+XGVRQ¶V%D\3RVt not far from Camp :DQDSLWHL+HUHFDQEHVHHQ,QGLDQOLIHDWILUVWKDQG´115 Framed in this way, what non-Aboriginal boy from the city would not be enticed by such a world?116 The GBC logo (see Figure 6.10) showed a young girl by a fire with a feather in her hair. Through its marketing, camps reinforced the idea that the best Indian was the imagined Aboriginal of the past.117 The founding camp directors argued that playing Indian was part of paying respect to the First Nations of Canada. Jack Eastaugh, staff member at Ahmek for many years, declared that Indian Council ring DW$KPHN³SODFHVWKH,QGLDQLQ a favourable light. It portrays him as a noble, courageous, religiously motivated KXPDQEHLQJ´118 In addition, the directors argued that Indian lore showed an appreciation for the land and the simple wilderness life. Indian lore was also used as an educational tool. In describing Indian day at Tanamakoon, Mary Hamilton 219 explained: ³7KHGD\ZLWKLWVFDPpfires, dances and songs, in no way caricatured the Indian, but rather proved quite educational in showing the greatness of these early inhabitants of our FRXQWU\´119 Yet, underneath the surface, camp leaders used Indian lore as a tool to attract parents wishing for a wilderness experience for their children and to convince campers that camp was fun and special. No RWKHUHYHQWDWFDPSFDSWXUHGFDPSHU¶VLQWHUHVWTXLWHOLNH,QGLDQ&RXQFLOULQJ- the culmination of Indian lore at camp. Deconstructing Council ring Council ring acted as the symbolic centre of camp, a sacred space, set up away from the main area of camp, removed from buildings, and surrounded by trees as depicted in Figure 6.11. As expressed by Dimock and Hendry: Council ring is in a sense a picturesque and symbolic center of the life of the camp. Clustered around its traditions are to be found many of the most PHDQLQJIXOH[SHULHQFHVRIDFDPSHU¶VOLIHDW$KPHN«Council ring is the one time during the week when the whole camp is gathered around the FDPSILUH«,W is then that the camp kindles fires of friendship and the deepest spirit of the camp becomes felt.120 It was a make-believe world where campers could let their imaginations run free. Indian traditions created a sense of community and belonging and an enticing and adventurous atmosphere for campers.121 As Jack Eastaugh, staff member at Ahmek for many years noted³None of this [Council ring] can be said to have any EDVLVLQIDFW´122 Since camp directors adopted Council ring from Seton and not from authentic First Nations traditions, examining Council ring is a way to learn about how non-Natives perceived Natives and which values they sought to emphasize through Council ring. 220 Figure 6.9 and 6.10: Taylor Statten Camps brochure 1955 (above). GBC logo 1920s (below). 80-014/1/5, TUA; GBC brochure, TUA. 221 In 1938, Jack Eastaugh of Ahmek compiled a book called Indian Council Ring to fulfill requests by camp directors and youth workers who wanted to learn about implementing Council ring. First and foremost, the book recommended ³UHDFKLQJWRWKHFKLOG¶VOHYHORILQWHUHVW...GUHVVLQJWKHSDUW´DQGEHFRPLQJ ³HQFKDQWHG.´This underlines the role of fantasy and make-believe in Council ring. Getting the campers excited was paramount to the success of Council. Campers transformed themselves into Natives by applying war paint, and wearing blankets and headbands to Council. When they heard the tom tom beat around camp, they silently proceeded to Council ring led by three or four horses.123 To ³HQOLYHQ´WKHLQWHUHVWRIWKHFDPSHUV, the book suggests discovering an Indian EXULDOJURXQGSULRUWR&RXQFLOULQJ,WJRHVRQWRDGGLWLV³up to you how far you ZDQWWRJRZLWKLW´124 This indicates the element of façade in Council ring. Drama and spectacle was always part of Council ring. Jack Sivers, a Kilcoo counsellor in the 1930s opened Council ring with ³0HHWXK&ROD0D\WWRQ Po 2PQLVKHHHPHH6KRZSHH´ZKLFKWUDQVODWHs WR³+HUe my friends. We are DERXWWRKROGDFRXQFLOILUH´7KH&KLHI, Plewman, then dramatically arrived by canoe dressed in full Indian regalia including a headdress adorned with eagle feathers.125 After this, the book suggested WKDWWKH³ULWXDORIWKHPHGLFLQHPDQ´be incorporated. The medicine man emerged from tepee with DORXGFU\³dressed in some weird costume with many things trailing. If he wears bells around his ankles and wrists and carries a couple of rattles, WKHHIIHFWFDQEHTXLWHVWDUWOLQJ´126 The biggest spectacle of the evening was lighting the council fire. The Chief repeated ³/LJKWZHQRZWKHFRXQFLOILUHEXLOWDIWHUWKHPDQQHURIIRUHVWFKLOGUHQ1RWELJ 222 OLNHWKHZKLWHPDQ¶VZKHUH\RXPXVWVWDQGDZD\RIIVRIURQWDOOURDVWDQGEDFNDOO gooseflesh; but VPDOOOLNHWKH,QGLDQ¶VVRZHPD\VLWFORVHDQGIHHOWKHZDUPWKRI ILUHDQGIULHQGVKLS´127 The Ahmek book suggested fire by friction as the best method for atmosphere. Other options were to string wire from the top of a cliff to the fire and send a ball of cloth soaked in kerosene down, or to shoot a flaming arrow.128 As the years went on, lighting the fire became more and more creative, adding more drama to the evening. For instance, one year a medicine man performed a dance ending with the transfer of fire from a clay bowl to the council fire triggering a small bottle of sulphuric acid by a hidden string into a mixture of potassium chlorate and sugar to produce a cracking.129 Similar chemical explosions were common at Kilcoo.130 Wanapitei Council in the 1960s added an additional element to the program. After the fire was lit, the Chief commented on the feeling of unrest among the tribes. A member of the Ottawa tribe stood and accused the Chippewa tribesmen of driving their wild deer from their hunting ground. In reply, the Chippewas argued that they did this because the Ottawas stole their furs. The Chief of the Micmacs then accused the Ojibways of stealing their corn, and the Ojibway Chief said that the Sioux gave them the corn, and they must have stolen it from the Micmacs. The Wanapitei Council took place on the water and in response to all the arguing a figure appeared on the water standing in a canoe lit by torches that appeared to be propelling itself. It was ZKDWWKH\FDOOHGWKH³Great White Spirit´Once on land the Spirit spoke to the Council of the need for peace. As a sign of friendship, the Chief asked the tribal leaders to heel and toe dance 223 Figure 6.11 and 6.12: Ahmek Council ring (above). GBC Council ring (below). Ahmek brochure 1926, Box 1-28, TSCA; 82-009/3/3, TUA. 224 around fire with drums. When the drums stopped, the leaders stopped dancing and came forward to smoke the peace pipe.131 7KLVZDV:DQDSLWHL¶V interpretation of conflict resolution among Aboriginals. Games testing balance, agility, and strength followed and added athletic challenge and fun to Council ring. These were not games usually found in the city as they were supposed to reflect games of the braves. The Chief said ³)ROORZLQJ the custom of the redmen, we are about to permit the braves to display their skill. For many moons, they have been practicing and developing their muscles until now they are ready to challenge all comers before the honoured guests of our council.´ 132 Games included leg wrestling in which opponents lay on their backs shoulder to shoulder with inside arms locked and one leg raised and locked. The objective was to pull down until one person rolled over. Badger pull was tug-ofwar in which the rope went around the body. Cat on the log matched two opponents on a log with one hand behind with the goal of knocking the other off balance and off the log. The Ahmek book suggested that ³whenever possible LQYHQWDQ,QGLDQVWRU\WRJLYHWKHJDPHPRUHJODPRXU´ 133 The story suggested for Pat and Mike went as follows: There were once two boasters who finally exasperated the chief with their continuous claims of wonderful achievements. At a council such as ours these two men were ordered to fight a duel. They were afraid of knives, tomahawks and arrows, but they agreed to lightweight clubs. Their battle ground was the darkened forest and they took turns at swatting one another by calling names and attempting to knock false scalps from the RWKHU¶VKHDG 134 In Pat and Mike, the opponents were blindfolded lying on their stomachs with left hands joining. Each player had a canvas bag and tried to hit the other one in the 225 head.135 The water boiling contest, appealing most to older campers, tested their abilities to boil water with only a log, knife, and hatchet.136 Hiawatha, the legendary Chief who worked to unify the tribes, also had a place in Council ring. Toward the end of Council, Hiawatha and his council ± enacted by a group of older boys draped in red blankets ± danced into the Council ring and sat around the fire. Hiawatha tells the council that he has heard the call of the great spirit and must depart. He reminds his warriors that he has made them a united nation and that peace prevails. He implores them to glory in his achievements and not to mourn his departure. He sings a moving song as he walks away and the red blanketed men respond in song. This is repeated as +LDZDWKD¶VYRLFHEHFomes more and more distant.137 Elizabeth Shapiro GHVFULEHG³WKHUH-enactment of the death of Hiawatha who climbeGDFOLII´WREH ³YHU\PRYLQJ)RUDWHQ\HDUROGJLUO,IRXQGWKLVTXLWHDZHLQVSLULQJ´138 From an analytical perspective, the departure of Hiawatha can also symbolize the disappearance of the First Nations at the hands of non-Aboriginals in North America. The Chief of council (Statten) stepped forward and said³2XUFKLHI +LDZDWKDKDVGHSDUWHGLVWKHUHDQ\RQHWRWDNHKLVSODFH"´ He then went on to describe how some braves offered themselves as worthy successors and some of the tests they endured such as walking on hot coals. He then reminded the group that all such tests of courage and endurance, while praiseworthy, are as nothing compared to the demands of the high office held by Hiawatha. The true test comes when you are alone ± beset with doubts and fears and tempted to 226 rely on your own resources or man-made weapons.139 At such times you need to call on the great spirit as in the Omaha Tribal Prayer. Wakanda dhe dhu, wa pa dhin a ±ton he ± ZKLFKWUDQVODWHGPHDQV³)DWKHUDQHHG\RQHVWDQGVEHIRUH WKHH,ZKRVLQJDPKH´ 140 GBC¶V&RXQFLOULQJ(see Figure 6.12) had some of the same elements as $KPHN¶V&RXQFLOULQJEXWZDVPXFKOHVVRIDVSHFWDFle, although it was still a solemn occasion. The GBC tribes arrived from separate directions to the secluded Council ring in the glen. The campers, dressed in blankets and feathers, waited in silence as Mary Edgar, the Chief, arrived and stepped up on the &KLHI¶VUock and raised her arm in salutation to the tribes. Rather than the spectacle that was part of lighting the fire at Ahmek and Kilcoo, Edgar lit the fire herself.141 The words recited by Edgar while lighting the fire revolved around God, not the First Nations. She said: Kneel always when you light a fire! Kneel reverently and thankful be )RU*RG¶VXQIDLOLQJFKDULW\.142 Council took on more of a meeting atmosphere than a show. They made announcements of camp awards and tribal honours.143 There was a system of recognition which awarded feathers to campers, ³VRLI\RXVWD\HGWKHUHORQJ HQRXJK\RXKDGIHDWKHUVDOODURXQG\RXUKHDG´144 Tribes competed against each other in various areas, such as nature study, water sport, land sport, and literary and dramatic work. The leaders in each area were announced at Council.145 This was followed by contests similar to those held at Ahmek, in which girls challenged each other. For instance, the stork contest tested to see who could 227 stand on one leg longest.146 One such game is pictured in Figure 6.13. Following this, they read the Scroll, a collection of poems and writings by the campers. Each camper was required to write at least one piece during the summer. Each tribe had a reader who read contributions from its members.147 Council ring closed with the Torch Light Ceremony in which each tribe passed the council fire, lit their torches, saluted the Chief and then departed the Council ring. 148 While there were many similar elements between GBC¶V&RXQFLODQG $KPHN¶VVXch as the secluded atmosphere, the role of the Chief, campers dressing up, the council fire, and challenges, GBC¶V&RXQFLOZDVQRWQHDUO\DV ELJDVSHFWDFOHDVZDV$KPHN¶VAs established previously, Taylor Statten was a showman and this translated into all aspects of Ahmek including Council ring. He was so intent on the fantasy of the Aboriginal that authenticity did not matter. For instance, a former staff member described an incident at Ahmek in which someone exposed another staff member as being non-Native after claiming he was Native. Statten met him at a %R\V¶ Work convention in Chicago and hired him as staff at Ahmek. When another staff member found out that the man was QRW1DWLYHDWDOOKH³grew indignant and threatened to expose this faker in IHDWKHUV´,QUHVSRQVH6WDWWHQGHFODUHG, ³:KHQ,KLUHGKLPKHVDLGKHZDVDQ ,QGLDQDQGDVIDUDVWKHER\VDUHFRQFHUQHGKHLVRQH$QGKH¶VJRLQJWRJR ULJKWRQEHLQJRQHDVORQJDVKH¶VDURXQGFDPSHYHQLILWNLOOV\RXKLP± or the ERWKRI\RX´149 Clearly, appearances were much more important to Statten than the truth. Like Seton, he used the constructed image of the Aboriginal for his own purposes, which included drama and spectacle. 228 Figure 6.13: Games at GBC Council Ring (see Edgar at top of picture). 99-1008, TUA. Edgar, a writer, loved stories and legends and had a vivid imagination, which explains the literary element to GBC¶V&RXQFLOULQJ Many of the passages in the Scroll included made-up Aboriginal legends written by campers. Thus, for (GJDU&RXQFLOULQJVWRULHVIHGWKHFDPSHU¶VLPDJLQDWLRQVDQGLQYLWHGWKHPWR fantasize about their camp as a sacred Aboriginal campsite. Inviting Aboriginals, like Dawendine, to tell legends of their people only enhanced this vision. As a result, spectacle and drama were less important to Edgar compared to Statten. One can imagine that make-believe was probably a very attractive feature of Council ring for both ER\V¶ and JLUOV¶ camps. Pretending to be Native one night a week was an exciting and adventurous event for the campers. Physical games and challenges allowed the campers to physically connect with the make-believe atmosphere and participate in games different from the city. In addition, gathering 229 the whole camp together in a solemn ceremony gave a sense of belonging, connection, and spirituality to all involved. Council ring made campers feel that camp was a special place where they participated in activities and ceremonies like no where they had ever been. Reaction to Indian Lore Ceremony and tradition in some form was part of every camp. Most of the camps in this study had a closing banquet or dinner at the end of the season in which they served a special meal and decorated the dining hall. GBC had a closing vesper service one night in which campers made their way to the hilltop FKDSHODQGOLWDFDQGOHIURPDIODPHRQWKHDOWDU/HDGHUVUHSHDWHG³may this light be a symbol of the pure white light your lives will shed now and through the years to come. Keep the radiance of your ideals every bright, and may the glow of your OLIHOLJKWWKHZD\IRUPDQ\WRIROORZ´150 When the campers returned to their cabins they blew out the candle and saved it. The following Sunday, when they returned home, they lit it and thought of their camp friends.151 Edgar explainsed, ³(DFKFDPSZRUNVRXWVSHFLDOIHDWXUHVRILWVRZQ, which are unique. The greatest value of a ceremony is that it expresses for the campers some underlying idea. Its value grows as it becomes a tradition of the camp...Symbolism certainly has a place in camp.´152 In these traditions, campers were their authentic selves, but the Council ring ceremony presented a special case because campers pretended to be people of another culture and stepped outside their true selves. NonNatives acted out elements that reflected the values and attitudes emphasized by camp directors, rather than historical accurate Native traditions or cultures, 230 illustrating the sense of privilege exercised by camp directors. Indian lore and Council ring did not relate to the modern day Aboriginal and their experience on reserves or struggles with land claims. After WWII, elements of Council ring were called into question. In the early 1970s, an incident occurred at Ahmek in which two campers approached Dr. Tay Statten, Ahmek GLUHFWRUDQG7D\ORU6WDWWHQ¶VVRQDQG complained that Council ring mocked the North American Indian. The boys suggested that the out-dated ceremony should cease. In response to the complaint, in the next Council ring instead of wearing his usual regalia Dr. Tay wore a military beret, a hunting jacket, and carried a walking cane. Instead of the usual fire lighting and peace pipe ceremonies, he made a statement about pollution and the consequence of poor environmental control. He emphasized his statement by emptying a garbage bag of gum wrappers and pop cans that he had collected on the way up to the Council ring. There was a mixed reaction to this change. Eastaugh, Assistant Director at Ahmek in the early 1970s explained, ³7KHWUDGLWLRQDOLVWVZHUHFRndemnatory and voiced the opinion that while it was DQLQWHUHVWLQJHYHQLQJWKH\KRSHGLWZRXOGQ¶WUHSODFHWKH&RXQFLOULQJ7KHWZR lads who had championed the Indians felt that it was a suitable substitute´ 153 Another incident in the early 1970s involved an Aboriginal staff member at Wapomeo who approached Adele Ebbs after Council ring (at this time Wapomeo and Ahmek had Council ring together). According to Ebbs, she said, ³,¶PYHU\ XSVHW,GRQ¶WNQRZLI,FDQVWD\DWFDPSDQ\PRUH,ZDVVRVKRFNHGWRgo to &RXQFLOULQJODVWQLJKWKDYLQJWRZDWFK\RXSHRSOHPDNHIXQRIP\SHRSOH´ 154 231 $GHOHZDVVKRFNHGDWKHUUHDFWLRQDQGFRQWHQGHG³:HQHYHUPDGHIXQRIWKH ,QGLDQV:HGLGQ¶WWKLQNZHZHUH´6KHWDONHGWRKHUEURWKHU, Dr. Tay, and again at the next Council ring, Tay did not wear the headdress or the Indian suit, instead he wore a jacket and a beret. It is not clear whether these incidents were LQWKHVDPH\HDU:KLOH(EEVGLGDGGUHVVWKHVLWXDWLRQDQGDGPLWWHGWKDW³LWZDV a lesson to us to be more carefuO´LWLVFOHDUWKDWVKHGLGQRWV\PSDWKL]HZLWKWKH position of the young Aboriginal ZRPDQ:KHQDVNHGLQDQLQWHUYLHZ³'LGVKH >WKHVWDIIPHPEHU@HYHUFRPHWRUHDOL]HWKDWLW>&RXQFLOULQJ@ZDVRXWRIUHVSHFW"´ $GHOHUHSOLHG³1R6KHZDVYHU\VWUDQJH´Ebbs explains that she received a letter from the woman after a white water canoe trip not associated with :DSRPHRDQGVDLGWKDW³VKHDJDLQKDGWKHVDPHIHHOLQJWKDWZKLWHPDQZDV trying to control the water...was not appreciating that this was nature doing its RZQWKLQJ$QGZKLWHPDQVKRXOGQ¶WWU\WRFRQTXHULW´,Qfurther statements, Ebbs revealed that her real opinion about Aboriginals was that they should assimilate. About the Aboriginal woman described in the incidents above, she asserted: ³6R she had this thing well in-bred. And she turned out to be sort of schizo [sic], which was very sad. She was the daughter of...the chief of the Curve ,QGLDQV6KHFRXOGQHYHUUHDOO\DVVLPLODWH´155 Hedley G. Dimock, a long time camper at Ahmek in the 1930s, explained WKDW&RXQFLOULQJLQWKHV³EHFDPHDKRWSRWDWR´DQG'U7D\LQYLWHG representatives from the Golden Lake tribe to come to camp and meet with campers who were complaining about Council ring. In the end, they worked out some kind of compromise.156 It is not clear what followed, but from my 232 experience as a camper at the Taylor Statten Camps in the 1990s, Council ring was identical in format to the one in the 1930s. Thus, it seems that changes were made briefly to appease complaints, since the camp had insufficient knowledge of genuine Native traditions to fall back on. Once the complainers were gone, Council ring went right back to the traditional style. These complaints did not inspire contemplation about what Council ring really represented and what the subsurface reasons were for its presence at the Taylor Statten Camps year after year. Council ring was a tradition at both Ahmek and Wapomeo that was part of the root from which the camps were grown. This tradition was based on the perception of the traditions of another culture and was adopted by Taylor Statten for his own purposes. Council ring was intact from the beginning and became so intertwined with Ahmek and Wapomeo that letting it go meant losing part of the social fabric of the Taylor Statten Camps. This is clearly problematic and an example of cDPSGLUHFWRU¶VH[HUFLVLQJDVHQVHRISULYLOHJH. $W+RGJLQV¶:DQDSLWHLWKHUHZDV&RXQFLOULQJEXWWKHUHZHUHQRWRWHP poles or Aboriginal naming. Bruce W. Hodgins, argued WKDW³FDELQVQDPHGDIWHU WULEHVLVVRSKRQH\LW¶VEH\RQGEHOLHIEHFDXVHWKHVWDIIGRHVQ¶WKDYHDQ\LGHD ZKDWWKHGLIIHUHQFHLVEHWZHHQ,URTXRLVSHRSOHDQG$OJRQTXLQ´+RGJLQVEHOLHYHV that the proximity to Aboriginals in Temagami made the Temagami camps more sensitive to the people since Bear Island was so close and there was more interaction with real Aboriginal peoples.157 Around 1978, Wanapitei stopped having Council ring. At this time there ZDVFULWLFLVPIURPWKH\RXQJHU$ERULJLQDOVDVVRFLDWHGZLWK:DQDSLWHLDQG³LQD 233 YHU\VRSKLVWLFDWHG´ZD\WKH\UHFRPPHQGHGWKDW+odgins re-examine Council ring. $FFRUGLQJWR+RGJLQV³7KHQH[WJHQHUDWLRQRI,QGLDQVZRXOGQ¶WKDYH WROHUDWHGLW7KH\FRXOGQ¶WGRDQ\WKLQJDERXWLWEXWWKH\ZRXOG¶YHEHHQYHU\YHU\ FULWLFDO´158 7KHGHFLVLRQWRUHPRYH&RXQFLOULQJ³KDGEHHQVORZO\EXLOGLQJ:H GLGQ¶WKDYHWRVWRS%XW,NQRZZHZRXOG¶YHDOOEHHQHPEDUUDVVHG´159 During my interview with Hodgins, about Council ring he explained, ³,UHDOO\IHHOVWURQJO\WKDW LWLVZURQJQRZEXW,GLGQ¶WWKHQ>SULRUWR@QRUGLG,ZKHQ,ZDVD\RXQJ DGXOW´160 Despite these incidents, some have argued that Indian lore at camp elicited interest in and support for Aboriginal communities. Eastaugh suggests that former campers and staff have gone on to develop an interest in Indian history. Artists John Hall and Elford Cox pursued Aboriginal arts and crafts. Murray AGDVKLQ¶V$OJRQTXLQ6\PSKRQ\includes strains of the moving song that accompanied +LDZDWKD¶V'HSDUWXUH at the end of Council ring.161 According to Hedley G. 'LPRFN³$JUHDWGHDORIP\LQWHUHVWDVDSURIHVVLRQDOFRQVXOWDQW working with Indian affairs was derived from feeling so positive and so interested LQ$ERULJLQDO&DQDGLDQV´'LPRFNZDVa major force in helping Quebec Aboriginals. He explained WKDW³DJUHDWGHDORIP\ELDVVXSSRUWLQJWKH,QGLDQV came out of...those early experiences pretending to be Indians, imagining...their culture, to look at what they were doing, to read some of the old tales of James Fenimore Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans, The Pathfinder, The Trailblazer´162 7KDWEHLQJVDLG'LPRFN¶V motivation rested in a make-believe world of the historical Aboriginal depicted in books and at camp. 234 When Mary Northway was a camper at GBC VKH³had never seen an Indian and far less knew anything of...historical dealings or misdealing with them.´163 As an adult Northway admitted WKDW³DQWKURSRORJLFDOVWXdy conflicted rather severely with my early notions of the life of the North American Indian, and even now I still retain a visual image of an Indian as a fellow clad in a manufactured blanket´+RZHYHUVKHcontended that ³the enjoyment of the pseudo-Indian antics was great, and I do not think that myths do children any harm provided that they can grow from them to accept reality and still look back on their childhood enjoyments with pleasure.´164 Surprisingly though, Northway was the person that introduced concern about Aboriginal representation at camp to the camping community. In an address given to the Manitoba Camping Association in 1946, Northway took a stand against inauthentic Indian representation by suggesting that ³1DWLYH&DQDGLDQV¶ZD\RIOLIHKDVEHHQQRZKHUHPRUHJUHDWO\GLVWRUWHGWKDQ LQRXUSUHVHQWVXPPHUFDPSV´165 She went and declared: ,VQ¶WLWWRREDGWKDWWKHRQO\FRQFHSWLRQVRPHRIRXUFDPSHUVOLYLQJLQ haunts so recently inhabited by Indians, have is that Indians were a people who met on Saturday nights dressed in blankets from Eaton¶VDQG the Hudson Bay store and engaged in marshmallow eating contests, singing battles, and a good many athletics derived from some book on modern UHFUHDWLRQDOJDPHV«:RXOGQ¶WDgeneration of Canadian children gain more if they learned a little of what we had done to the Indians and what their present rights and living are? Or are we ashamed of it.166 As previously established, Ahmek Council ring was not based on first-hand knowledge of First Nations culture. (DVWDXJKRI$KPHNDGPLWV³:HDUHJXLOW\RI disregarding cultural facts. Indian Lore at summer camp has not limited itself to archaeological truth. We have stolen the tipi from the people of the plains, the 235 grotesque and marvellously hideous masks of the Iroquois, the birch bark crafts of the Hurons and the R[h]ythmic design of the Haidas and Kootenay Indians of WKH:HVW&RDVW´167 In an address given by Northway to the Manitoba Camping Association in 1946, she suggested that campers be told about the authentic experiences and struggles of &DQDGLDQ$ERULJLQDOV³, believe we could refrain from presenting fiction as fact, myth as reality, ZLVKDVDFKLHYHPHQW´6KHGid not advocate removing Indian lore altogether as she explained: ³/HW¶VKDYHVWRULHV legends, fantasies presented as story, legend and fantasy, for imagination is one of the greatest human gifts, but the highest imaginative concepts are always based on realism and the greatest romance is founded on the knowledge of WKLQJVDVWKH\DUH´168 Linda M. Gerber asked: ³'RHVDUH-enactment of past cultural patterns do justice to present day Indians, or does it perpetuate stereotypical images of primitiveness that interfere with relations between Indians and non-Indians WRGD\"´169 Gerber sees camp directors DV³JDWHNHHSHUs controlling access into a QHZDUHDRIDVVRFLDWLRQDOUHODWLRQVKLSV´170 She suggested that a consensus as WR³,QGLDQRSLQLRQ´DERXWFDPSSURJUDPVFRXOGEHUHDFKHGLI$ERULJLQDOV were invited to discuss their opinion. Camp programs would then modify their programs to reflect the wishes of the Native people thereby providing ³OHJLWLPDWLRQLQWKHH\HVRITXHVWLRQLQJ\RXQJFDPSHUV´171 In this way, Aboriginals would be given a say in determining how their culture is presented to non-Native youth.172 236 The literature does not address the current opinion of Council ring in the camping community, but illustrates that, post-WWII, the camp community began to re-examine the representation of Aboriginal peoples in Council ring and whether Council ring should be amended or even discontinued. It seems that in one respect, the attempt to create a unique camp culture based on antimodernism went too far for some. Indian lore and Council ring, in particular, became contentious in the camping community. While some camps like Wanapitei and Tanamakoon eliminated Council Ring, other camps, like Wapomeo and Ahmek, held on to their adopted tradition. The idealized image of the Aboriginal was an invented RQH7KLVZDVH[HPSOLILHGE\6HWRQ¶VLGHDVRI primitive life, famous Canadian Aboriginals like Pauline Johnson, Indian lore at camp, and through camp advertising. Elements of Aboriginal culture were selectively chosen by camp directors in order to enhance values deemed important for the creation and maintenance of a unique camp culture based on an anti-modern premise. Just as Seton used the image of the Aboriginal to propel his philosophy, so did camp directors. Since historically, Aboriginals were perceived to be aligned with nature, the wilderness context of camp plus the anti-modern tenets of camp made the historical Aboriginal a convenient component of the temporary camp society. Aboriginals were a direct link to the past and the ideals associated with the perceptions of the past, which is what camp directors tried to emulate. Sharon Wall and Abigail A. Van Slyck argue that playing Indian was a form of cultural appropriation in which the dominant culture selectively exploited and excluded historical context from 237 discourse.173 $ERULJLQDOVZHUHHVVHQWLDOO\³XVHG´DVDQH[DPSOHRIDZD\Rf life that would entice youth and create a world in which certain ideals could be fostered. In Going Native, Shari M. Huhndorf contends that encouraging campers to play Indian temporarily during the summer emphasized the superiority of the dominant culture.174 Council ring and other Indian traditions depicted Aboriginal peoples as primitive or pre-modern, and white people as progressive and modern.175 During the summer, campers knew that camp was temporary and while Indian lore was fun, it was not reality. Reinforcing the connection between Natives and a primitive past contributed to a sense that true Indian culture had disappeared, just like Hiawatha, and helped to sustain the superiority of the hegemonic culture in North America.176 In this way, Indian lore at camp helped to support racial hierarchies, even if this was not the conscious intention of camp directors.177 238 Endnotes 1 Ernest Thompson Seton, Trail of an Artist-Naturalist: The Autobiography of Ernest Thompson Seton 1HZ<RUN&KDUOHV6FULEQHU¶V6RQV 2 Seton, Trail of an Artist-Naturalist, 106. 3 Seton, Trail of an Artist-Naturalist, 106. 4 Seton, Trail of an Artist-Naturalist, 106. 5 6KDURQ:DOO³7RWHP3ROHV7HHSHHVDQG7RNHQ7UDGLWLRQVµ3OD\LQJ,QGLDQ¶DW2QWDULR6XPPHU &DPSV´Canadian Historical Review 8.3 (Sept. 2005): 520-:DOO¶VDUWLFOHXVHV similar sources and content as WKLVFKDSWHU7KLVFKDSWHUGLIIHUVIURP:DOO¶VDUWLFOHGXHWRWKH inclusion of data from interviews done by the author, a detailed deconstruction of Council ring, DQGPRUHRIDIRFXVRQGLIIHUHQFHVLQ,QGLDQORUHDWER\V¶FDPSVDQGJLUOV¶FDPSV 6 Daniel Francis, The Imaginary Indian: The Image of the Indian in Canadian Culture (Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp Press, 1992), 8 7 Francis, 8. 8 Francis, 221. 9 Don Morrow and Kevin B. Wamsley, Sport in Canada: A History (Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2005), 15. 10 Morrow and Wamsley, 16. 11 Francis, 221. 12 Francis, 123. 13 Francis, 52. 14 Francis, 59. 15 Marie Battiste and James Youngblood Henderson, Protecting Indigenous Knowledge and Heritage: A Global Challenge (Saskatoon: Purich Publishing Ltd., 2000), 21, 31. 16 +HDWKHU'XQORS³7KH Role and Image of Wilderness and the Aborigine in Selected Ontario Shield Camps (MA thesis, Trent University, 1997),154-155. 17 Francis, 123. 18 Francis, 59. 19 Patricia Jasen, Wild Things: Nature, Culture and, Tourism in Ontario, 1790-1914 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1995), 85. 20 Francis, 59. 21 Francis, 59. 239 22 0DU\(GJDU³$'LVWLQJXLVKHG9LVLWRU´-010/1/5, MSE, TUA. 23 Barb Gilchrist and John Gilchrist, 83-002/005/017, SVRC, TUA. 24 Mary Edgar³$'LVWLQJXLVKHG9LVLWRU´MSE, OCA. 25 0DU\6(GJDU³2XU,QGHEWHGQHVVWR2XU,QGLDQ)ULHQGV´-007/5/5, OCA, TUA. 26 Gilchrist and Gilchrist, SVRC, TUA. 27 Francis, 117. 28 Francis, 117. 29 Francis, 118. 30 Francis, 113-114. 31 Francis, 131. 32 Francis, 138. 33 Francis 132. 34 Francis, 135. 35 Francis, 137, 140. 36 Francis, 123. 37 Francis, 142. 38 Francis, 143. 39 Seton, Trail of an Artist-Naturalist, 106; ³+LVWRU\RI2QWDULR&DPSLQJ´-007/2/11, OCA, TUA. 40 Abigail A. Van Slyck, A Manufactured Wilderness: Summer Camps and the Shaping of American Youth, 1890-1960 (Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press, 2006), 172. 41 Ernest Thompson Seton, The Book of Woodcraft and Indian Lore (Garden City, New York: Doubleday Press and Co., 1926), 483. 42 Seton, The Book of Woodcraft and Indian Lore, 202-203. 43 Seton, The Book of Woodcraft and Indian Lore, 202-203. 44 Seton, The Book of Woodcraft and Indian Lore, 202, 203, 217, 218. 45 th Ernest Thompson Seton, Manual of the Woodcraft Indians: The 14 Birchbark Roll (Garden City, NY: Double Day, Page and Co, 1915), xv. 46 Seton, The Book of Woodcraft and Indian Lore 183. 240 47 Seton, The Book of Woodcraft and Indian Lore 183. 48 Seton, The Book of Woodcraft and Indian Lore, 484. 49 Francis, 146. 50 Philip J. Deloria, Playing Indian (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1998), 108. 51 ³+LVWRU\RI2QWDULR&DPSLQJ´-007/2/11, OCA, TUA. 52 Ernest Thompson Seton, as quoted in Roderick Frazier Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind (New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 2001), 148. 53 Seton, Manual of the Woodcraft Indians, xvi. 54 Seton, The Book of Woodcraft and Indian Lore, v, vi; Wall, 520-521; Van Slyck, 172. 55 Ernest Thompson Seton, as quoted in 5REHUW3DJH/LQFROQ³6LGHOLJKWRQ6HWRQ´Hardings Magazine,1949 Vol. xxcix No. 10, 85-005/1/8, ETS, TUA. 56 5REHUW3DJH/LQFROQ³6LGHOLJKWRQ6HWRQ´ETS, TUA. 57 5REHUW3DJH/LQFROQ³6LGHOLJKWRQ6HWRQ´ETS, TUA. 58 Seton, Manual of the Woodcraft Indians, 3. 59 Nash, 47, 49. 60 John Barry, Environment and Social Theory. (London and New York: Routledge, 1999), 55. 61 Francis, 146. 62 Seton, The Book of Woodcraft and Indian Lore, v, vi. 63 Deloria, 115. 64 Deloria, 105, 156. 65 Statten, as quoted in C.A.M. Edwards, Taylor Statten: A Biography (Toronto: Ryerson Press, 1960), 22. 66 Edwards, 85, 88. 67 &KLFN+HQGU\³-RWWLQJVRQD-RXUQH\´-001/1/22, JAE, TUA. 68 Edwards, 94. 69 Ahmek brochure, 1932, Box 1-28, TSCA. 70 Taylor Statten, ³.LQGlLQJ&KDUDFWHULQ&DPS´-019/13/10, OCA Additions, TUA. 71 Adele Ebbs 2, 83-002/010/009, SVRC, TUA. 241 72 Fires of Friendship: Eighty Years of the Taylor Statten Camps (Toronto: The Taylor Statten Camps, 2000), 24. 73 Ronald H. Perry ed., Canoe Lake Echoes 3.1 (May 1931),82-016/2/8, RHP, TUA. 74 John Latimer, Maker of Men: The Kilcoo Story (Transcontinental Printing, 1999), 176-177,179180,189. 75 -DFN(DVWDXJK³,QGLDQ&RXQFLOULQJ´-010, Heather Dunlop fonds [hereafter HD], TUA 76 Bruce W. Hodgins, interview by author, May 7, 2009, Peterborough, Ont. 77 Hodgins interview. 78 Sue Ebbs, interview by author, June 11, 2009, Bradford, Ont. 79 Harry and Adele Ebbs, 83-002/005/027, SVRC, TUA. 80 Adele Ebbs, 83-002/002/010 SVRC, TUA. 81 Ebbs, SVRC, TUA; Ebbs interview. 82 Mary G. Hamilton, The Call of the Algonquin: A Biography of Summer Camp (Toronto: Ryerson Press, 1958), 14. 83 Hamilton, 14. 84 Hamilton, 14. 85 Fires of Friendship, 15. 86 +RGJLQV³:DQDSLWHLRQ7HPDJDPL´ 87 Latimer, 9. 88 Hamilton, 18-19, 53. 89 0DU\1RUWKZD\³%OXH/DNHDQG5RFN\6KRUHEDQTXHWVSHHFK´0-016/1/35, Northway Additions [hereafter NA], TUA. 90 GBC brochure 1923, 72-007/1/2, OCA, TUA. 91 Gilchrist and Gilchrist, SVRC, TUA; GBC brochure 1923, TUA. 92 ³7KH/DVW&RXQFLO)LUHLQWKH*OHQ´The Scroll, 1924, 72/007/1/3, OCA, TUA. 93 Gilchrist and Gilchrist, SVRC, TUA. 94 6WDWWHQ³.LQGlLQJ&KDUDFWHULQ&DPS´2&$ Additions, TUA. 95 6WDWWHQ³.LQGlLQJ&KDUDFWHULQ&DPS´2&$ Additions, TUA. 96 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 242 97 Van Every Tribal Certificate, 99-1008 Alan Van Every Collection, TUA. 98 Nora Cochrane and Aileen Cochrane, 83-002/007/011, SVRC, TUA. 99 The College Times, (Easter 1924), UCCA, 44. 100 Dunlop, 102. 101 Ahmek brochure, 1937, Box 1-27, TSCA. 102 Hedley G. Dimock, interview by author, May 13, 2009, Milton, Ont. 103 Ahmek brochure, 1937, TSCA. 104 H.G. Dimock interview. 105 H.G. Dimock interview. 106 ³1HZ)DFHV´ Canoe Lake Echoes 3.1 (May 1930) 82-016/2/8, RHP, TUA. 107 ³'DZHQGLQHRIWKH0RKDZNV´-010/1/2, MSE, TUA. 108 ³'DZHQGLQHRIWKH0RKDZNV´06(78$. 109 ³'DZHQGLQHRIWKH0RKDZNV´06(78$. 110 ³'DZHQGLQHRIWKH0RKDZNV´MSE, TUA. 111 ³'DZHQGLQHRIWKH0RKDZNV´MSE, TUA. 112 ³'DZHQGLQHRIWKH0RKDZNV´06(78$. 113 (GJDU³2XU,QGHEWHGQHVV´2&$78$ 114 Camp Temagami: A Summer Camp for Men and Boys, est. 1900, (pamphlet, text-fiche, 1915). 115 Wanapitei Information Booklet, 1932, 72-007/2/5, OCA, TUA. 116 Wanapitei information booklet, 1932, TUA. 117 Jasen, 176. 118 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 119 Hamilton, 149. 120 Hedley S. Dimock and Charles E. Hendry, Camping and Character: A Camp Experiment in Character Education (New York: Association Press, 1929), 75. 121 122 Wall, 514. :-(DVWDXJK³,VWKHUH6WLOOD3ODFHIRUWKH,QGLDQ&RXQFLOULQJ&HUHPRQ\"´-010/1/9, MSE, TUA. 243 123 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 124 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 125 Latimer, 177 126 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 127 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 128 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 129 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 130 Latimer, 180, 183. 131 Indian Night 1966, 92-000/2/7, Hodgins Collection, TUA. 132 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 133 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 134 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 135 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 136 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 137 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 138 Elizabeth Shapiro, email interview by author, May 3, 2009. 139 Eastaugh, MSE, TUA. 140 Eastaugh, HD, TUA. 141 The Scroll, 1924, 72/007/1/3, OCA, TUA. 142 The Scroll, 1924, OCA, TUA. 143 The Scroll, 1924, OCA, TUA. 144 Mary Northway, 83-002/002/005, SVRC, TUA. 145 Northway, SVRC, TUA. 146 Northway, SVRC, TUA. 147 Northway, SVRC, TUA. 148 Northway, SVRC, TUA. 149 Jack Mosher, ³2OG&DPSHU´7KH$KPHN%RRN(May 31, 1944), TSCA. 244 150 The Scroll, 1928, 72/007/1/3, OCA, TUA. 151 The Scroll, 1928, 72/007/1/3, OCA, TUA. 152 0DU\6(GJDU³7KH8VHRIWKH6\PEROLFLQ&DPSLQJ´-007/5/16, OCA, TUA. 153 Eastaugh, MSE, TUA. 154 Adele Ebbs 2, 83-022/010/009, SVRC, TUA. 155 Ebbs 2, SVRC, TUA. 156 H.G. Dimock interview. 157 Hodgins interview. 158 Hodgins interview. 159 Hodgins interview. 160 Hodgins interview. 161 Eastaugh, MSE, TUA. 162 H.G. Dimock interview. 163 0DU\1RUWKZD\³%OXH/DNHDQG5RFN\6KRUHEDQTXHWVSHHFK´-016/1/35, NA, TUA. 164 1RUWKZD\³%OXH/DNH and Rocky Shore banquet speech,´NA, TUA. 165 0DU\/1RUWKZD\³&DQDGLDQ&DPSLQJ,WV)RXQGDWLRQDQG,WV)XWXUH´DGGUHVVJLYHQWRWKH Manitoba Camping Association, May 1946, 97-009/1/4, Adele Ebbs Fonds, TUA. 166 Northway, Adele Ebbs Fonds, TUA. 167 Eastaugh, MSE, TUA. 168 NoUWKZD\³&DQDGLDQ&DPSLQJ,WV)RXQGDWLRQDQG LWV)XWXUH´OCA Additions, TUA. 169 /LQGD0*HUEHU³,QGLDQ&XOWXUHLQ&DPS3URJUDPV,WV5HOHYDQFHWRWKH1DWLYH3HRSOHRI 7RGD\´$SU-010/1/9, MSE, TUA; Note: It is not clear in the archives who Linda M. Gerber is or whom she is addressing. 170 Gerber, MSE, TUA. 171 Gerber, MSE, TUA. 172 Gerber, MSE, TUA. 173 Wall, 516; Van Slyck, 212, 213. 174 Van Slyck, 207. 175 Wall, 532-533. 245 176 Van Slyck, 212. 177 Van Slyck, 212, 213.