MICHAEL's EMAIL

WELCOME TO THE MICHAEL J MORRIS REPORT!!!!

EMAIL mj.morris@live.ca

WRITE ME WITH COMMENTS, STORY IDEAS, SUGGESTIONS, INFORMATION REQUESTS. IF YOU CAN'T FIND A STORY, DO NOT HESITATE TO EMAIL ME

Monday, May 19, 2014

Vince Crichton wins Conservation Award of Manitoba Chapter of The Wildlife Society

Dr. Vince Crichton has been awarded the Conservation Award of the Manitoba Chapter of The Wildlife Society,
 
Dr. Crichton, one of Canada's leading wildlife biologists was born and raised in Chapleau,, graduated from Chapleau Public and Chapleau High Schools and earned his BSc and MSc from University of Manitoba and PhD from University of Guelph in wildlife diseases.   
 
Vince is the son of the late Vincent and Dora (Morris) Crichton. His father is  the author of "Pioneering in Northern Ontario".

Until retiring recently Vince was a wildlife biologist with the government of Manitoba. Since retiring he has been spending time as a consulting wildlife biologist and sent the news of his award win almost while heading out the door for Fairbanks, Alaska.
 
An article about the award says that his principal interest over the years has been big game, primarily moose and woodland caribou. He has won numerous awards at the local, provincial, national and international levels for his work on management and research on activities on moose.
 
"Grampy" with granddaughter
Much of his work is in documented reports and peer reviewed journals.
 
Despite Vince's busy schedule, he has managed almost each year to make time to return to Chapleau and spend time at the Crichton camp at Mulligan's Bay. 
 
As a matter of interest, I went to an article about his family that Vince wrote for 'Chapleau Trails' edited and published by Dr. William R. Pellow to see when the camp was built.
 
His grandfather, also Vincent, arrived in Chapleau in 1911 from England, and the camp at Mulligan's Bay was built in 1917.
 
The article notes that Vince takes every opportunity to speak to the public about moose and contemporary wildlife issues in Manitoba and Canada. He is one of the original "moosers". On occasion Vince had made presentations in Chapleau.
 
Interestingly, Vince made a film about moose as they live in summer and fall, called 'Moose Closeup'.
 
While shooting it, he was a frequent visitor to Riding Mountain National Park where he spent "many hours mountain biking to favourable viewing sites in the park".
 
Vince with friends at CHS reunion 2012
He has also guided groups including one from National Geographic who were doing photo shoots on moose.
 
In 1983 he became a Certified Wildlife Biologist and has served as associate editor of The Wildlife Society Bulletin.
 
 He conducted scientific reviews for papers and wrote two chapters of 'The Ecology and Management of the North American Moose' which won The TFW Editorship award in 1998.
 
In presenting him with the Conservation Award, it was noted that few other biologists bring the "passion and commitment to the knowledge about and management of any species as Vince does with moose.
 
"He has unquestionably played a major role in Manitoba wildlife management during his career."
 
Congratulations Vince. My email is mj.morris@live.ca
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Health care in "ancient Chapleau" precarious but improved when Lady Minto Hospital opened 100 years ago in 1914

Health care in "ancient Chapleau" was precarious for its citizens, according to George Evans, in an article he wrote about it in the community's early years.
For those of us who knew George, we will appreciate his play on the word "ancient" given his love of the history of ancient Greece, and to some extent Rome.

George was referring to Chapleau in the late 19th and early 20th centuries from the beginning when the Canadian Pacific Railway arrived in 1885 until the Lady Minto Hospital opened in 1914, 100 years ago.

Before professional medical help was available on a regular basis, "death struck often and hard" George wrote, not only in Chapleau, but in all the remote communities along the main line of the CPR.
He cites some evidence from Chapleau alone between 1888 and 1918. In the old Roman Catholic Cemetery in that time period there were 74 burials he noted and 44 (59.9%) of them were children who died before their fifth birthday.
In my book 'Sons of Thunder ... Apostles of Love' the history of St. John's Anglican Church, I wrote that in 1888, life was not easy for the early citizens, and t o add to the hardships disaster struck when "an outbreak of diphtheria of the most virulent type inflicted the residents. Several, including young children died from the disease."
In Chapleau, over those early years first aid centres and a "cottage hospital" were established and medical doctors seemed to come and go.
The pressing need for a hospital was recognized and in 1914 the Lady Minto Hospital was officially opened at the corner of Elm and Queen streets. There was a public fund raising campaign led by the CPR and the Victorian Order of Nurses with donations of $5000 and $3000 respectively.
It was the only hospital between Sudbury and Fort William now Thunder Bay.
An early form of health insurance was implemented whereby married CPR employees paid $1.00 a month and single 50 cents.
By 1914 there were two full time doctors in Chapleau -- Dr. J.J. Sheahan, who was the "house surgeon and physician in charge" at the hospital and Dr. Steve Wilkinson.
George wrote that in 1916, the "good people" of Chapleau gave Dr. Sheahan a brand new Ford making him the first person with a car in Chapleau. It was black with nickel plated door handles and nickel plated rims on the headlights.
He couldn't go very far out of town for a ride though as the road ended at about the old power dam.
After receiving the car, Dr. Sheahan is said to have quipped, "Instead of babies coming in a little black bag, they will now come in a little black car,"
I have no official records of babies born at the Lady Minto Hospital but Jim Morris, my father; Dr. G.E. "Ted" Young, and F.A. 'Nick' Card were all born there in 1914, the year it opened.
By 1914, Chapleau also had a branch of the Canadian Red Cross Society, just as World War I was beginning and it did much work in sending parcels overseas.
It met in the newly completed Town Hall on Pine Street, and I have  read minutes from one of the first meetings. I was browsing through the now Chapleau Public Library web site of Chapleau history founded by Hugh Kuttner, and thought I recognized the handwriting in scan of the minutes.
I did. My grandmother Edith Hunt, who had arrived in Chapleau in 1913 was the "honourable secretary", and furher, my great aunt, May (Mulligan) McMullen was the president. She and my grandmother Lil (Mulligan) Morris were sisters.
Other members of the executive included Rev. Father Romeo Gascon, of Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church as first vice president; Mrs. L. Copping as second vice president, H.B. Pelton  as treasurer and my grandmother, secretary.
G. B. Nicholson, who served as first reeve of Chapleau from 1901 to 1913, was also active in the branch as well as a large number of volunteers.
Lady Minto Hospital is gone now but it is good I think to reflect for a moment on those years in the life of "ancient Chapleau" as my good friend George put it, and celebrate 100 years of having a hospital in the community. My email is mj.morris@live.ca







Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Adults 'homeward bound' when entering child's world, Muriel (Hunt) Morris says at retirement party in 1970

Muriel E (Hunt) Morris
After 32 years as a teacher at Chapleau Public School, Muriel E. (Hunt) Morris, my mother, retired at the end of June 1970.

Looking through my stacks of newspaper clippings recently, I came across the story about her retirement party written by Margaret 'Maggie; Costello in the Sault Star.

My mother came to Canada from England as a young child in 1913 with her parents Edythe and George Hunt, and her older sister, Elsie, and they settled in Chapleau. She attended Chapleau Public and Chapleau High schools then Normal School in North Bay and upon graduation taught four years "in the country" as she would say at Kakabeka Falls.

Our lives take some twists and turns we never anticipate, and such was the case with Mom's. She had come home to Chapleau to teach in the 1930s, married Jim Morris, my father in July 1940 and moved to Hamilton where he was in the Royal Canadian Air Force, and  became a Flying Instructor in the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan.

I was born in Hamilton in November 1941, and in 1942 we returned to Chapleau  when he went overseas. It was never the plan of my parents that we would remain in Chapleau after the end of World War II.  Mom and I lived with my aunt and uncle Elsie and B.W. "Bubs" Zufelt, and at times grandparents Harry and Lil (Mulligan) Morris.

Auntie Elsie, Nanny and Mom at their mother's 80th birthday
My grandfather George Hunt was with us while my grandmother Edythe Hunt was back In England serving as a nurse during the war.

On July 16, 1943, my father was killed on active service in the RCAF, and that single act, made all the difference in our lives.

My Mom and Dad
Mom decided we would stay in Chapleau, and to this day, I am so thankful she did. It was the greatest place to grow up and live.

Enough background, and now on to the retirement party according to Margaret Costello. I wish my friend Maggie was still here so I could thank her for the story.

"Every now and then, unlike the prophets who are not honoured in their own country, an outstanding citizen of a community receives honour and tribute from friends and associates of all ages on the local scene. Such was the case when Mrs. Muriel Morris was guest of honour at a reception of the Chapleau Board of Education in the Legion Hall," Maggie wrote.

Describing the decoration in the hall all made by students of Chapleau Public School, she wrote that it was "a riot of colour provided by a tree decorated with multicoloured gigantic blooms, a bower of sunshine yellow with a proliferation of more huge flowers and individual big blossoms hung from the ceiling".

Rev. Murray Arnill, chairman of the Chapleau Board of Education, welcomed the guests -- packed with friends, fellow teachers and students past and present.

"The school choir, trained to a high polish by Mrs. Jeannette Gjoni and Mrs. Wilma Schmidt who also provided the piano accompaniment, sang four bright selections with such verve that they won rounds of applause," according to Maggie.

Heading to visit Maw and Grandpa Morris
As an aside, Mom particularly loved this part of the program as music was such a part of her life and she directed many concerts and plays including HMS Pinafore by Gilbert and Sullivan. It was also great to see Wilma directing a choir at the 90th anniversary reunion festival of Chapleau High School in 2012.

Mrs. Olive M. Card, deputy reeve of Chapleau extended congratulations commenting that my mother must "be proud to have played a part in the education of Chapleau children many of whom had gone on to distinguish themselves in a wide var iety of professions.

Board member Mansel Robinson presented gifts of a lawn table, umbrella and portable television.

In her comments Mom said "the entire occasion" was beyond anything she had ever dreamed of.

She only hoped that some of the things she had taught the boys and girls would stay with them and help make them better men and women, and was proud to have had a part in  their education and that Chapleau would be proud of them.

Then, she addressed parents, and like it was only yesterday, I recall Mom preparing her comments at home on Grey Street.

Maggie captured her words: "There have been many changes in education, but the function of teacher and parents has not changed. It is to guide children into self development, to create a climate for learning in school and at home.

"The home and school cannot be divorced if we are to be successful. The child must be encouraged to make the most important discovery of all -- himself or herself!.

"The major concerns of childhood continue through the years."

She concluded with "When we enter into a child's world we are not in a strange land -- we are homeward bound."

School principal Foy Wright commented that long before current concepts were accepted, she was among the first "to think of the child as an individual. She had a wonderful sense of responsibility not just for her own room, and a sense of dignity and quietness."

Mrs. Opal Simpson of the teaching staff made a presentation of a coffee table. Mrs. Simpson added that "To those of us who have worked with her, she has been a warm personal friend, and her departure will leave gap hard to fill."

Thomas Corston, recently retired as Anglican Bishop of the Diocese of Moosonee on behalf of former students and friends presented her with a purse.

As a young teacher
Mom was active in the choir of St. John's Anglican Church where she served as choir director for many years, in the Sincerity Rebekah Lodge and the Anglican Church Women. Sonia Lucas, Margaret Fife and Margaret Turner presented gifts from each respectively.

Mrs. Mary Campbell of the teaching staff had organized a book with the hundreds of names of former pupils over the 32 years. My mother treasured this gift greatly and used it to comment when one of them got married, graduated, had children, etc.  It became her personal journal about her pupils.

Over the years, so many of my Mom's pupils have shared comments and memories of her with me which I have so much appreciated. I would never have attempted to do a column on Mom, but as another school year draws to a close, I believe her comments to parents, indeed all of us, apply today as much as they did in 1970. It is also Mother's Day on May 11.

And, Margaret Costello supplied most of the content.

Mom died on March 4, 1989. My email is mj.morris@live.ca




Michael J Morris

Michael J Morris
MJ with Buckwheat (1989-2009) Photo by Leo Ouimet

UNEEK LUXURY TOURS, ORLANDO FL

UNEEK LUXURY TOURS, ORLANDO FL
click on image

MEMORIES FROM CHILDHOOD

MEMORIES FROM CHILDHOOD
Following the American Dream from Chapleau. CLICK ON IMAGE