Friday, August 9, 2013

Hugh MacMillan Inspired A Lot Of Apprentice Paper Hunters



A MEMORIAL TRIBUTE

     I HAD WRITTEN THE TWO BIOGRAPHICAL REVIEWS, JUST NOW PUBLISHED, EARLY LAST SUMMER, AS A ROUGH DRAFT CHAPTER; HAVING PLANNED THIS ANTIQUE HUNTING BLOG SERIES ALMOST A YEAR IN ADVANCE. I HAD JUST FINISHED PUTTING THIS LITTLE TRIBUTE TOGETHER, WHEN I RECEIVED NEWS HUGH HAD PASSED AWAY SUDDENLY, IN OTTAWA. IT WAS ON JULY 21ST, 2012, THAT CANADA LOST A REMARKABLE, STORIED CHAP I WAS VERY FOND OF. FOR YEARS, I'D GET MY CHRISTMAS NEWSLETTER FROM HUGH AND HIS WIFE, AND ABOUT EVERY THREE MONTHS OR SO, HE'D CALL ME UP, AND WE'D TALK FOR ABOUT AN HOUR. I NEVER TIRED OF HIS STORIES. I BELIEVED ALL OF HIS STORIES. I LOVED TO HEAR THAT GRUFF VOICE ON THE OTHER END, ASKING WHAT I'D BEEN UP TO HERE IN MUSKOKA. I REMEMBER HIS VISITS HERE TO BIRCH HOLLOW, OUR TRIPS OVER TO SEE A CANOE-MATE, BILL RATHBUN, OF GRAVENHURST, AND HIS FRIEND AND BIRCH BARK CANOE EXPERT, RICK NASH, OF DORSET. I REMEMBER HIM HOLDING ONTO NORMAN BETHUNE'S BRONZE HAND, ON THE STATUE ELEVATED IN THE GRAVENHURST OPERA HOUSE SQUARE, AND TELLING ME ABOUT HIS VAST KNOWLEDGE OF BETHUNE FAMILY HISTORY. WHAT A FOUNTAIN OF INFORMATION HE WAS. HE WAS A FRIEND OF MY AUTHOR ASSOCIATE WAYLAND "BUSTER" DREW, AND A HISTORICAL MATE OF MY LONG-TIME BUDDY, DAVID BROWN, OF HAMILTON, BOTH GENTS ALSO DECEASED. I JUST CAN'T THINK OF HUGH'S LIFE FORCE BEING EXTINGUISHED…..SO I WON'T.



THE MISUNDERSTOOD AND MISREPRESENTED VALUES OF HISTORIC PAPER / DOCUMENTS

HUNTING, FINDING, RESCUING, CONSERVING AND BENEFITTING FROM HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS

     FROM AN HISTORIAN'S PERSPECTIVE, NOT HAVING ENOUGH INFORMATION IS ALWAYS A DRAG ON A RESEARCH PROJECT. A "HAIR PULLER!" I HAVEN'T BEEN INVOLVED IN A SINGLE HERITAGE PROJECT OR BIOGRAPHY, THAT I HAVEN'T, AT SOME NARROWING OF THE PIPELINE….THAT FEEDS INFORMATION, SCREAMED SILENTLY ABOUT THE SHORTFALL. COMPLAINING THAT WHAT COULD BE AN EXCEPTIONAL, HUGELY INSIGHTFUL RESEARCH MISSION, IS WHACKED DOWN IN ITS TRACKS, BECAUSE OF SOME UNFORTUNATE SHORTFALL OF INFORMATION……THAT MAY EXIST, OR WAS SOMEHOW DESTROYED OUT OF NEGLECT. AS I WORK ON ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES THESE DAYS, IT IS SUCH A DETRIMENT, TO GET SO CLOSE TO THE HEART OF THE STORY, BUT HAVE TO SLUFF IT OFF OR GENERALIZE, BECAUSE A HUGE WHACK OF THE SUBJECT'S LIFE IS UNDOCUMENTED. AS IS THE CASE, THE SUBJECTS OF THESE BIOGRAPHIES ARE DECEASED, ADMITTEDLY THE RESEARCHER COUNTS ON FAMILY AND FRIENDS FOR THE BULK OF THE RESEARCH MATERIAL. SOME TIMES THIS ISN'T THE CASE, AND SUZANNE AND I HAVE TO EMPLOY GREATER EFFORT AND EXPENSE OF TIME, TO SEEK OUT SHREDS OF BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL ALL OVER GOD'S HALF ACRE, WHICH IS NORMAL EXERCISE FOR HISTORICAL-TYPES, BUT ALSO IMPOSES A HIGH DEGREE OF DIFFICULTY THAT CAN SERIOUSLY DIMINISH THE FINAL STORY-LINE. THE MORE INFORMATION, THE MORE RESPONSIBLE THE END RESULT.
    I'VE NEVER RUN INTO A RESEARCH PROJECT, WHERE I COMPLAINED THERE WAS TOO MUCH INFORMATION. I MIGHT COMPLAIN ABOUT BEING UNDER-STAFFED TO SCAN THROUGH IT ALL, OR THAT I MIGHT BE UNDER THE GUN IN TERMS OF BUDGET OF TIME, BUT NEVER BECAUSE THERE'S A MOUNTAIN OF AVAILABLE RESEARCH MATERIAL. WELL, THANKS TO ARCHIVIST, PAPER SLEUTHS LIKE HUGH MACMILLAN, IN OUR COUNTRY, HUGE AMOUNTS OF ARCHIVAL MATERIAL, FOR RESEARCHERS, HAS BEEN RESCUED FROM ALL OVER THE CONTINENT, (AND SOMETIMES BEYOND), THAT HAS INFILLED OUR COUNTRY'S CITIZEN HISTORY; WHICH AT TIMES, WAS ACQUIRED ONE DOCUMENT, ONE JOURNAL, ONE LETTER AT A TIME. IT'S ALL ABOUT TIEING UP LOOSE ENDS OF THE STORY, WHICH LEFT UNDONE, AND INCOMPLETE, DRIVES HISTORIANS NUTS. WHERE THERE HAS BEEN AN OBVIOUS VOID OF INFORMATION IN A STORY, OTHERS THOUGHT WAS A FINAL CAPPING, HUGH MACMILLAN, TIME AND AGAIN, PROVED THEM WRONG, BY FINDING A STASH OF HISTORIC PAPER NO ONE ELSE KNEW ABOUT……OR COULD HAVE IMAGINED; ULTIMATELY AND EFFECTIVELY ADDING THOSE IMPORTANT NEW CHAPTERS ON STORIES THAT PRESUMABLY, AND PREMATURELY HAD BEEN CONCLUDED.
    HIS WAS A JOB, UNDER THE MOST TRYING OF CIRCUMSTANCES, THAT HARDLY EVER EARNED HIM GREAT PUBLIC ACCOLADES; EXCEPT OF COURSE FROM HIS PEERS, WHO REVERED HIS SENSE OF MISSION, AND MANTRA, "SUCCESS AT ALL COST." THE ARCHIVIST PROFESSION SELDOM STRETCHES BEYOND THE COMPLETION OVATION, "SUCCESSFUL, BUT STILL WORK TO BE DONE!"  THE WORD "UNSUNG," COMES TO MIND, AS WOULD BE EXPECTED OF THE GRUNT-WORK BEHIND THE SHOW LIGHTS…..BEYOND THE MAIN STAGE WHERE THE FINDS ARE THANKFULLY CELEBRATED. THE FOUNDER OF THE EVENT? WELL, HE'S GOT NO TIME NOW TO BASK IN ACCOMPLISHMENT. THAT WAS THE GOOD FEELING YESTERDAY. TODAY THERE'S ANOTHER MOUNTAIN OF PAPERWORK TO BE SORTED AND CATALOGUED. TO SAY HUGH MACMILLAN WAS INTREPID AND STALWART ABOUT HIS WORK, WAS OF COURSE AN UNDERSTATEMENT.
      BEHIND THOSE MAJOR PAPER FINDS WERE REMARKABLE, NEVER-SAY-DIE HISTORICAL TYPES LIKE HUGH MACMILLAN, WHO BECAME A LEGEND AS THE COUNTRY'S FIRST FREELANCE ARCHIVIST. WAS HE DESERVING OF THE LIMELIGHT FOR HIS ACCOMPLISHMENTS? HONESTLY, I DON'T THINK HE NEEDED THIS KIND OF RECOGNITION, TO FEEL GOOD ABOUT THE HISTORY HE RELEASED FROM ATTICS, BASEMENTS, OLD SHEDS, BARNS AND OTHERWISE RUINS, TO BENEFIT THE ONGOING WORK OF CANADIAN HISTORIANS IN THOUSANDS OF DISCIPLINES. HE KNOWS THE GOOD HE'S DONE, BUT AT THE SAME TIME, I KNOW IT BOTHERS HIM PROFOUNDLY, TO REALIZE THAT OUT THERE, SOMEWHERE, A LARGE PILE OF IMPORTANT HERITAGE DOCUMENTATION, IS BEING RUINED BY NEGLECT; OR TOSSED OUT BY AN UNCARING FAMILY MEMBER…….NOT RECOGNIZING WHAT EVERY ONE SHOULD. BEFORE HISTORY IS WRITTEN INTO A MANUSCRIPT, IT HAS TO BE SUPPORTED BY INFORMATION……LIKE THE MATERIALS BEING THROWN OUT FROM ESTATES, OR DESTROYED BY SHEER NEGLECT OF ITS HISTORICAL IMPORTANCE. I AM PROUD TO SAY, I HAVE HUNG-OFF HUGH MACMILLAN'S EVERY WORD, FOR MANY YEARS NOW, AND I FEEL THAT THE BEST EDUCATION I RECEIVED IN CANADIAN HISTORY, DIDN'T COST ME A DIME OF TUITION……..JUST A WEE BIT OF HOSPITALITY, AND AN EAGERNESS, ON MY PART, TO LEARN FROM SOMEONE WHO HAD EVERY CREDENTIAL AS A PROFESSOR, BUT DIDN'T LIKE BEING CONFINED TO ONE PLACE…..WHEN THERE WAS SO MUCH TO BE GAINED BY TRAVEL AND EXPLORATION. IF AT TIMES, I BLUR THE LINES BETWEEN HISTORIAN, WRITER, COLLECTOR AND ANTIQUE DEALER, PLEASE EXCUSE MY ENTHUSIASM TO DABBLE IN EVERYTHING THAT AMAZES AND ENTERTAINS ME. IN PART, I GOT THIS AS SOURCE INSPIRATION, FROM GOOD FOLKS LIKE HUGH MACMILLAN, WHO THANKFULLY INVITED ME INTO HIS WORLD, MANY YEARS AGO, TO SHARE THE TRUTHS OF WHAT MAKES HISTORIANS THE CENTER OF ATTRACTION. THE WORK OF ARCHIVISTS, THE HUNTER-GATHERERS OUT ON THE HUSTINGS, MAKE HISTORIANS LOOK GOOD. SO IF I OCCASIONALLY GET CREDIT FOR SOME HERITAGE PROJECT OR BIOGRAPHY, THE FIRST NAME I OFFER AS A FOUNDER OF MY SUCCESS, IS HUGH MACMILLAN. I WILL NEVER CHANGE THIS OPINION. HE HAS AND CONTINUES TO BE A MODEL IN MY PROFESSION. AS FAR AS COLLECTING GOES, I COULDN'T FIND A BETTER ROLE MODEL IF I LIVED ANOTHER FIFTY-SEVEN YEARS IN THIS OLD BODY. MOST OF US IN THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUE PROFESSION, HAVE FOND RECOLLECTIONS OF OUR RESPECTIVE MENTORS, OUR TUTORS AND INSTIGATORS……THOSE FOLKS WHO HELPED US MOVE FORWARD IN OCCUPATIONS AND PREOCCUPATIONS THAT PEAKED CURIOSITY IN OUR YOUTH. THAT'S OUR SPECIAL PROVENANCE. IT'S HOW WE GOT FROM THERE TO HERE, AND WE WON'T FORGET THE CONTRIBUTION THEY MADE……

NOR WESTER TALES POST ARCHIVIST YEARS

     "My job title of Ontario's official liaison officer was abolished in 1989, but my paper sleuthing didn't stop; in fact it just continued. As is obvious from all the foregoing chapters, treasure hunting for manuscripts, relics and ephemera is a vocation, avocation, occupation, preoccupation, and a game I will continue to enjoy as long as I live," wrote Hugh MacMillan, in his book, "Adventures of a Paper Sleuth," Penumbra Press, 2004 (hardcover). "From the moment I retired until today, I have continued this lifelong interest as a part-time dealer in antiquities."
     He writes, "Not simply a matter of having in my possession items of historical interest, the obsession also includes trying to solve historical mysteries, locating art treasures, and find the best destinations for certain valuable historic items. Shortly after my retirement party, when I related some of my misadventures to friends, and relatives gathered at the Arts and Letters Club, in Toronto, Muriel and I set to work on our own business called Nor'Wester Partners. With Muriel as editor, we have published four catalogues so far, listing items ranging in value from $25 to $85,000, and the chase continues in the 21st century. We chose the name Nor'Wester Partners because though we have branched out considerably, we originally intended to specialize in finding and selling reproduction trade silver, and publishing journals about the North West Company. We operated fur trade canoe brigades for pleasure, provided costumes for heritage movie footage, organized tours to historical pageants and fur trade canoe races, and personal slide shows and lectures on the history of the fur trade. We also conducted tours to Scotland, following our interest in Glengarry antecedents."
     "Through all these related activities, we built a network of history buffs and developed useful leads to manuscript collections. Similar to the original North West Company, our Nor'Wester Partners Company is a commercial venture. The original Nor' Westers explored much of Canada, as they conducted the fur trade; we explore the same territory while conducting our trade in papers and objects of historical value. Some museum archives and other public institutions, miss important collections because of poor rapport with intermediaries. I discovered early on that establishing good relations with dealers in antiquities benefits the public archives and all those who use them for research," writes Hugh MacMillan. "Every item that has appeared in our Nor'Wester Partners catalogues is a story in itself, from the very start up to yesterday's acquisition. Our first major coup was acquiring the Lambart Papers. Hyacinthe Lambart (1904-1988), a woman to be reckoned with, had a regal bearing and spoke her mind freely. In 1973, she took offense at something I said, didn't speak to me for ten years, then suddenly phoned to apologize and offered to sell me some manuscripts. These were letter books from the old Hamilton Brothers Mill, at Hawkesbury across the Ottawa River from where she lived in Cushing, Quebec. They had considerable historic value so I bought them for the Ontario Archives. In 1990, two years after Hyacinthe Lambart died, her executors got in touch with me to offer Miss Lambert's family, business and personal papers. They revealed much detail of this illustrious family, a real coup for our new antiquarian company. Hyacinthe's great-grandfather, the Earl of Cavan, had brought his son Octavius Lambert to Canada in 1874. Hyacinthe's father Frederick, son of Octavius, became a surveyor in Canada and built Vine Lynne at 7 Rideau Gate, across from the Governor General's residence in Ottawa, which is now used as a residence for visiting VIPs."
     "The letters in this collection define Hyacinthe Lambart as a fascinating Canadian. At McGill University, she studied under Hugh McLennan and Stephen Leacock. One of Canada's first female pilots, she corresponded with Amelia Earhart," notes historian, Hugh MacMillan. "In 1932, Hyacinthe Lambart, flew her Gipsy Moth aircraft to Quebec City, landing it on the Plains of Abraham. A striking photograph shows her wearing a stylish tweed suit, standing beside the plane en route to Holland to attend an international aviation conference. A photograph in the same collection shows her as the only female, still wearing her tweed suit, amidst a group of sober looking male aviators. During World War II she was secretary to the Association of Canadian Flying Clubs based in Montreal. Hyacinthe went on to historical research and writing. We eventually placed her family papers, some 2000 items spanning four generations, with the National Archives in Ottawa, where they can be read by interested researchers. Included in the collection were papers from her two brothers, Arthur and Edward Lambart. Arthur left the RCMP for special duties with the RAF and was killed early in WWII. Edward was with the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery, in Italy, when he was killed by a German sniper. An unusual item in the Lambart collection was a fine sleeping robe made of lynx paws. Her father had brought it back from the North where he took part in the Yukon / Alaska boundary survey. This item is now with the National Museum of Civilization in Gatineau."
     It's possible you might be able to find a copy of this book by consulting the Advanced Book Exchange, online, and typing in the title and author.
     I want to thank you once again, for taking the time out of your busy day…..and on the brink of another winter storm, to visit this interesting biography of archivist / historian, Hugh MacMillan, who taught me some hunting and gathering tips that have served me well for many years. Just because antique dealers don't usually write tell-all books, or regional / general histories, doesn't mean they don't play the role of historian. Just ask them a question. You might be surprised how far their knowledge extends, past the neat little shops they operate during the daytime. Please come back for a visit, as we carry on our antique hunting adventures. Be careful driving out there.
     "As I close this collection of stories illustrating my never-ending search for historical papers, I must reiterate my mission statement: We must remain vigilant in seeing to the preservation of written and pictorial records. Make sure that those letters of your aunt, mother, or other relatives are saved. Let an archives or museum decide if those memorabilia are worth preserving. It is unnecessary - indeed impossible - to save every scrap of old paper; just make certain that the worthwhile material is not discarded. Paper sleuthing has been called an addiction, even a disease. Whichever it is, I, for one, will never be cured."

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