Join us as we (carefully) flip through the withering pages of a (barely) surviving copy of the August 16, 1926 edition of the Ottawa Evening Citizen -- and travel back a century and explore some of the news items and advertisements published in the newspaper’s special “Centenary Edition”, kicking off Ottawa’s celebration of its first 100 years.
FRONT PAGE “CENTENARY EDITION”
Bold headlines announce that “Mayor Hands ‘Key’ of City to Visitors”, “Throng on Parliament Hill for Centenary Official Opening Ceremonies” and “Sunday Scenes at Lansdowne Park When Centenary Opened with Garrison Church Parade”.
(Let’s not be confused! A fourth unrelated headline is inserted reporting that “Empty Casket in Case Alleged to Contain the Body of Kitchener”, a story that has nothing to do with Ottawa’s Centenary but rather a discovery at a train station in London, England.)
On the same page, the Citizen boasts that “1,400 pounds of ink will be consumed” publishing this special 128-page Centenary edition.
For more on that week’s celebration of Ottawa’s 100 th birthday, check out James Powell’s “Ottawa’s Centenary”: todayinottawashistory.wordpress.com/2019/07/20/ottawas-centenary/
FIRST SHOWING OF “BEN HUR” IN THE BRITISH EMPIRE
August 16, 1926
This silent-era MGM classic, showing at Ottawa’s Auditorium, accompanied by a touring symphony classic is the “first time shown in the British Empire” and “will not be shown here again for at least 12 months”.
James Powell tells us more about the remarkable legacy of the Auditorium (1923-1967): todayinottawashistory.wordpress.com/2024/08/31/the-auditorium-the-aud/
CENTENARY STAMPEDE
An advertisement for the week-long Centenary Stampede, the highlight of Centenary celebrations at Lansdowne Park. James Powell tells us more about this “Most Thrilling Sporting Event!”: todayinottawashistory.wordpress.com/2025/10/25/the-centenary-stampede/
A CENTENARY “WELCOME!”
August 16, 1926
We were being promised “Two Big Weeks of Fun and Merriment” August 16-28, with the Centenary celebrations – the Stampede and Historical Pageant – at Lansdowne Park the first week, with the Central Canada Exhibition (the “Ex”) hoping to capitalize on the wave of momentum when it takes over the venue the second week.
Note: “Reserved Seats for all events on sale at Centenary Headquarters, Russell House Block, Phone Q. 1127”.
On the same page, an ad for Fournier’s noting that the retailer will be closed Wednesday (August 18) for “Ottawa’s Birthday” but offering broadcloth shirts for as low as $1.79 and neckties and socks for under a dollar for those who shop on Tuesday.
Also on the same page, a listing of “Radio Programs” from stations broadcasting as far away as Philadelphia and New York City, including a report on the previous two nights’ radio reception, courtesy of the Department of Marine and Fisheries: “Sunday – Reception good. Saturday – Fair, with some static and slight fading”.
“OTTAWA CENTENARY AWAY TO SPLENDID START”
August 16, 1926
“Impressive Church Parade Features Sunday Ushering City’s Big Celebration”, “Thousands of Visitors From Near and Far in Capital”, “Crowded Streets, Gaily Decorated and Illuminated”.
On the same page:
A Bishop visiting from England for the Centenary, preaching at Christ Church Cathedral, pleads with the congregation to “Keep Canada British”, stating “We welcome those from other countries, and God knows where they call come from, but don’t let us, for God’s sake, lose the British ties of blood which once bound the early settlers of Canada.”
Mackenzie King (leading the Opposition during Arthur Meighen’s brief 3-month tenure as Prime Minister that summer) is accused by one of Meighen’s ministers as repeating “false statements” accusing the Customs Department of “maladministration”.
Saturday night’s “annual sweet pea show”, put on by the Westboro Horticultural Society is deemed “a signal success, as evidenced by the large attendance and the many entries”.
SPORTS PAGE – TWO HOMERS FOR BABE
August 16, 1926
“Babe Ruth and his mighty bat were busy over the week-end” against the Washington Senators,”Babe Brings Home Run Total Up to 39”. (The Babe would finish 1926 with 47 home runs, the fifth highest in his career, batting a career-high 60 homers the following year.)
Also on the same sports page:
Four new “Dominion” records were established in swim meet held in the Rideau Canal this past weekend.
Toronto’s team in baseball’s International League narrowly remained in first place (the Toronto “Maple Leafs” would go on to win 29 of the next 38 games and win the league championship for their last time until 1943.
The local “Lauriers” of the Independent Baseball League were beaten by Wakefield before a crowd of 2,000 on Porter’s Island.
Four Canadian and three U.S. power boats competing in a regatta on the Ottawa River.
Centenary motorcycle and bicycle races drew a large crowd at Lansdowne Park.
Almonte beat the Defence HQ in cricket at Rideau Hall.
Also on the same page, the day’s “Our Boarding House” cartoon featuring the tall-tale-telling “Major” Hoople.
“O.E.R. (OTTAWA ELECTRIC RAILWAY) NEWS”
August 16, 1926
“The daily bus service to the Ottawa Hunt and Golf Club, via Mooney’s Bay, has been discontinued because the revenue form passengers fell far below the cost of operation.”
This sort of blunt announcement may have become frequent in the 1920s, as the rapid increase in automobile ownership began to precipitate a correspondingly sharp decline in street car ridership, eventually leading to the termination of Ottawa’s street car system by 1959.
In a valiant effort to reverse the trend, “O.E.R. NEWS” goes on to quote a national U.S. survey reporting that, with depreciation and upkeep “it costs the average automobile owner $700 and year to own and operate a car”.
Also quoted is a Kansas City Railway Co. ad that claims one of its main routes is “30 minutes by street car: cost 7 ½ cents” vs. “22 minutes by private auto: cost 50 cents”. The O.E.R. NEWS goes on to comment “this is making generous allowances to the private conveyance. Ask any motorist who has to come to the center of the city. Unless he starts very early in the morning he must lose all speed results in looking for a place to park.”
This unflattering verdict against the automobile is followed by the grim story of an eight-year old newsboy from Scranton, Pennsylvania who lost his life when he slid under the wheels of a car while trying to sell a newspaper to one of its passengers.
Finally, in a separate advertisement on this same page, the Ottawa Electric Railway lets potential customers know that it is now offering the services of motorized coaches, in addition to its street car service.
The late Cliff Scott wrote about the rise and fall of the Ottawa Electric Railway: www.historicalsocietyottawa.ca/publications/ottawa-stories/significant-technological-changes-in-the-city/ottawa-s-street-railways
RETAILERS HOP ON BOARD THE CENTENARY BANDWAGON
August 16, 1926
Poulin’s, Max Feller, Freiman’s, Devlin’s, Fisher’s, Murphy-Gamble, Bryson-Graham and the Ottawa Beach Motor Company were among the Ottawa merchants to take out ads in this special Centenary edition.
Devlin’s welcomes “visitors to Ottawa” to the “fair village of Colonel By”. With stores required to close Wednesday for the Centenary, Murphy-Gamble and Freiman’s advertise Tuesday-only specials.
James Powell writes about some of these icon retailers of Ottawa’s past:
todayinottawashistory.wordpress.com/2017/10/07/bryson-graham-ltd-ottawas-greatest-store/
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