Thomas D'Arcy McGee - Ottawa, Ontario
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Weathervane
N 45° 25.534 W 075° 42.037
18T E 445190 N 5030465
This statue of Thomas D'Arcy McGee, the only Canadian victim of political assassination at the federal level, is located behind the Centre Block of the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa, Ontario.
Waymark Code: WMDG9W
Location: Ontario, Canada
Date Posted: 01/12/2012
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 33

This monument to Thomas Darcy McGee was created by George William Hill. It was unveiled in 1913, at its location northwest of the Library of Parliament. The bronze statue measures approximately 8 feet high while the granite pedestal and base measure approximately 12 feet high. Both the statues of Thomas Darcy McGee and that of the woman sitting at the base of the monument are approximately 1.5 times lifesize. Inscribed on the pedestal is: "To/A Thomas Darcy McGee 1825-1868. McGee is wearing a shirt, vest and long coat and is holding on to the side of his coat with his right hand. His left hand is opened as if to acknowlege someone coming forth. The woman sitting on the base of the monument appears to be cupping her hand to her ear as if she was intensely listening to what Darcy McGee was saying. She has her hair in a bun and is wearing a flowering gown.

The view behind the monument is that of Gatineau, Quebec.

Thomas Darcy McGee:

"Thomas D'Arcy Etienne Hughes McGee, PC, (April 13, 1825 – April 7, 1868) was an Irish Nationalist, Catholic spokesman, journalist, and a Father of Canadian confederation. He fought for the development of Irish and Canadian national identities that woMcGee, Thomas D'Arcy (1825-1868), one of the Fathers of Confederation, was born at Carlingford, county Louth, Ireland, on April 13, 1825 , the son of James McGee, a coast guardsman, and Dorcas Catherine Morgan. He was educated at a day-school in Wexford , Ireland ; and in 1842 he emigrated to America. He joined the staff of the Boston Pilot, a weekly journal for Irish-Americans, and became its editor. In 1845 he returned to Ireland, and became the editor of Freeman's Journal in Dublin. The policy of this newspaper proved too moderate for him, and he transferred his services to the Nation, the organ of the "Young Ireland" party. Though not actually in arms, he was implicated in the rebellion of 1848, and escaped to America in the disguise of a priest. In New York he founded in 1848 the New York Nation, a short-lived weekly newspaper; in 1850 he moved to Boston, and founded the American Celt, and in 1852 he moved to Buffalo, where he published the American Celt for five years.

In 1857 he moved from Buffalo to Montreal, Lower Canada, at the invitation of some leading Irish Canadians. In Montreal, he founded a newspaper called the New Era (1857-58), and in 1858 he was elected, as an Irish Roman Catholic, to the Legislative Assembly of Canada for Montreal West. This constituency he represented until 1867; and he was re-elected for it to the first House of Commons of the new Dominion. He first aligned himself with the Reformers, and in 1862-3 he was president of the council, and later provincial secretary, in the S. Macdonald-Sicotte administration. When the government was reorganized in 1863, however, he was omitted from it; and he then transferred his allegiance to the Conservatives. He became minister of agriculture in the second Taché-Macdonald government of 1864, and he continued to hold this portfolio in the "Great Coalition" until 1867. He was a delegate to the Charlottetown and Quebec Conferences in 1864, and he contributed in a peculiar degree to the success of the Confederation movement. From the moment of his arrival in Canada, he had preached the doctrine of "the new nationality"; and his eloquent advocacy did more than anything else to create the psychological basis for union. In 1867, when the first cabinet of the Dominion of Canada was being formed, he stood aside, with Charles Tupper, in a spirit of rare self-abnegnation, in order that the claims of the Irish Roman Catholics and the people of Nova Scotia might be combined in the appointment to office of Edward Kenny. In the first parliament of the Dominion, therefore, he was merely a private member of the House of Commons. But his claim to the title of having been the chief apostle of Canadian national unity was even then secure.

Even before he came to Canada, he had begun to shed many of his youthful anti-British ideas; and in Canada he became a loyal subject of the Crown. In 1866 he condemned with vehemence the Irish-American Fenians who invaded Canada ; and in so doing he incurred the enmity of the Fenian organization in the United States. As a result, he was assassinated at Ottawa, in the early morning of April 7, 1868, by a Fenian named Whalen, as he was returning from a late session of the House.

One of the most brilliant orators who have graced Canadian public life, McGee was also a writer and poet of no mean order. Before coming to Canada he published several books dealing with Irish affairs, notably A history of the Irish settlers in North America (Boston, 1852), and Historical sketches of O'Connell and his friends (Boston, 1854); and in Canada he published A popular history of Ireland (New York, 1863) and The Irish position in British and in republican North America (pamphlet, Montreal, 1866). In connection with Confederation he published Speeches and addresses, chiefly on the subject of British American union (London, Montreal, 1865 ; tr. into French by L. G. Gladu, St. Hyacinthe, 1865), and The mental outfit of the new Dominion (pamphlet, 1867). He was also the author of Canadian ballads, and occasional verses ( Montreal , 1858) ; and after his death his poetical work was collected by Mrs. J. Sadlier under the title The poems of Thomas D'Arcy McGee (New York, 1869), with a biographical sketch."
URL of the statue: [Web Link]

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