Vancouver Sun

Royal B.C. Museum takes on Terry Fox collection

Family signs 20-year partnershi­p to care for and display most items from the run

- DARRON KLOSTER Victoria Times Colonist

Terry Fox's family has entered into a long-term agreement with the Royal British Columbia Museum to protect and preserve the vast collection associated with the national hero's Marathon of Hope.

The collection, once stored in Terry's room in the family's Port Coquitlam home, includes the runner's prosthetic legs, the shoes, T-shirts and shorts he wore, his personal journals, massive numbers of letters and the bottle of ocean water he collected in Newfoundla­nd when he started his historic 1980 run across Canada.

The museum is displaying for several weeks this spring the 1980 van that Terry and his family used as a support vehicle for the Marathon of Hope.

Terry, who had his right leg amputated because of cancer, started the run to raise funds for cancer research on April 12, 1980 — 44 years ago this Friday — and covered 5,373 kilometres.

Near Thunder Bay, Ont. on Sept. 1, Terry tearfully ended the cross-Canada run after doctors confirmed that cancer had returned and spread to his lungs. He died on June 28, 1981.

Darrell Fox, Terry's younger brother, who accompanie­d him on the marathon, told a packed audience at the museum Wednesday he was thankful to the museum for its commitment to taking care of the collection. “It is an enormous responsibi­lity, but we know as a family that the Terry Fox collection will be in very good and capable hands,” said Fox. “His story of hope and courage, of trying the impossible to show that it can be done ... his story of giving unconditio­nally regardless of the personal implicatio­ns and regardless of his personal well-being has stood the test of time.”

Fox said in the past 18 months alone, he has been invited to England, Ireland, Malaysia, Singapore, Brazil and the French Polynesian islands to tell his brother's story and launch runs.

In all, more than 30 countries host Terry Fox events. In Canada this fall, more than 600 towns and cities will host runs and fundraisin­g events for cancer research.

According to the Terry Fox Foundation, more than $850 million has been raised since 1980.

Fox noted that more than 10,000 schools will hold Terry Fox events this year, adding educators are always looking for more Terry Fox materials.

Solicitor General Mike Farnworth, who was in the same junior high school class as Terry Fox in Port Coquitlam, said Terry showed the whole the country the “power of an individual.”

“He united a country in a way that we have never seen before,” he said. “His dream was to find that cure (for cancer) and we are well on our way to doing that because of what he did.” Farnworth said preserving the artifacts is important to keep Terry Fox's story alive for future generation­s.

“It's a message to everyone that if they have a dream, a passion and something they believe in, there's no obstacle they can't overcome.”

The collection contains more than 50,000 items, including thousands of letters and cards from schoolchil­dren who wrote to Terry after he was forced to stop his marathon.

Canadians only had to address their letters to Terry Fox in British Columbia and “the envelope would arrive at 337 Laurel St, in Port Coquitlam,” Darrell Fox said.

He said the Atlantic Ocean water that Terry had intended to dump into the Pacific in Victoria is still there and both his artificial legs and the sock he never took off during the run are part of the collection.

“He had two legs, but there was a favourite — just like a favourite hockey stick or soccer ball, Terry had his favourite leg and that leg ran most of the 5,300 kilometres Terry ran,” said Fox.

“These are items that are just in storage right now and need to be shared along with the stories behind them.”

Museum chief executive Tracey Drake said it will take some time to assess the collection before any of the artifacts are put on display.

She did not pinpoint a date or say if anything would be displayed this year, though the 1980 Econoline van — restored by the Ford Motor Company — will be in the museum lobby for several weeks this spring.

Drake said the museum has a 20-year partnershi­p with the Fox Foundation to preserve and steward the collection, with the Fox family retaining ownership.

 ?? DARREN STONE/VICTORIA TIMES COLONIST ?? Darrell Fox visits the Royal B.C. Museum on Wednesday, where the Ford Econoline used to support his brother Terry during the 1980 Marathon of Hope is on display.
DARREN STONE/VICTORIA TIMES COLONIST Darrell Fox visits the Royal B.C. Museum on Wednesday, where the Ford Econoline used to support his brother Terry during the 1980 Marathon of Hope is on display.

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