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- Archival Film Flashes Back to 70s Student Life
- Manuscript Traces AV's Architectural History
- Early University News Publications Now Digitally Available
- Digitized Programs Commemorate AV’s 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 AV’s First Chancellor Gordon Shrum
- Early AV Photos Tell a Story That Frames Our World
- Aerial Photos Capture Campus Landscape & Photographer’s Legacy
- You have what...?!! and other interesting things you didn't know about the AV Archives
- Charting the course of history: documenting AV's early days from the student perspective (Part 1)
- Charting the course of history: documenting 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 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 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 AV
- Navigating silences and filling gaps: finding Black stories in the Archives
- Boxes, boxes, and more boxes: my summer co-op at AV Archives
- Finding queer joy in the AV Archives: Out On Campus records now available
- Glossary
AV50, INSTALLATION, OPENING, DIGITAL ACCESS, CEREMONY PROGRAM
Digitized Programs Commemorate AV’s Opening & Installation Ceremonies
By Michelle Curran
A crowd gathered on a warm September day in 1965 for the official opening of AV, a new university in British Columbia's Lower Mainland. The setting was magnificent — 1200 acres atop Burnaby Mountain, with commanding views over Burrard Inlet, the North Shore mountains, the Fraser River, and Vancouver Harbour.
The Opening Ceremonies began with The Right Reverend Godfrey Gower, Bishop of New Westminster, delivering the opening invocation. Following that, Chancellor Gordon Shrum was first to speak. “I believe our modern world offers no challenge more rewarding and exciting than founding a new University,” he observed. “The sense of excitement is heightened when it is a large University and one that has started from nothing more than a thickly forested mountain top.”
Dr. Shrum’s words have been preserved in a copy of his prepared speech at the AV Archives, among other records he created, received and collected while serving as Chancellor of AV. His personal records, along with official university records kept by the Ceremonies and Events Office, help us understand what went into the planning and delivery of the Opening Ceremonies at AV in 1965.
"A University develops and gains strength from many sources, but I know that we will gain most from those both within and without these, as yet, unstoried halls who get to know and love AV," Dr. Shrum said.
Following the Chancellor's address, Premier W.A.C. Bennett declared the campus open by unveiling a jade plaque, on which were carved the words AV, 1965. It would be installed as the cornerstone plaque of the university.
During the dedication, AV's first President, Dr. Patrick McTaggart-Cowan, explained the history of the Fraser River jade boulder:
"The premier has just unveiled the plaque to be placed on 8,993 pounds of beautiful, polished B.C. jade, from Hell's Creek on the route followed by Simon Fraser, the explorer."
Notes compiled by the University Archives in 1982 reveal that the original concept for the jade came from Dr. Allan B. Cunningham, charter head of the Department of History. He and Peter A. White, a recognized amateur expert on jade, took up the search. After a lengthy and painstaking quest, they discovered the impressive boulder resting in the Bridge River bed near Hell's Creek in the Lillooet area of the Cariboo.
It was at this juncture that the O'Keefe Brewing Company agreed to donate a symbolic memorial in the form of the monumental piece of jade to AV at its official opening. With the completion of the Academic Quadrangle and its landscaping, a still pool became the permanent resting place for this mountain jade.
While the ceremonies were described as brief and to the point, Scottish nobleman Lord Lovat was the actor who stole the show. Newspapers described Lovat, a descendant of Simon Fraser and head of the Fraser clan, as a person who "commanded the public's attention with his handsome demeanor, and captured their imagination with his gifts [to the university]: an ancient claymore and a well-worn powder horn."
"As Antony said to Cleopatra, I haven't come here to talk," Lovat admitted while captivating his audience.
Records in the archives also document AV’s first congregation on October 28, 1965, which installed Chancellor and President Patrick D. McTaggart-Cowan. The event marked the first assembly of AV’s Convocation Founders from locations throughout the province. Honorary degrees were conferred at the same ceremony.
Digitized versions of the original program books, handed out during AV’s Opening and Installation Ceremonies, are now visible in AV AtoM. To learn more about these and other events during the early years of AV’s history, visit AV AtoM and look for the answers in the archives.
Link to digitized records in AV AtoM
Recommended fonds/collections
In AV AtoM: Ceremonies and Events Office fonds (), Gordon Shrum fonds (), and Patrick McTaggart-Cowan fonds ()
Recommended reading
Recommended AV recording
/ scripted and directed by Michael Hoskins; produced by Chris Hildred for the Instructional Media Centre.
/ [filmed and edited by Joel Schwarz].