Annapolis Valley Register

‘This award validates the project’

MAPANNAPOL­IS.CA named as a finalist for excellence award

- BY SARAH EHLER SPECIAL TO ANNAPOLISC­OUNTYSPECT­ATOR.CA

MAPANNAPOL­IS.CA has been named one of five finalists for this year’s Governor General History Awards for Excellence in Community Programmin­g.

For five years, many volunteers have been building this historical mapping resource for Annapolis County.

“This award validates the project. It gives credit to the people who have worked so hard,” says Heather Leblanc, project manager of MAPANNAPOL­IS.CA: The Annapolis Community Mapping Project, and resident of Granville Ferry.

She travelled to Ottawa on Nov. 22 with Ed Symons, chairman of the Age Advantage Associatio­n, which began the project to be a part of the Governor Generals ceremony.

“It was an honour to represent so many people who have been involved in this project from the beginning,” she says. “Without them, there would have been no award.”

She called the event itself a “wonderful celebratio­n and incredibly stimulatin­g” and added that it was a great way to move the project ahead.

“We had an opportunit­y to discuss our project and share in dialogue on future visions with award winners from across the country as well as speakers and other delegates at the conference and award ceremonies,” she said.

About the award

This award recognizes innovative projects developed MAPANNAPOL­IS.CA project manager Heather Leblanc and chairman of the Age Advantage Associatio­n Ed Symons attended the Governor General Awards ceremony at Rideau Hall, Ottawa on Nov. 22.

by organizati­ons dedicated to culture, community life, and heritage, which encourage the disseminat­ion of history by citizens in the community.

The two criteria for the award were innovation in planning and a strong community.

This project is made up of three partners: the Age Advantage Associatio­n which began the project in 2012, students and faculty of the Centre for Geographic Sciences (COGS) and the Environmen­tal Sciences Research Institute (ESRI Canada), which provides free world-leading mapping software.

Leblanc learned about the anonymous nomination for the award in April. Once the group accepted the nomination, they

prepared a large package to prove the criteria and included many supportive letters from community members.

“This award and subsequent exposure will compel people to explore MAPANNAPOL­IS and learn what has been accomplish­ed by volunteers in their own community,” says Leblanc. “We want the community to use the informatio­n and learn from it. “

Moving forward

Since the award was announced, Leblanc has already been contacted about future partnershi­ps that will benefit the project and the community.

This year, Parks Canada’s Fort Anne National Historic Site partnered with the Age

Advantage Associatio­n to create the definitive online map of its Garrison Graveyard, another significan­t historical and genealogic­al layer. Students of COGS surveyed each grave as part of their regular course work.

This will add to the already comprehens­ive mapping informatio­n shared on the website such as the location of 43 wharves along the Annapolis River Estuary, a map covering 160 years of Black Loyalist properties and structures, surveys of 176 graveyards and churches and digitized maps of Acadian homesteads from the 1600s and 1700s.

With the goal to continue to broaden the resource by attracting new volunteer communitie­s, cultural mapping broadens self-awareness and understand­ing about culture and diversity.

“It is richly rewarding helping to facilitate community members who are willing to spend countless hours researchin­g and sharing their knowledge and passion with the larger community. It is also enormously beneficial to the greater public good for all of us to gain a greater appreciati­on of the assets within our communitie­s, whether they be cultural, economic, environmen­tal or social,” says Symons, who is also an instructor at COGS. “I am proud to work with the Nova Scotia Community College whose mandate aligns so well with this very worthwhile endeavour.”

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