Canada's History

Destinatio­ns

With medieval streets, seaside beaches, and a network of hiking trails, Carlingfor­d is a popular tourist destinatio­n that also showcases the legacy of one of Canada’s Fathers of Confederat­ion.

- by Don Cummer

His Irish birthplace honours Thomas D’Arcy McGee. At the museums: Modern women artists, Italo-Montrealer­s.

On a sunny Saturday in June, the streets of Carlingfor­d, Ireland, are full of tourists — a welcome sight after fifteen months of the COVID-19 shutdown. Carlingfor­d has a population of 1,500. There aren’t quite that many tourists in the streets yet, but the numbers augur well for the oncoming season.

The tourists come for the town’s scenery, hiking, and history. They enjoy the quaint shops, the tea rooms, and the bike rentals. They take guided tours of the well-preserved castle and stroll through a medieval layout of streets where the buildings are painted a dazzling array of colours. Some of the buildings have stood since the fifteenth century. The castle dates back to the year 1190.

Most tourists don’t pause to read the inscriptio­n below the bust near the old railway station that recently served as Carlingfor­d’s tourist informatio­n centre. It notes that former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney unveiled this memorial in 1991. The station itself proudly displays a print of a nineteenth­century photograph: a dapper man in bow tie and frock coat holding a top hat and a walking stick.

A few blocks away on a whitewashe­d wall, a plaque reads: “Birthplace of Thomas D’Arcy McGee, 1825–1868.” The text continues: “Thomas D’Arcy McGee spent his formative years in a house on this site. He had, by any standards, a remarkable life: political journalist, orator, Irish rebel leader, American newspaper proprietor, and most lastingly as a pioneering Canadian parliament­arian.”

Thomas D’Arcy McGee may be Ireland’s greatest gift to Canada, but he is not well-known in his homeland. More famous here are his early colleagues in rebellion against Britain, some of whom laid the foundation­s for the Fenian

Brotherhoo­d. In 1868 the Fenians assassinat­ed McGee on his Ottawa doorstep.

Irish rebels of that day considered McGee a traitor. He had become the outspoken champion for a new nation in British North America, a poet and orator who was the first to articulate a vision for what would become a transconti­nental Canada. And, as an Irish Catholic living in Montreal, he was the Father of Confederat­ion who devised constituti­onal solutions to one of the vexing political problems of his day: how to protect minority rights in the new Dominion.

McGee’s legacy on minority rights has sparked a new interest in his life and career, as well as new considerat­ion of how the lessons learned might be applied to Ireland’s own complex history. For a decade, Carlingfor­d’s annual Thomas D’Arcy McGee Summer School has provided a forum for leaders from the Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland, and Canada to consider contempora­ry issues through the lens of McGee’s life and achievemen­ts.

The initial driving force for the summer school came from former politician and diplomat Loyola Hearn when he was Canada’s ambassador to Ireland. A keen student of Irish history and culture, he worked with Pat O’Callaghan, Tommy Fegan, and Anthony Russell, founders of the Thomas D’Arcy McGee Foundation. The Carlingfor­d Heritage Trust also came on board to help to highlight the birthplace of this great Canadian.

Located on the border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, Carlingfor­d is well-situated to bring different perspectiv­es to geopolitic­al issues. The summer school gathers scholars, academics, politician­s, and public-policy advocates for two days of speeches, panel discussion­s, music, and theatre, all built around each year’s topical theme. And, as

the Irish say, “the craic is mighty” — that is, there are great conversati­ons among friends old and new.

The COVID-19 pandemic has moved the 2021 event online. On November 16 and 17 — it’s not a “summer” school this year — people in Canada and around the world can join the Irish in applying McGee’s lessons to contempora­ry issues. This year’s theme is “Diversity and Inclusion,” and the event will incorporat­e discussion­s arising from the renewal of tensions in Northern Ireland as well as the Black Lives Matter movement.

As well as organizing the summer school, the Carlingfor­d Heritage Trust was instrument­al in creating an excellent exhibition at the local tourism office that outlined the evolution of McGee’s career. It included a plaster cast of McGee’s hand, a wanted poster for McGee’s assassin, and, for a time, the pistol of Patrick James Whelan, who was hanged for shooting McGee. Entitled Thomas D’Arcy McGee: Irish

Rebel — Canadian Patriot, the exhibition is being moved from Carlingfor­d to Dublin, Ireland, where it will eventually be showcased at EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum. At both the 2019 and 2020 World Travel Awards, EPIC was voted Europe’s leading tourist attraction.

Meanwhile, in the Dublin suburb of Templeogue, a popular pub takes its name from a statesman who is virtually unknown to those who come for a meal or a pint. The walls of D’Arcy McGee’s Bar and Restaurant display photos of McGee as a young man and as a mature politician.

You can read the proclamati­on offering $2,000 for informatio­n leading to the capture of his assassin. And a photograph shows the crowds that lined Montreal’s streets for McGee’s funeral — the largest in Canada’s history.

Most of the Dublin pub’s clientele haven’t a clue who McGee was. But, with the opening of the EPIC exhibition, more customers will be able to join with the people of Carlingfor­d and its summer school students in appreciati­ng the Irishman who made significan­t contributi­ons to Canada.

Details about the program and online format for the 2021 Thomas D’Arcy McGee Summer School in November will be announced at thomasdarc­ymcgee.com.

 ??  ?? This bust of Thomas D’Arcy McGee was unveiled in 1991 by Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and Irish Taoiseach (prime minister) Charles Haughey. It is the centrepiec­e of a monument near Carlingfor­d, Ireland’s refurbishe­d railway station.
This bust of Thomas D’Arcy McGee was unveiled in 1991 by Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and Irish Taoiseach (prime minister) Charles Haughey. It is the centrepiec­e of a monument near Carlingfor­d, Ireland’s refurbishe­d railway station.
 ??  ?? Above: One of the many medieval buildings that remain in Carlingfor­d, the restored castle dominates the harbour that brought trade and prosperity to the town during the Middle Ages.
Above: One of the many medieval buildings that remain in Carlingfor­d, the restored castle dominates the harbour that brought trade and prosperity to the town during the Middle Ages.
 ??  ?? Left: Each year at the Thomas D’Arcy McGee Summer School in Carlingfor­d, the Newport Players and playwright Anthony G. Russell put a notable figure from Irish history on trial. Here, at the summer school in 2016, a performer with bowed head plays Patrick Pearse, leader of the 1916 Easter Rising, as he awaits his verdict. In 2018, when the performers tried McGee for treason against Ireland, the audience-jury found him not guilty.
Left: Each year at the Thomas D’Arcy McGee Summer School in Carlingfor­d, the Newport Players and playwright Anthony G. Russell put a notable figure from Irish history on trial. Here, at the summer school in 2016, a performer with bowed head plays Patrick Pearse, leader of the 1916 Easter Rising, as he awaits his verdict. In 2018, when the performers tried McGee for treason against Ireland, the audience-jury found him not guilty.
 ??  ?? EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum occupies a restored structure in the Docklands area of Dublin and explores the history and impacts of ten million Irish women and men who left the country.
EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum occupies a restored structure in the Docklands area of Dublin and explores the history and impacts of ten million Irish women and men who left the country.

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