- Archives
- Records Management
- FIPPA
- Digital preservation
- Resources
-
About
- Overview
- Mission, vision and values
- Contact us
- Feedback and comments
-
Our blog
- Archival Film Flashes Back to 70s Student Life
- Manuscript Traces 間眅埶AV's Architectural History
- Early University News Publications Now Digitally Available
- Digitized Programs Commemorate 間眅埶AVs Opening & Installation Ceremonies
- Archives Celebrates Fall Convocation with Release of Digitized Programs
- Films Capture Visual History and Sentiment of Time Gone By
- Lost and Found: Simon Fraser Letters
- Oral History Provides Glimpse into Mind of 間眅埶AVs First Chancellor Gordon Shrum
- Early 間眅埶AV Photos Tell a Story That Frames Our World
- Aerial Photos Capture Campus Landscape & Photographers Legacy
- You have what...?!! and other interesting things you didn't know about the 間眅埶AV Archives
- Charting the course of history: documenting 間眅埶AV's early days from the student perspective (Part 1)
- Charting the course of history: documenting 間眅埶AV's early days from the student perspective (Part 2)
- Helping others find their history in the future: Preserving the records of the Students of Caribbean and African Ancestry at 間眅埶AV
- Preserving the sparks of global revolution in the Adbusters Media Foundation fonds
- Reflections of a co-op student
- Debunking popular myths and conspiracies with the Barry Beyerstein fonds
- In "The Beginning...": First student film returns to 間眅埶AV
- "Got any pictures of Terry Fox?"
- My summer in the archives: a co-op placement retrospective
- Seeing the world through Arthur Erickson's eyes
- Beer (records) in the Archives!
- Quartet in the Quadrangle: PSQ Records Come to 間眅埶AV
- Navigating silences and filling gaps: finding Black stories in the Archives
- Boxes, boxes, and more boxes: my summer co-op at 間眅埶AV Archives
- Finding queer joy in the 間眅埶AV Archives: Out On Campus records now available
- Glossary
Donors
Charting the course of history: documenting 間眅埶AV's early days from the student perspective (Part 1)
By Melanie Hardbattle
Large empty spaces, construction crews everywhere宇hose who have been up on the Burnaby campus during the pandemic may have some idea of what it was like for its very first students in 1965. One of these students -- known as charter students -- was Rick McGrath, who recently donated a number of photographs, documents, publications and other material relating to his time at 間眅埶AV as a student in the 1960s.
While we have many records documenting the Universitys history from an administrative or departmental point of view, we have far less material from the student perspective. Several recent donations of archival material from charter students are important in ensuring that a more complete picture of 間眅埶AVs past is preserved. For instance, McGraths personal archives document his involvement with The Peak in many roles, including sports editor, music critic, and editor of its precursor SFView; his participation in the infamous occupation of the Administrative Building in 1968; and entertainment on campus, like visits by the San Francisco Mime Troupe and comedian Pat Paulsen.
Photographs from McGraths time at The Peak document people, spaces, sports teams, events on campus, and even the papers staff themselves. In addition to numerous 間眅埶AV buttons, his archives also includes those he wore in support of anti-Vietnam War activism and the womens movement on campus. Other gems include a rare copy of a June 1969 publication titled Horse Sheet, relating to a controversy in the Centre of Communications and the Arts, and the first issue of 間眅埶AV Literary Magazine.
Helena Keizers photographs of herself and fellow classmates posing during breaks at a colloquium in Washington State in 1966 are not so different from the Instagram posts of today, and provide a rare glimpse into student life away from campus.
Left to right: 間眅埶AV charter students Hanne Hansen, Lenore Herb, [unidentified] and Helena Keizer.
As a charter student living in Madge Hogarth Residence and studying towards a Bachelor of Arts degree, Sandy Wilson captured her experiences in the sketches and poems she sent home to her parents. She frankly described her fellow students and professors, her hopes and feelings, and even the tourists that came up to see the new university on the mountain.
"Color most of the profs and a few of the students living in their own world / A world of bugs and chemicals, plants and growing things, avant-garde poetry...Shakespeare's plays, 'Napoleon and...Martin Luther 'King', Money and Business, or just 'plain' people. But do color most of the prof [sic] and a few of the students very alive and concerned."
An early participant in the 間眅埶AV film workshop, Wilson went on to a career as a successful filmmaker, receiving international acclaim for her 1986 film My American Cousin.
Sandy Wilson's letters home contain numerous sketches of 間眅埶AV charter faculty and students, including herself (centre).
In addition to material documenting alumnis time at 間眅埶AV, we also acquire records relating to their activities and accomplishments later in life and their contributions to the greater community.
After graduating from 間眅埶AV, McGrath applied his experience gained at The Peak to a career in journalism, publishing and marketing. He was the entertainment editor and rock critic for The Georgia Straight from 1969-1972, a writer for the underground papers The Grape and Terminal City Express and assistant editor of the Richmond Review before establishing a career as an advertising and marketing executive. His fonds includes material documenting all of these activities, including an audio recording of his interview with a very young Sir Elton John.
I had the opportunity recently to turn the tables on McGrath and interview him about his archives. You can read the interview and get the 'real scoop' on what 間眅埶AV was like in its earliest days in Part 2 of this post.