For my first northern post this year,
I’m sharing
Dad’s letter about
a cold morning at school
and an unexpected visit
from the Indian Agent.
My School
Photo by Don MacBeath, October 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved
For perspective,
I’m quoting from a paper1
on northern teaching
my father wrote in the mid-1960s:
"The teacher is strictly on his own,
for usually he is the only government official
within several hundred miles.
The school inspector gets in usually
only two or three times a year,
and the teacher is lucky if he sees the
agency supervisor once a month."
My father wrote in his letter
on Monday October 3, 1960:
Hello again:
Today was considerably better
from a reporter’s point of view,
but not so hot
from the point of view
of personal comfort.
This morning I jumped in my trusty canoe
and took off for the mainland
full of good intentions
of starting the week off right
with everything organized;
but you know what they say about good intentions.
The road to the hot place is paved with them.
Well, as of Monday morning,
there are several new paving stones on Satan’s highway.
First,
I slipped getting into the canoe
and got my left leg
wet up to the knee;
but what the heck,
I very seldom get across
without getting
one or more appendages wet,
so that didn’t disturb me too much.
Wikimedia
When I reached my school though,
a real treat was in store for me.
Somehow the spaces heaters
had gotten blown out over the weekend,
but the oil had not been turned off.
I opened the stove to light it,
and I smelt this strong smell of oil.
I happened to have my flashlight with me,
so I shined it in the stove,
and the cotton-picking thing
was about three quarters full of oil.
Well, there I was
with a school full of kids
and a stove full of oil,
and everything, school, kids,
and stove as cold as charity.
I said the Lord’s Prayer
in spite of the way he had let me down,
called the roll, and let my pupils go home for the morning.
Then I went
down to McRae’s
and had a couple
of cups of coffee
to warm myself up.
Probably McRae's House
Photo by Don MacBeath, October 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved
Then I went back across the water,
changed into my old clothes, returned,
and started to clean up the stoves.
Duncan helped me.
We took about
three quarters
of a bucket of oil
from each stove.
Before we were finished,
I was soot and oil
from head to toe
and smelled
like an oil refinery.
Don MacBeath with Duncan McRae
Photographer Unknown, October 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved
Just about the middle of the whole operation,
who arrived at Lansdowne, but Mr. Gowans
the Indian Agent from Nakina.
I was glad he came in time to see
all the difficulties under which I was operating.
He saw the makeshift desks that I was using
and assured me that my desks would be in soon.
Right now
I have ten homemade double desks that the Father loaned me,
a card table and four chairs
that I borrowed from
the nursing station,
and a card table
that I borrowed from
the McRaes.
Students in Father Ouimet's
Homemade Desks
Photo by Don MacBeath, September 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved
After I talked to Gowans,
I came home and had a bath at the rectory,
changed back into my clothes, had dinner,
and went back in my canoe to open school for the afternoon.
And I didn’t get my left foot wet this time.
I got my right one wet instead.
Oh well, it’s all in a day’s work.
To refer to the subject of desks again for a moment,
along with the above-mentioned
motley assortment of desks and tables,
I have a rather unique kindergarten table for the beginners.
The other day when I was coming home from school,
I noticed a dozen sheets of plywood
that the Department of Indian Affairs had shipped in
to build a fish warehouse at Lansdowne House.
There they were, big as life,
sitting on the DOT wharf.
I had an inspiration.
I got two Indians to carry a sheet
up to the school for me.
Then I went down to see Bill Mitchell at the Bay,
borrowed two low sawhorses,
and carried them up to the school.
I placed the sheet of plywood on the sawhorses
and had a swell kindergarten table for myself.
The first thing Gowans asked me when he saw me
was why I had taken his plywood.
He wanted me to give it back to him immediately,
but when he saw the use to which I was putting it,
he decided I could keep it till my school furniture arrived.
I never cease to be amazed
at how neatly
the Indian children work.
Everything they do
has to be done
to perfection,
no halfway measures for them.
Students in Father Ouimet's
Homemade Desks
Photo by Don MacBeath, September 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved
Whatever they do,
they work at it till it is perfect
and don’t want to be interrupted till it is finished.
If fact, they don’t even want to
go out for recess if they are doing something.
If they start doing something late in the afternoon,
it is quite a task to get rid of them at four o’clock
when the school day ends.
In this respect there is a lot more satisfaction
working with Indian children than with white ones.
I can’t figure out why they are so careless
about their dress and personal cleanliness,
and at the same time,
so fussy about the work they do in school.
I guess it isn’t so much being careless about clothes, etc.,
as being unable to do anything about it.
Only a couple of the children, whose fathers happen
to be better than ordinary hunters and trappers,
have any sort of decent clothes.
The rest of them just wear hand-me-downs
from other children and other members of the family.
And the shoes,
I don’t know whether to laugh or cry about them.
They don’t worry about fit at all.
There is one little girl in grade two
who is wandering around in a pair of loafers
that would be too large for Sara.2
She has them tied on so they won’t fall off.
Well, I guess that does it for another night.
Bye for now,
Love, Don.
My Father's Canoe Route
My father's cottage is between the white-colored church and rectory on the Father's Island.
Dad canoed back and forth between the island and the dock one or more times a day.
Dad's borrowed ten double homemade desks also made this trip by canoe.
Dad's borrowed ten double homemade desks also made this trip by canoe.
Photo by Father Ouimet, circa1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved
On the surface, I find Dad's letter entertaining;
but in it, I see hints of the unfolding tragedy
that was Lansdowne House in later years.
I've been researching the relationship
between the government
and the Fort Hope Band,
which includes the Ojibwa of Lansdowne House.
In the early 1960s
government policies and programs
for the Indians of Canada
operated without practicable objectives,
monitoring, or accountability,
and their failures had devastating consequences
for the vulnerable Ojibwa in Northern Ontario.3
My father arrived in Lansdowne House
at a critical juncture in aboriginal history,
when the local Ojibwa,
with strong government encouragement,
were adapting their traditional lifestyle
of hunting, fishing, and trapping
to life in a settled village.
In his letters I can see
the changes playing out.
This is one reason why I believe
Dad’s letters are an important
record of that time.
Notes:
1 MacBeath The Northern School Teacher 9
2 Sara: My mother and Dad's wife
3 Driben and Trudeau When Freedom Is Lost:
The Dark Side of the Relationship between Government and the Fort Hope Band i
Till next time ~
Fundy Blue.