![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/220320153725-92a1041e6851a6ea6951cdca7773d774/v1/ecc08ab2d510b4ef2c245c9afc9c5a54.jpeg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
8 minute read
CANAL
We’ve been skating on the Canal for more than 150 years
By the time this issue of the Glebe Reportis published, skating on the Canal will have finished for the winter. Millions of skaters have glided along the 7.8-kilometre Rideau Canal Skateway since it was opened by the National Capital Commission (NCC) in 1971. But the history of skating on the Rideau Canal goes much farther back than that.
Hockey on the Rideau Canal, Christmas Day, 1901. PHOTO: LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA
By Blake Butler
Ottawans have been skating on the Canal since at least the 1860s. The Ottawa Citizen reported that thousands were taking to the ice by the 1870s. Looking to take advantage of the pastime’s popularity, local businessmen Thomas Huckell and Fred Fooks cleared a rink in December 1873 on the Canal Basin, a large moorage area that once encompassed the present-day sites of the Shaw Centre and National Arts Centre. That winter, the popular “Huckell and Fooks Rink” hosted a carnival and skating tournament, the latter organized by the governor general, Lord Dufferin. Other businessmen replicated these efforts in subsequent years, making the Canal Basin a favoured skating destination.
Skating was an impromptu affair on the rest of the Canal. As the Glebe was developed and settled in the late 1800s, residents created their own rinks on the Canal and Patterson’s Creek. Skating was most popular in early winter when the ice was free of snow; by mid-winter, deep snow limited skating to small sections of the Canal. One exception came in February 1913, when cold, snowless weather created a continuous ice sheet from Sparks Street to Ottawa South. Hundreds of skaters crowded the Canal that month.
Residents first pushed for the creation of an extended skating rink a few years later in 1918. While members of the Ottawa Improvement Commission (OIC), the NCC’s predecessor, voiced their support, they stressed that they did not have the funds for such a project. The snow-clearing costs alone were considered too prohibitive for a “straight-away” rink. Instead, the OIC created a smaller Canal rink to complement its other outdoor rinks at Bingham Square, Lansdowne and Plouffe Parks.
Grand plans for the Canal were renewed 30 years later by City Controller C.E. Pickering. In January 1949, Pickering suggested that the city should transform the Canal into the world’s longest skating rink. Weaving its way through Ottawa, the Rideau Canal, lined with concession stands and coloured lights, would be “a winter attraction second to none.” While Pickering’s proposal was endorsed by the OIC and city officials, the plan was scrapped in December when the federal Department of Transport, which oversaw the waterway, refused to maintain the water levels necessary for skating. Instead of a skateway that winter, the Canal was, as Pickering later described it, “nothing but a mud-hole.”
This setback did not dampen skating enthusiasm in Ottawa. The Canal, Patterson’s Creek, and Dow’s Lake
ted r. lupinski
Chartered Professional Accountant • Comptable Professionnel Agréé
137 Second Avenue, Suite 2 Tel: 613-233-7771 Ottawa, ON K1S 2H4 Fax: 613-233-3442 Email: tedlupinski@rogers.com
![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/220320153725-92a1041e6851a6ea6951cdca7773d774/v1/a95d022847182093a44feef21bf59a54.jpeg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
Flooding the Canal in preparation for the 1958-59 skateway pilot project
remained popular. In response to growing demand, Ottawa’s Department of Parks and Recreation finally agreed to create a skateway between Patterson’s Creek and the Bank Street Bridge in December 1958. The Board of Control only set aside $2,000 for the project, considerably less than had been requested. Officials hoped to see at least 1,000 skaters a day in order to justify future investments; instead, only an average of 50 skaters a day turned out, possibly because there was more snow that usual. Snow-clearing costs quickly ate up the skateway’s budget. The board closed the rink on January 5, 1959, much earlier than anticipated. Local officials did not attempt any more skateway initiatives for the next decade. Instead, the city created smaller rinks on Dow’s Lake and the Canal as part of its Winter Carnival festivities. But the idea of skating along the entire Rideau Canal continued to resonate with residents. “Each year it seems Ottawa’s Winter Carnival planners express a hope that this city could become a centre of winter sports activity,” wrote an Ottawa Journal reporter in January 1965. “Using the natural advantages of the Canal-Dow’s Lake waterway would seem to make good sense.” Continued government inaction frustrated skateway proponents. As the Journal complained in December 1970, “this imaginative idea is being killed mainly because there’s never really been the will to make it work.”
The future of the Canal changed the next month when NCC Chairman Douglas Fullerton instructed crews to clear the ice between the National Arts Centre and the Bronson Street Bridge. The new Rideau Canal Skateway was a huge success with residents that winter, as it has been ever since. It’s a unique part of Ottawa’s winter culture that, as a new Glebe resident, I am glad I can take part in.
Blake Butler is a history PhD candidate and new Glebe resident who enjoyed skating on the Rideau Canal whenever he had the chance this winter.
IN THE HEART OF THE glEbE Richard Merrill Haney, Ph.D. (Counselling & Mediation)
• Individual, Couple and Family Counselling • Comprehensive Family Mediation (with or without lawyers) • Hypnotherapy • Life Coaching
![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/220320153725-92a1041e6851a6ea6951cdca7773d774/v1/6e02832ab0afb9dd81d2c52ed012fdc0.jpeg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/220320153725-92a1041e6851a6ea6951cdca7773d774/v1/76d65760a9d100e62f057d509615fb80.jpeg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
The LCBO manager and staff and a customer add to the fun.
A shining moment of good cheer
Editor, Glebe Report
Perhaps in normal times, the events I’m about to describe wouldn’t be so special, but my goodness, amidst the COVID and convoy situations, it was a shining moment on February 5. Let me explain.
The seven members of our run group, the Antiques of Steel, celebrate our birthdays by running, walking or other sport, sporting the age number and toasting each other over coffee.
That Saturday in the frigid cold, we walked together to the Whole Foods coffee shop, where our plan was to buy our drinks and head upstairs to the dining area. Once we’d made our purchases, we realized the eating area hadn’t reopened and we had no inside option. Upon hearing our dilemma, the Whole Foods supervisor kindly offered to refund the price of our drinks since we couldn’t gather as expected.
We then turned left and regrouped, sitting on the floor of the LCBO foyer. Of course, the LCBO manager came out shortly after to inquire what kind of sit-in was going on. Upon hearing it was an impromptu 75th birthday party for me, he not only wished all of us well and let us stay outside the store doorway for card and gift presentation, he had a staff member present the birthday girl with a bottle of wine. A customer leaving the store, on seeing the commotion, placed $10 in the birthday girl’s hand.
So thank you Whole Foods, LCBO and anonymous customer for spreading kindness and cheer.
The “Antiques of Steel” holding an impromptu birthday celebration on the floor of the Lansdowne LCBO lobby
Louise Rachlis
Window sign in proud support of our great city
Editor, Glebe Report
Thank you to Glebe Community Association (GCA) for this uplifting community initiative, to their volunteers and to Dominion City Brewery, which printed these 11” by 17” window signs. The sign was delivered free of charge to me by volunteers in the pouring rain. I am so proud to have this sign in my window.
Wendy Daigle Zinn
GRAPHIC: STEVE ST. PIERRE
www.glebereport.ca
Established in 1973, the Glebe Report, published by the Glebe Report Association is a monthly not-forprofit community newspaper with a circulation of 7,500 copies. It is delivered free to Glebe homes and businesses. Advertising from merchants in the Glebe and elsewhere pays all its costs, and the paper receives no government grants or direct subsidies. The Glebe Report, made available at select locations such as the Glebe Community Centre and the Old Ottawa South Community Centre and Brewer Pool, is printed by Winchester Print.
EDITOR............................ Liz McKeen editor@glebereport.ca COPY EDITOR.................... Roger Smith LAYOUT DESIGNER............. Jock Smith layout@glebereport.ca GRAPEVINE EDITOR............ Micheline Boyle grapevine@glebereport.ca WEB EDITOR..................... Peter Polgar website@glebereport.ca SOCIAL MEDIA................... Sophie Shields ADVERTISING MANAGER...... Judy Field advertising@glebereport.ca 613-858-4804 BUSINESS MANAGER........... Debbie Pengelly accounting@glebereport.ca
DISTRIBUTION MANAGER..... COMMERCIAL DISTRIBUTORS
Louise Green circulation@glebereport.ca Teddy Cormier, Eleanor Crowder PROOFREADERS................ Martha Bowers, Jeanette Rive AREA CAPTAINS................. Martha Bowers, Bob Brocklebank, Judy Field, Ginny Grimshaw, Jono Hamer-Wilson, Brenda Perras, Hilda van Walraven, Della Wilkinson
CONTACT US
175 Third Avenue Ottawa, Ontario K1S 2K2 613-236-4955
TFI@glebereport
SUBMIT ARTICLES
editor@glebereport.ca.
OUR DEADLINES
For Glebe Report advertising deadlines and rates, call the advertising manager. Advertising rates are for electronic material supplied in pdf format with fonts embedded in the file.
Views expressed in the articles and letters submitted to the Glebe Report are those of our contributors. We reserve the right to edit all submissions. Articles selected for publication will be published in both a printed version and an online version on the Glebe Report’s website: www. glebereport.ca. Please note: Except for July, the paper is published monthly. An electronic version of the print publication is subsequently uploaded online with text, photos, drawings and advertisements as a PDF to www.glebereport. ca. Selected articles will be highlighted on the website.
Glebe
Comings & Goings �
Boston Pizza at 640 Bank Street closed in February.
The Beer Store is coming soon to the ground floor of the Amica building, near its former location.
Oh So Good Desserts & Coffee House opening soon on Exhibition Way at Lansdowne