Media releases

  • Alum and ex-diplomat to donate rare map collection to Brock archives

    MEDIA ADVISORY: R00216 – 5 October 2016

    Brock University’s map collection is about to get much more historic.

    On Friday, Oct. 7, Brock alumnus and former Canadian ambassador Dan Livermore will donate 25 valuable antique maps — some dating to the 17th century — to the University’s Special Collections and Archives department.

    The maps range in size and age, but all feature Canada in some way, said David Sharron, Head of Special Collections and Archives at Brock. A number of them show Niagara at various points in history.

    “Without using text, the maps show an evolution of Canada,” said Sharron. “Maps have a way of communicating history without a lot of words.”

    Sixteen of the maps pre-date anything in Brock’s collection. The oldest map currently housed at the University dates from 1766, showing the French islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon off the coast of Newfoundland.

    Brock’s staff will digitize these pieces and post them online, so people can access them and see the geographical changes that have taken place over time.

    Sharron said the donation of such a rare collection underscores the fact that Brock has the proper environmental and security controls to house historic materials. He hopes this will encourage other alumni to consider donating artefacts to the Brock archive.

    Livermore graduated from Brock in 1969 with a BA in history and politics, then went on to serve three decades as a Canadian diplomat and specialist in international affairs. Besides being Canada’s ambassador to Guatemala and El Salvador, he had postings at the United Nations in New York, as well as in Chile, and Washington, D.C. From 2002 to until his retirement in 2007, Livermore was Canada’s Director General of Security and Intelligence. He is a longtime donor and supporter of Brock University.

    Brock faculty and staff are invited to attend Friday’s event, which will take place at 10 a.m. in Special Collections on the 10th floor of Schmon Tower.

    Media are welcome and both Sharron and Livermore will be available for interviews.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    • Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    – 30 –
     

    Categories: Media releases

  • Manager of Parks Canada Underwater Archaeology team to speak at Brock University

    MEDIA ADVISORY: R00215 – 4 October 2016

    For more than 165 years, the final resting places of the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror remained Canada’s greatest nautical mystery. The Franklin expedition ships were abandoned in the ice of Canada’s Arctic in 1848, but it wasn’t until 2014 that the first of the two ships were finally located.
    Three weeks ago, Parks Canada announced the second ship, HMS Terror, had been located resting on the seafloor of Terror Bay in Nunavut.

    The search for the two vessels has been called on of the most challenging underwater archaeological projects in Canada. On Friday, Oct. 7, Marc-Andre Bernier, Manager of Parks Canada’s Underwater Archaeology team, will be speaking at Brock University, in a free public talk hosted by the Niagara Peninsula Society of the Archaeological Institute of America.

    Bernier will the share the challenges and discoveries of this project in an illustrated talk from 5:30-7:30 p.m. in AS215. A reception will precede the talk at 5 p.m. The talk is free and open to the public and the media.

    The mystery of the fate of the Franklin expedition has gripped imaginations for generations. Sir John Franklin sailed from England in 1845 in search of the fabled Northwest Passage with HMS Erebus and HMS Terror. Both ships were abandoned in the ice three years later and the crews walked to their deaths across the Arctic. None of the 128 crew members survived. Over the decades, searches found relics and documents, but the exact resting places of the ships remained a mystery until 2014.

    Parks Canada announced the discovery of HMS Erebus in September, 2014, in an exploration project that brought together the governments of Canada and Nunavut, as well as public, private and non-profit organizations. Partners included the Royal Canadian Navy, the Canadian Coast Guard, the Arctic Research Foundation, and the Royal Canadian Geographical Society. Two years later, on Sept. 14, 2016, Parks Canada announced the potential discovery of the HMS Terror. 

    The location of both wrecks corresponds with 19th century Inuit oral testimony and underscores the importance of Inuit knowledge. The wrecks will be the first cooperatively managed national historic sites in Nunavut.

    The Niagara Peninsula Society of the Archaeological Institute of America hosts public lectures at Brock University during the academic year. Schedule and information can be found on their website.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    – 30 –
     

    Categories: Media releases