Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T03:30:33.075Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Further evidence and reflections on Joseph Elzéar Bernier's 1907 and 1909 sovereignty claims

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2012

Janice Cavell*
Affiliation:
Historical Section, Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, 125 Sussex Drive, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0G2, Canada ([email protected])

Abstract

Few aspects of Canada's Arctic sovereignty claims have been more misunderstood than the sector theory, which many writers believe originated with and was put forward on Canada's behalf (whether officially or unofficially) by explorer Joseph Elzéar Bernier. However, several Canadian government officials in the 1920s were both shrewd and accurate in their assessment of Bernier's pretensions. This note focuses on the views of civil servant Oswald Sterling Finnie, as recorded in previously unexamined government documents. In the years following Bernier's retirement from government service in 1925, the explorer embarked on a campaign to win the place in history he felt he deserved, only to be thwarted by Finnie and his colleagues. The note also clarifies the differences between Bernier's 1907 and 1909 sector claims and the official sector claim made in 1925.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bernier, J.E. 1925. Letter to O.S. Finnie, 26 March 1925. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada. RG 85, vol. 584, file 571.Google Scholar
Bernier, J.E. 1927. Our northern heritage. In: Empire Club of Canada: Addresses delivered to the members during the year 1926. Toronto: Empire Club Foundation: 222–228. URL: www. http://empireclub.org.Google Scholar
Bernier, J.E. 1930. Letter to G. Perley, 13 November 1930. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada. RG 85, vol. 584, file 571.Google Scholar
Bernier, J.E. 1933. Letter to R.B. Bennett, 21 November 1933. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada. RG 25, vol. 1673, file 748–33.Google Scholar
Canada, House of Commons. 1910. Official reports of the debates of the House of Commons of the Dominion of Canada, 1909–10, vol. 2. Ottawa: S.E. Dawson.Google Scholar
Cavell, J. 2010. As far as 90 north: Joseph Elzéar Bernier's 1907 and 1909 sovereignty claims. Polar Record 46 (239): 372376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cavell, J. 2011. ‘A little more latitude’: explorers, politicians, and Canadian Arctic policy during the Laurier era. Polar Record 47 (243): 289309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cavell, J., and Noakes, J.. 2010. Acts of occupation: Canada and Arctic sovereignty, 1918–25. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.Google Scholar
Coates, K., Lackenbauer, P.W., Morrison, W., and Poelzer, G.. 2008. Arctic front: defending Canada in the far north. Toronto: Thomas Allen.Google Scholar
Cory, W.W. 1928. Memorandum for O.S. Finnie, 28 April 1928. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada. RG 85, vol. 584, file 571.Google Scholar
Davies, B. 1927. He has added half a million square miles to Canada. Canadian Magazine 67 (2): 2021, 30.Google Scholar
Dorion-Robitaille, Y. 1978. Captain J. E. Bernier's contribution to Canadian sovereignty in the Arctic. Ottawa: Department of Indian and Northern Affairs.Google Scholar
Fairley, T.C., and Israel, C.E.. 1964. The true north: the story of Captain Joseph Bernier. Toronto: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Finnie, O.S. 1928. Memorandum for R.A. Gibson, 24 April 1928. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada. RG 85, vol. 584, file 571.Google Scholar
Finnie, O.S. 1929. Letter to L.B. Pearson, 14 November 1929. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada. RG 85, vol. 584, file 571.Google Scholar
Finnie, O.S. 1930. Memorandum for W.W. Cory, 28 November 1930. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada. RG 85, vol. 584, file 571.Google Scholar
Head, I., and Trudeau, P.. 1995. The Canadian way: shaping Canada's foreign policy, 1968–1984. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.Google Scholar
MacEachern, A. 2010. J.E. Bernier's claims to fame. Scientia Canadensis 33 (2): 4373.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, R.A.J. 1945. Memorandum, 7 January 1945. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada. RG 25, vol. 6297, file 9057–40.Google Scholar
Saint-Pierre, M. 2009. Joseph-Elzéar Bernier: champion of Canadian Arctic sovereignty, 1852–1934 (translator Barr, William). Montréal: Baraka Books.Google Scholar
Skelton, O.D. 1933. Letter to A.F. Lascelles, 23 November 1933. Ottawa: Library and Archives Canada. RG 25, vol. 1673, file 748–33.Google Scholar
Smith, G.W. 1966. Sovereignty in the north: the Canadian aspect of an international problem. In: Macdonald, R.St.J. (editor). The Arctic frontier. Toronto: University of Toronto Press: 194255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woollacott, A.P. 1928–1929. He saved the Arctic for Canada. MacLean's Magazine, part 1, 15 December 1928: 8–9, 59–60; part 2, 1 January 1929: 21, 30, 32.Google Scholar
Zaslow, M. 1971. The opening of the Canadian north, 1870–1914. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.Google Scholar