Did the Scots Really Invent Canada?
From the 18th century
to the 20th, inured to hardship but disdainful of oppression, armed to an
exceptional degree with education and a belief in social equality, the Scots
burst the confines of their northern country, once the poorest in Europe. Doing
so, they populated the world with explorers and entrepreneurs, warriors and
politicians, inventors and educators. This is the theme of Ken McGoogan’s
wonderful 2010 book, How the Scots Invented Canada.
Ken McGoogan, a
Scottish-French-German-Irish-Danish Canadian once wrote for the Calgary
Herald. He now lives in Toronto, and in this book he tells an extremely
compelling story about the influence of the Scots on Canada. McGoogan, the
author of four books on Arctic exploration, isn’t writing about tiresome tartan
chauvinism but the undeniable fact that, in so many ways, Scots created the
nation we inhabit today. Their influence is so pervasive it’s invisible.
As McGoogan
demonstrates, Scots arrived in Canada early, when there was still plenty of
scope for action. They explored the place, extracted its resources and
virtually ran it for decades. McGoogan points out that Scots and their
descendants have represented roughly 15 per cent of the population throughout
Canada’s history, yet contributed more than half the Fathers of Confederation,
and no fewer than 13 of our 22 prime ministers – including Sir John A.
Macdonald. (That's 14, now, since Justin Trudeau, like his father, also has
Scots heritage.)
Macdonald not only
convinced the Britain’s North American colonies to confederate, but established
our form of governance and defined it during his 19 years in power. The
constitution Macdonald wrote has evolved over the ensuing 142 years under such
leaders as Mackenzie King, John Diefenbaker and Pierre Trudeau – all of
Scottish descent, the last two on their mothers’ side.
Long before
Confederation, the cutthroat fur-trading rivalry between the Scots of the Hudson’s
Bay Company and the Scots of the North West Company succeeded in mapping our
country, building its economy and keeping it British. Less gloriously, Scots
attacked Scots when the Nor’Westers, fearing Lord Selkirk’s settlers at Red
River would interfere with their fortunes, burned homes and took lives – a
grisly reminder of the clan violence of the Highlands.
Then there was the
fiery Scot whose 1837 rebellion triggered the arrival of responsible
government, William Lyon Mackenzie; and the Scots who built the Canadian
Pacific Railway, Donald Smith and George Stephen; and the Scot who founded
the Globe and Mail, George Brown; and the Scots who ushered in
equality for women, Nellie McClung, Emily Ferguson Murphy and Agnes Macphail;
and the Scot who fathered Medicare, Tommy Douglas.
The author portrays
Scottish businessmen and politicians as more egalitarian, flexible and
pragmatic than the English. They were readier to form alliances with indigenous
peoples and with French Canadians to achieve their ends – a cultural
intermingling that laid the foundation for Canadian diversity. That mindset
resulted from the liberal ideals of the Scottish Enlightenment.
His approach is
biographical. He provides cameos of several dozen Scottish-Canadian giants,
including world-class writers like Farley Mowat, Margaret Laurence and Alice
Munro, and innovative thinkers like Harold Innis, George Grant and Marshall
McLuhan. And let's not forget Alexander Graham Bell, who invented the telephone
on Canadian soil. McGoogan always focuses on how the Scottishness of the people
in his book informed their work, and he tells amazing stories. One is the
story of a Hudson’s Bay Company "man" who, it turned out, became
pregnant on the job.
How the Scots Invented
Canada is a great way to learn about many of
Canada’s colourful men and women. Ken McGoogan has the good sense to note that
other ethnic groups have played equally key roles in shaping Canada, but says
that he has “refused to let fairness take the fun out of the tale.”
Although McGoogan
clearly had mixed ancestry, he took a DNA marker test that did indeed trace his
ancestry to Scotland, and the last words of his book are worth recording.
Following his Scottish ancestry, he and his wife went to Mt. McGoogan, which is
on a small Scottish island. He went there intent on climbing the mountain, but
the mud and muck made it impassable on that particular day. He did, however,
find a plastic sandwich bag. “To mark my farthest progress,” he wrote, he
placed his cap “inside the bag and, shooting video at each step, buried them
both” in a stone wall at the bottom of the mountain.
“Afterwards, as I
slogged through the marsh back to the car, I elaborated my plan. I would post
the video on my website. To anyone who retrieved my baseball cap, or else presented
evidence of having reached the top of Mount McGoogan, I would send free copies
of four of my books and pick up the tab for a thirty-seven marker DNA test. Or
no, on second thought, I would make that two books and a less expensive
twelve-marker test. That would suffice. We [Canadians] are [northerners], we
are diverse, we are post-modern. Yet some of us are also of Scottish heritage.
No sense being frivolous.”
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