A number of monuments and memorials in Canada were removed or destroyed as a result of protests and riots between 2020 and 2022. These included six sculptures of Sir John A. Macdonald, the first prime minister of Canada, three of other figures connected to the Canadian Indian residential school system (Alexander Wood, Egerton Ryerson and Joseph Hugonard), two of Canadian monarchs (Queen Victoria and Elizabeth II), one of the British explorer Captain James Cook and one of John Deighton ("Gassy Jack"), a bar-owner whose nickname inspired the name of Vancouver's Gastown district.
The initial protests in 2020 occurred in the context of the worldwide George Floyd protests, [1] which resulted in the widespread removal of monuments and memorials in the United States and other countries connected to systemic racism. In the spring of 2021, unmarked graves were discovered at the sites of several former residential schools.
Monument/memorial | Location | Province | Removal announced | Removed | Means of removal | Notes | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A Canadian Conversation Sir John A. Macdonald Ruth Abernethy, 2015 | Baden | Ontario | Jul 27, 2020 | c. Sep 3, 2020 | Put into storage | Wilmot Township Council voted on July 27 for the statue's immediate removal. | [2] [3] [4] | |
Monument to Sir John A. Macdonald George Edward Wade, 1895 | Montreal | Quebec | — | Aug 30, 2020 | Statue toppled and decapitated by protesters | The toppling occurred during a Defund the Police protest; the statue had been a target of vandalism in the past. After three years of hesitation, it was announced the statue would not be reinstated. | [5] [6] [7] | |
Statue of Sir John A. Macdonald Sonia de Grandmaison, 1966–1967 | Regina | Saskatchewan | Mar 31, 2021 | Apr 7, 2021 | Temporarily put into storage | Regina City Council voted 7–4 to put the statue into storage while a new location is determined. | [8] [9] | |
Statue of Sir John A. Macdonald Mike Halterman, 2008 | Charlottetown | Prince Edward Island | May 31, 2021 | Jun 1, 2021 | Formal removal by city council | Following the discovery of unmarked graves at the Kamloops Indian Residential School, First Nations protesters gathered for a vigil at the statue. Hours later, Charlottetown City Council voted to remove the statue. By 7am the next day, it was removed. | [10] [11] | |
Statue of Egerton Ryerson Hamilton MacCarthy, 1887 | Toronto | Ontario | — | Jun 6, 2021 | After repeated vandalism, the statue was destroyed by protesters; pedestal and base removed by university | The statue at Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson University) was toppled and beheaded after a demonstration motivated by the 215 unmarked graves discovered at the Kamloops Indian Residential School. University President Mohamed Lachemi announced that the statue "will not be restored or replaced". | [12] [13] [14] | |
Holding Court Sir John A. Macdonald Ruth Abernethy, 2015 | Picton | Ontario | Jun 8, 2021 | Jun 9, 2021 | Formally put into storage by city council | The council had voted to leave the statue in place in November 2020. In June 2021, it voted to remove the statue during an emergency session. In April 2022, it was decided to return the statue to its original donors, the Macdonald Project. | [15] [16] [17] [18] | |
Statue of Sir John A. Macdonald George Edward Wade, 1895 | Kingston | Ontario | Jun 16, 2021 | Jun 18, 2021 | Temporarily put into storage | On June 16, Kingston City Council voted 12–1 to relocate the statue from City Park. Plans to relocate the statue at Cataraqui Cemetery were eventually rejected by the cemetery's board, and as of August 2023, no final decision has been made. | [19] [20] [21] | |
Monument to Joseph Hugonard Charles Duncan McKechnie, 1927 | Lebret | Saskatchewan | Jun 17, 2021 | Jun 21, 2021 | Put into storage | A protest camp had been set up at the site for some time until the Archdiocese of Regina agreed to the removal. The monument stands in a cemetery near the site of the Qu'Appelle Indian Residential School, which Hugonard helped found before becoming its first principal. There are no plans to install it elsewhere. | [22] [23] [24] | |
Statue of Queen Victoria George Frampton, 1904 | Winnipeg | Manitoba | — | July 1, 2021 | Toppled and beheaded by protesters | During a protest on Canada Day, the statue outside the Manitoba Legislative Building was torn off its pedestal, splattered with red paint (which was also used to leave handprints on the pedestal) and beheaded. The head was thrown into the nearby Assiniboine River. Although initially the government intended to attempt repairing the monument, this was determined to not be possible. As of April 2023, no final decision has been made on whether to commission a new monument. | [25] [26] [27] [28] | |
Statue of James Cook Derek and Patricia Freeborn, 1976 (after John Tweed, 1912) | Victoria | British Columbia | — | Jul 1, 2021 | Toppled by protesters and thrown in nearby harbour | On the night of July 1, the statue was thrown into the Inner Harbour, and its pedestal covered in red handprints. A makeshift statue of a red dress commemorating missing and murdered Indigenous women was put up in its place. Hours later, a totem pole in Malahat (30km away) was set on fire, apparently in retaliation for the toppling of the statue. | [29] [30] [31] [32] | |
Statue of Sir John A. Macdonald George Edward Wade, 1893 | Hamilton | Ontario | — | Aug 14, 2021 | Toppled by protesters | On July 8, Hamilton City Council voted 12–3 not to remove the statue in Gore Park. The Hamilton Indigenous Unity rally took place on the steps of Hamilton City Hall on August 14 to protest against this decision. After the rally, the protesters marched to Gore Park and toppled the statue. As of June 2023, plan existed to return the statue. | [33] [34] | |
Statue of John Deighton ("Gassy Jack") Vern Simpson, 1970 | Vancouver | British Columbia | Feb 14, 2022 | Feb 14, 2022 | Toppled by protesters | Toppled during the annual Women's Memorial March. Deighton married a 12-year-old Squamish girl. | [35] | |
Statue of Alexander Wood Del Newbigging, 2005 | Toronto | Ontario | — | Apr 4, 2022 | Removed and destroyed | On June 8, 2021, the Church Wellesley Village Business Improvement Area (CWVBIA), which originally installed the statue, called for it to be removed. The CWVBIA removed and destroyed the statue on April 4, 2022. | [37] [38] |
Monument/memorial | Location | Province | Removal announced | Removed | Returned | Notes | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Statue of Queen Elizabeth II Leo Mol, 1970 | Winnipeg | Manitoba | — | July 1, 2021 Toppled by protesters | June 2, 2023 | Toppled in the same protest as that in which the statue of Queen Victoria was felled. | [26] [39] |
Sir John Alexander Macdonald was the first prime minister of Canada, serving from 1867 to 1873 and from 1878 until his death in 1891. He was the dominant figure of Canadian Confederation, and had a political career that spanned almost half a century.
Adolphus Egerton Ryerson was a Canadian educator, author, editor, and Methodist minister who was a prominent contributor to the design of the Canadian public school system. Ryerson is considered to be the founder of the Ontario public school system.
John Deighton, better known as "Gassy Jack", was a bar-owner in British Columbia. The Gastown neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia takes its name from him.
John Cullen Nugent (1921-2014) was a Canadian artist and educator known primarily for his public art works, often in the form of abstract sculpture.
Victoria Park is a public park in the centre of downtown Regina, the capital of the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.
The John A. Macdonald Memorial was a public sculpture in bronze of John A. Macdonald by Sonia de Grandmaison and John Cullen Nugent, formerly located at the south entrance to Victoria Park, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. In March 2021, Regina city council voted to remove the statue and it was removed in April 2021.
By the arrangements of the Canadian federation, Canada's monarchy operates in Manitoba as the core of the province's Westminster-style parliamentary democracy. As such, the Crown within Manitoba's jurisdiction is referred to as the Crown in Right of Manitoba, His Majesty in Right of Manitoba, or the King in Right of Manitoba. The Constitution Act, 1867, however, leaves many royal duties in Manitoba specifically assigned to the sovereign's viceroy, the lieutenant governor of Manitoba, whose direct participation in governance is limited by the conventional stipulations of constitutional monarchy.
Since 1786, members of the Canadian royal family have visited Canada, either as an official tour, a working tour, a vacation, or a period of military service. The first member to visit was the future King William IV in 1786. In 1939, King George VI became the first reigning monarch to tour the country.
The Macdonald Monument is a monument to John A. Macdonald, first Prime Minister of Canada, by sculptor George Edward Wade (1853–1933), located at Place du Canada in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Hamilton Thomas Carlton Plantagenet MacCarthy was one of the earliest masters of monumental bronze sculpture in Canada. He is known for his historical sculptures, in particular his Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Mons at Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia (1904) as well as Samuel de Champlain overlooking Parliament Hill on Nepean Point, Ottawa (1915), next to the National Gallery of Canada. His monument to the Ottawa volunteers who died in the South African War (1902) was moved to Confederation Park in 1969 after several moves. Other works include that of Ottawa mayor, Samuel Bingham, in Notre-Dame Cemetery in Vanier.
A statue of Queen Victoria formerly stood on the grounds of the Manitoba Legislative Building in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
A statue of John Deighton was commissioned in 1970, and was sculpted by Vern Simpson. Its location moved to various spots in Vancouver's Gastown neighborhood, in British Columbia, Canada. It was finally installed at a spot near where Deighton had opened the Globe Saloon in 1867. On February 14, 2022, the statue was toppled by protesters.
Gore Park is a town square or urban park located in downtown Hamilton, Ontario.
The Canadian Indian residential school system was a network of boarding schools for Indigenous children directed and funded by the Department of Indian Affairs. "A genocidal policy, operated jointly by the federal government of Canada and the Catholic, Anglican, United, and Presbyterian Churches... rife with disease, malnutrition, poor ventilation, poor heating, neglect, and death," the goal of the residential school systen between 1828 and 1997 was "assimilating First Nations, Métis, and Inuit children into white settler society". Over 4,000 students died while attending Canadian residential school. Students' bodies were often buried in school cemeteries to keep costs as low as possible. Comparatively few cemeteries associated with residential schools are explicitly referenced in surviving documents, but the age and duration of the schools suggests that most had a cemetery associated with them. Many cemeteries were unregistered, and as such the locations of many burial sites and names of residential school children have been lost.
A statue of Egerton Ryerson by Hamilton MacCarthy was installed on the grounds of Ryerson University in Toronto, now known as Toronto Metropolitan University, from 1887 until 2021.
A statue of John A. Macdonald by George Edward Wade was installed in Kingston, Ontario, until 2021.
A statue of Elizabeth II by Leo Mol was installed in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
A statue of Captain James Cook stood in Victoria, British Columbia, from 1976 until 2021, when it was toppled in a protest. It was a fibreglass copy of a bronze statue of 1912 by John Tweed in Whitby, Yorkshire, England. The Victoria Environmental Enhancement Foundation commissioned the work from Derek and Patricia Freeborn to mark the 200th anniversary of Cook's departure on his third voyage in 1776. The statue was unveiled on July 12, 1976, by William Richards Bennett, Premier of British Columbia. It stood on the Causeway, facing the Fairmont Empress hotel, with its back to the Inner Harbour.