News
About
Directory
Researching
Meeting
Learning
Exhibits
Contact Us
But ideals seldom remain the same for that long together. They grow and develop and change, like everything else, with the passing years. An anniversary merely affords a convenient moment to stand back and look at the design and see how it is working out.
M.B. Williams, Guardians of the Wild (1936)
In 1911 Canada became the first country in the world to establish an agency devoted to the management of its national parks. Over the past century, these parks have witnessed, and mirrored, important debates about the place of nature in Canadian nationhood, as well as changing relationships between its diverse ecosystems and communities. A Place for the People: Canada’s National Parks, 1911-2011 brings together leading historians to reflect on the evolution of our national parks under the aegis of Parks Canada.

Entrance to Kluane National Park, 1995
Photo © Parks Canada/J. Butterill
Despite their image as protected wilderness space, parks have always been designed and managed “for the benefit, advantage, and enjoyment of the people,” as the 1887 Rocky Mountains Park Act stated. “It is a place for the people,” thundered John Diefenbaker about Prince Albert National Park in 1971. So this collection focuses on the Branch’s philosophical and practical dilemmas in attempting to manage parks for nature and for humanity.
Most literature on national parks has concentrated, understandably, on the original Rocky Mountain parks in their earliest decades: conjuring images of elite railway hotels and Victorian mountaineering. This project expands that research in both time and place.
While some essays discuss the Branch’s formative years, in the 1910s and 1920s, many deal with the postwar era, to explain the origins of the park landscape more familiar to Canadians today: the contradictions of busy highways and summer campgrounds alongside nature programs and ecological zoning.

Camping on Beausoleil Island, Georgian Bay Islands National Park, 1986
Photo © Parks Canada/Barrett & MacKay
In addition, this book profiles sites from across Canada - boreal parkland, arctic watersheds, Laurentian shield - moving us far from Banff and Jasper (although it has these, too!) and demonstrating the enormous regional variations within the national system.
By introducing a number of new subjects, emphasizing historical context and the Branch’s dealings with local communities, and with new attention on the north - the “new frontier” of park policy in recent decades - we are pushing the boundaries of park research.

Highway 10 through Riding Mountain National Park, 1935
Photo © Parks Canada
Some of the key themes of the collection include:
Preservation from humanity, preservation for humanity: in either case, parks are designated for the purposes of public good. But which purpose? Which public? When has it worked? What have we learned?
The Process of Writing Collaboratively
A Place for the People capitalizes on the vibrant new sense of community in environmental history in Canada, thanks in large part to the structure and work of NiCHE. It represents a remarkable kind of collaboration between university-based and public historians from across Canada, from a wide range of disciplinary backgrounds, and from all stages of their careers
We wanted the book to reflect this sense of community and conversation. The writing team has read each others’ work, and met twice, intensively: first at the Parks for Tomorrow Conference in May 2008 at the University of Calgary, to discuss the spirit and direction the collection should take; and a year later, at the CHA at Carleton, to review working drafts of the essays. Both meetings were supported by the Landscapes cluster in NiCHE, headed by Colin Coates, who holds a Canada Research Chair in Cultural Landscapes.

Parkway through La Mauricie National Park, 1996
Photo © Parks Canada/J. Pleau
Writing for Impact
The authors are committed to producing a readable, well-illustrated, and engaging work that will appeal to a wide audience. We recognize the importance of national parks in the Canadian imagination, and the unique ability of the environmental historian to speak to people about their places and their histories.
At the same time, there is a surge of energy among historians intent on engaging in public discussion and public policy. Each of these essays raises questions that directly relate to the state of the parks, whether as an historical legacy or a current practice.
The University of Calgary Press was selected to publish the book for its existing relationship with NiCHE and its Parks and Heritage Series, and is very enthusiastic about the project.
Watch for it in 2011!
Claire Campbell
Dalhousie University