Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Woman Who Sewed First Maple Leaf Flag Celebrates 50th Anniversary Of The Event

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 14 Nov, 2014 02:50 PM
    OTTAWA — When most Canadians contemplate their national flag, their thoughts might naturally turn to Canada Day, July 1.
     
    Historians and others may think about Feb. 15, the day in 1965 when the modern Canadian flag — bearing its familiar hallmark symbol, the Maple Leaf — was first raised on Parliament Hill.
     
    For Joan O’Malley, Nov. 6, 1964, will forever be the birthday of Canada's iconic red-and-white banner, the day her father asked her to do an impromptu sewing job that she will never forget.
     
    "For me, it's my 50th anniversary," O'Malley told a small gathering of friends, family and political dignitaries Friday on Parliament Hill, where she was presented with the flag that flew from the Peace Tower on Nov. 6 this year.
     
    With her original Singer sewing machine on display, O'Malley described the night her father approached her to ask whether she could sew the three prototypes that had been chosen as the finalists to become Canada's new emblem.
     
    A November snowstorm had fallen over the nation's capital and O'Malley was just home from work with her husband Brian and expecting to spend the evening indoors.
     
    But O'Malley's father Ken Donovan, an assistant purchasing director with the Canadian Government Exhibition Commission, called his then-20-year-old daughter with an urgent request.
     
    That afternoon, Lester B. Pearson had asked that the three flag prototypes that were under consideration be delivered to 24 Sussex Drive so he could see them hoisted on polls at the prime minister's Harrington Lake retreat the next day.
     
    Pearson had come to office with a minority government under a promise made in 1963 that under his leadership, Canada would have a new flag. The final three designs had been picked from a list of entries that totalled more than 3,500.
     
    Pearson's preference was a flag with three red maple leaves on a white background and blue on either side, a design that became known as the Pearson Pennant.
     
    But O'Malley said she knew her favourite right away as she saw the prototypes sprawled across a makeshift table of plywood on top of two saw horses.
     
    "I remember when they first put our flag on my sewing table, I said, 'That's the one that would get my vote,'" she said.
     
    "It was nice, clean looking."
     
    The flag she liked most was, in fact, one designed by historian George Stanley and submitted at the last minute.
     
    The debate over which emblem to choose was a raucous one, pitting Pearson and his design against the Conservatives.
     
    In the end, Pearson's Liberals voted unanimously with the Conservatives in favour of Stanley's now-familiar red-and-white design.
     
    At the time, O'Malley didn't give much thought to the significance of what she was sewing.
     
    "I didn't think it was history in the making at all," she said. "I just knew that they had to have it done and I needed to help my dad out."
     
    Democratic Reform Minister Pierre Poilievre said he's not yet sure where O'Malley's now famous sewing machine will be put on display, but promised that it would be retained by the federal government as a historical artifact.
     
    "It will be preserved as a national treasure," Poilievre said before presenting O'Malley with the Peace Tower flag.
     
    Unlike Betsy Ross, who was paid to produce flags and, as legend has it, sewed the first American Stars and Stripes banner, O'Malley didn't receive a cent for putting the finishing touches on Canada's original flag.
     
    Receiving recognition for her efforts, 50 years later, was thanks enough, she said.
     
    "Now I think I'm paid in full," O'Malley said tearfully as she received a standing ovation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Girlfriend Using Hammers Begins Murder Trial

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Girlfriend Using Hammers Begins Murder Trial
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A Kamloops jury has viewed video of a man telling an undercover police officer that he bashed his girlfriend on the head upwards of 60 times with a mallet and sledgehammer before packing her body in a cooler.

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Girlfriend Using Hammers Begins Murder Trial

    Winnipeg teen beaten, sexually assaulted eager to return to school: mother

    Winnipeg teen beaten, sexually assaulted eager to return to school: mother
    WINNIPEG — The mother of a 16-year-old who was viciously attacked, sexually assaulted and left for dead in downtown Winnipeg says the teen is getting better and is anxious to return to school.

    Winnipeg teen beaten, sexually assaulted eager to return to school: mother

    Video Of A Vancouver Homeless Man Being Goaded Into Setting His Hair On Fire Sparks Outrage

    Video Of A Vancouver Homeless Man Being Goaded Into Setting His Hair On Fire Sparks Outrage
    VANCOUVER — An online video of a Vancouver homeless man being goaded into setting his hair on fire has sparked outrage, though police are not currently investigating the incident.

    Video Of A Vancouver Homeless Man Being Goaded Into Setting His Hair On Fire Sparks Outrage

    Small Magnets Found In Some Toy Sets A Health Risk To Children: Health Canada

    Small Magnets Found In Some Toy Sets A Health Risk To Children: Health Canada
    TORONTO — Health Canada is repeating its warning that toys containing small, powerful magnets are a health risk to children.

    Small Magnets Found In Some Toy Sets A Health Risk To Children: Health Canada

    Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau Calls Conservative Fiscal Update 'Unfair'

    Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau Calls Conservative Fiscal Update 'Unfair'
    Trudeau says the federal government chose to spend its budget surplus on tax breaks such as income splitting, which benefits only a very small number of Canadians.

    Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau Calls Conservative Fiscal Update 'Unfair'

    Lowering The Status Of Canada's Chief Doctor Worrying Public Health Community

    Lowering The Status Of Canada's Chief Doctor Worrying Public Health Community
    TORONTO — Members of Canada's public health community are expressing concern about intended changes to the authority of the country's chief public health officer, changes that strip the office holder of the responsibility of running the Public Health Agency of Canada.

    Lowering The Status Of Canada's Chief Doctor Worrying Public Health Community