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Canadian Historical Association

The Canadian Historical Association (CHA; French Société historique du Canada, SHC) is a Canadian organization founded in 1922 for the purposes of promoting historical research and scholarship. It is a bilingual, not-for-profit, charitable organization, the largest of its kind in Canada. According to the Association, it "seeks to encourage the integration of historical knowledge and perspectives in both the scholarly and public spheres, to ensure the accessibility of historical resources, and to defend the rights and freedoms of emerging and professional historians in the pursuit of historical inquiry as well as those of history degree holders who utilize the analytical, research, communication, and writing skills they acquired during their studies to pursue a variety of career paths inside or outside of academia."[1]

Canadian Historical Association
AbbreviationCHA
Formation1922
TypeHistorical association
Legal statusActive
PurposeFoster the scholarly study and communication of history in Canada
HeadquartersOttawa, Ontario, Canada
Region served
Canada
Official language
English, French
President
Penny Bryden
AffiliationsCFHSS
Websitewww.cha-shc.ca

Activities

The CHA represents historians in Canada and acts as a public advocate for the field. Within the historical profession, the CHA helps to set ethical standards for research and has published a Statement on Research Ethics.[2] The Association organizes annual meetings for members and publishes the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association, The CHA Bulletin and series of booklets featuring concise treatments of particular aspects of Canadian history in an international context.[3] The CHA has also created a microsite, What Can you Do With a History Degree? [1], which profiles individuals with history degrees who work in a variety of fields. Other activities include lobbying government agencies, libraries, and archives on matters related to document preservation and availability.

The current CHA president is Penny Bryden of the University of Victoria.

An affiliated committee of the Canadian Historical Association, the Canadian Committee on Labour History, publishes the journal Labour/Le Travail. It holds an annual conference together with other scholarly groups as part of the Congress of the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences (the "Learneds").

Other affiliated committees include:

  • Aboriginal History Group [2]
  • Active History Group
  • Canadian Business History Association [4]
  • Canadian Committee for Digital History [5]
  • Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality [6]
  • Canadian Committee on Labour History [7]
  • Canadian Committee on Migration, Ethnicity and Transnationalism [8]
  • Canadian Committee on Military History
  • Canadian Committee on Women's History [9]
  • Canadian Network for Economic History [10]
  • Canadian Network on Humanitarian History [11]
  • Canadian Oral History Association
  • Committee on the Second World War
  • Canadian Urban History Caucus
  • Environmental History Group
  • Graduate Students' Committee [12]
  • History of Children and Youth Group [13]
  • International Committee of Historical Sciences [14]
  • Media And Communication History Committee [15]
  • Political History Group [16]
  • Public History Group [17]

History

Early years

The Canadian Historical Association was founded in 1922 by Lawrence Burpee. That year, Burpee presented a new constitution for the Historic Landmarks Association (founded in 1907[4]), which was adopted, changing the name and objectives of the organization.[5] Burpee's model for the Canadian Historical Association was based on the American Historical Association, which was founded in 1884.

The first Canadian Historical Association Executive and Council included George Wrong, Chester Martin, Arthur Doughty, Pierre-Georges Roy, James Kenny, Lawrence Burpee, William Douw Lighthall, and Frederic William Howay.[5] Marius Barbeau was its founding Secretary. Lighthall nominated Burpee for the presidency of the Canadian Historical Association, and Burpee was president from 1923 to 1925 and continued his involvement as chairman of the management committee until 1934.[6]

Over the course of the 1920s, the Canadian Historical Association saw its annual meeting become a scholarly conference. It also became a social event for historians to reconnect with each other. In 1926, Frank Underhill wrote a letter to Charles Cochrane, the Secretary-Treasurer at the time, encouraging the Canadian Historical Association to model its annual meeting after the American Historical Association. Underhill later suggested that the annual meeting be organized around a particular theme. Cochrane agreed to both suggestions.[7] In 1927, the annual meeting was held at the University of Toronto. The format in 1927 became the basic format of the annual meeting. In 1928, the annual meeting was held in Winnipeg.[7]

In 1929, Rodolphe Lemieux became president, he was succeeded by Robert Borden.[7] In 1931, Frederic William Howay became president and he was succeeded by John Clarence Webster in 1932.[8]

In 1933, the Canadian Historical Association held its annual meeting in conjunction with the Canadian Political Science Association. They met separately, but gathered for a joint session and some social events.[9] Based on the success of their joint meeting, they established a joint membership in 1936 at the cost of four dollars.[9]

In 1937, the CHA was invited by the CBC to prepare a series of radio broadcasts on forgotten Canadians. The Association created a Radio Committee with Toronto's George Glazebrook as chair. Over twelve months the committee paired specific historians with specific topics in a series of twenty-seven broadcasts.[10]

In late 1939, the Royal Society of Canada approached the CHA with an offer to become a subgroup of the Society,[11] but after Donald Creighton and Reginald Trotter met with representatives of the Society it was decided that the Canadian Historical Association would not accept this offer.[12]

Recent years

In 2017, in response to public conversations about the legacies of Canadian historical figures and in particular their roles in the genocide of Indigenous peoples, the CHA council proposed changing the name of one of its flagship awards, the Sir John A. Macdonald Prize.[13] The award was an annual prize established in 1977 and given to the book making the most significant contribution to Canadian historical understanding.[14] In 2014, the prize had been awarded to James Daschuk for his book Clearing the Plains: Disease, Politics of Starvation, and the Loss of Aboriginal Life, which in part highlighted Macdonald's role in the forced starvation of Plains Indigenous peoples in the late 19th century.[15] Daschuk noted that winning the award for this book was "ironic" and was vocally in favour of rebranding the prize.[13] In May 2018 at its annual meeting in Regina, CHA members voted overwhelmingly in favour of the name change, by a margin of 121–11.[16] The prize was renamed the CHA Best Scholarly Book in Canadian History Prize.[17]

Controversy

Several Canadian historians are concerned that the CHA has been recently "more about activism than good scholarship" or that from the 1990s onwards the CHA has moved too close to social history at the expense of political history, diplomatic history and military history.[18] For example, on 1 July 2021, the CHA issued a statement regarding Canada's past treatment of Indigenous peoples, claiming the existence of a "broad consensus" among historical experts that "genocidal intent has been amply established".[19] In response, on 12 August The Dorchester Review published an open letter from 53 historians (many of whom were past members of the CHA) disputing this claim. Authors included Margaret MacMillan; Robert J. Young; Robert Bothwell; J.L. Granatstein, author of Who Killed Canadian History?; and Prof Jim Miller, emeritus professor of history at the University of Saskatchewan.[20] This letter was in turn criticized immediately by seven historians in Native American studies.[21]

Prizes

As part of its mandate to promote and recognize excellence in historical research, the CHA administers the following prizes:

  • François-Xavier Garneau Medal, awarded every five years honours an outstanding Canadian contribution to historical research[22]
  • CHA Best Scholarly Book in Canadian History Prize, an annual prize for non-fiction work of Canadian history judged to have made the most significant contribution to an understanding of the Canadian past[23]
  • The Wallace K. Ferguson Prize, an annual prize for an outstanding scholarly book in a field of history other than Canadian history
  • The Clio Prizes, given for meritorious publications or for exceptional contributions by individuals or organizations to regional history
  • The Albert B. Corey Prize, an award once every two years jointly with the American Historical Association, for best book dealing with the history of Canadian-American relations or the history of both countries
  • The John Bullen Prize, awarded for the outstanding historical dissertation written for a doctoral degree at a Canadian university
  • The CHA Journal Prize, awarded every year for the best essay published each year in the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association
  • CCWH Book Prize in Women's and Gender History, awarded every two years to the best book published in the field in the previous two years, in either English or French
  • The Hilda Neatby Prize, awarded annually for the best articles in French and English on women's history
  • Other prizes include: The Canadian Aboriginal History Book Prize, Political History Prize – Best Book, Political History Prize – Best Article, Public History Prize, The Eugene Forsey Prize, The Neil Sutherland Article Prize and Best article on the History of Sexuality.

Presidents

See also

References

  1. ^ "What is the CHA?". cha-shc.ca. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  2. ^ "Statement on Research Ethics". cha-shc.ca. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  3. ^ "What we do". cha-shc.ca. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  4. ^ Michel Duquet and Jacqueline Holler (2018). "The Journal of the Canadian Historical Association / Revue de la Société Historique du Canada on the Eve of Its Centennial". Scholarly and Research Communication. 9 (1).
  5. ^ a b Wright, Donald (2003). "The Canadian Historical Association: A History". The Canadian Historical Association. Historical Booklet No. 62: 5. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  6. ^ Wright, Donald (2003). "The Canadian Historical Association: A History". The Canadian Historical Association. Historical Booklet No. 62: 6,7. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  7. ^ a b c Wright, Donald (2003). "The Canadian Historical Association: A History". The Canadian Historical Association. Historical Booklet No. 62: 8. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  8. ^ Wright, Donald (2003). "The Canadian Historical Association: A History". The Canadian Historical Association. Historical Booklet No. 62: 9. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  9. ^ a b Wright, Donald (2003). "The Canadian Historical Association: A History". The Canadian Historical Association. Historical Booklet No. 62: 14. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  10. ^ Wright, Donald (2003). "The Canadian Historical Association: A History". The Canadian Historical Association. Historical Booklet No. 62: 12. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  11. ^ Wright, Donald (2003). "The Canadian Historical Association: A History". The Canadian Historical Association. Historical Booklet No. 62: 13. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  12. ^ Wright, Donald (2003). "The Canadian Historical Association: A History". The Canadian Historical Association. Historical Booklet No. 62: 13,14. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  13. ^ a b Dec 21, The Canadian Press Published on; 2017 5:06pm (2017-12-21). "Canadian Historical Association council seeks to pull Sir. John A.'s name off award". iPolitics. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  14. ^ "CHA Prizes". cha-shc.ca. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  15. ^ "When Canada used hunger to clear the West". Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  16. ^ "Historical association rebrands award named for John A. Macdonald". National Post. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  17. ^ "'A key player in Indigenous cultural genocide:' Historians erase Sir John A. Macdonald's name from book prize". National Post. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  18. ^ Ira Basen (2022-05-14). "The past is present". The Globe and Mail. p. O1.
  19. ^ Canadian Historical Association (2021-07-01). "Canada Day Statement: The History of Violence Against Indigenous Peoples Fully Warrants The Use of the Word "Genocide"".
  20. ^ "Historians Rally vs. "Genocide" Myth". The Dorchester Review. 2021-08-12.
  21. ^ "Open letter to the Council of the Canadian Historical Association and the Canadian Public". 2021-08-13.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-03-25. Retrieved 2012-02-14.
  23. ^ ""About the Awards"". CanadasHistory.ca. Canada's History Society. Retrieved 18 October 2017.

External links

  • Canadian Historical Association website
  • Archival papers of Robert Craig Brown, President from 1979–1980 of the Canadian Historical Association, held at the
  • Archival papers of J.M.S. Careless, President from 1968–1969 of the Canadian Historical Association, held at the
  • Archival papers of the CHA Committee on Historical Broadcasting held at the
  • Canadian Historical Association fonds (R6802) at Library and Archives Canada

canadian, historical, association, french, société, historique, canada, canadian, organization, founded, 1922, purposes, promoting, historical, research, scholarship, bilingual, profit, charitable, organization, largest, kind, canada, according, association, s. The Canadian Historical Association CHA French Societe historique du Canada SHC is a Canadian organization founded in 1922 for the purposes of promoting historical research and scholarship It is a bilingual not for profit charitable organization the largest of its kind in Canada According to the Association it seeks to encourage the integration of historical knowledge and perspectives in both the scholarly and public spheres to ensure the accessibility of historical resources and to defend the rights and freedoms of emerging and professional historians in the pursuit of historical inquiry as well as those of history degree holders who utilize the analytical research communication and writing skills they acquired during their studies to pursue a variety of career paths inside or outside of academia 1 Canadian Historical AssociationAbbreviationCHAFormation1922TypeHistorical associationLegal statusActivePurposeFoster the scholarly study and communication of history in CanadaHeadquartersOttawa Ontario CanadaRegion servedCanadaOfficial languageEnglish FrenchPresidentPenny BrydenAffiliationsCFHSSWebsitewww wbr cha shc wbr ca Contents 1 Activities 2 History 2 1 Early years 2 2 Recent years 3 Controversy 4 Prizes 5 Presidents 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksActivities EditThe CHA represents historians in Canada and acts as a public advocate for the field Within the historical profession the CHA helps to set ethical standards for research and has published a Statement on Research Ethics 2 The Association organizes annual meetings for members and publishes the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association The CHA Bulletin and series of booklets featuring concise treatments of particular aspects of Canadian history in an international context 3 The CHA has also created a microsite What Can you Do With a History Degree 1 which profiles individuals with history degrees who work in a variety of fields Other activities include lobbying government agencies libraries and archives on matters related to document preservation and availability The current CHA president is Penny Bryden of the University of Victoria An affiliated committee of the Canadian Historical Association the Canadian Committee on Labour History publishes the journal Labour Le Travail It holds an annual conference together with other scholarly groups as part of the Congress of the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences the Learneds Other affiliated committees include Aboriginal History Group 2 Active History Group 3 Canadian Business History Association 4 Canadian Committee for Digital History 5 Canadian Committee on the History of Sexuality 6 Canadian Committee on Labour History 7 Canadian Committee on Migration Ethnicity and Transnationalism 8 Canadian Committee on Military History Canadian Committee on Women s History 9 Canadian Network for Economic History 10 Canadian Network on Humanitarian History 11 Canadian Oral History Association Committee on the Second World War Canadian Urban History Caucus Environmental History Group Graduate Students Committee 12 History of Children and Youth Group 13 International Committee of Historical Sciences 14 Media And Communication History Committee 15 Political History Group 16 Public History Group 17 History EditEarly years Edit The Canadian Historical Association was founded in 1922 by Lawrence Burpee That year Burpee presented a new constitution for the Historic Landmarks Association founded in 1907 4 which was adopted changing the name and objectives of the organization 5 Burpee s model for the Canadian Historical Association was based on the American Historical Association which was founded in 1884 The first Canadian Historical Association Executive and Council included George Wrong Chester Martin Arthur Doughty Pierre Georges Roy James Kenny Lawrence Burpee William Douw Lighthall and Frederic William Howay 5 Marius Barbeau was its founding Secretary Lighthall nominated Burpee for the presidency of the Canadian Historical Association and Burpee was president from 1923 to 1925 and continued his involvement as chairman of the management committee until 1934 6 Over the course of the 1920s the Canadian Historical Association saw its annual meeting become a scholarly conference It also became a social event for historians to reconnect with each other In 1926 Frank Underhill wrote a letter to Charles Cochrane the Secretary Treasurer at the time encouraging the Canadian Historical Association to model its annual meeting after the American Historical Association Underhill later suggested that the annual meeting be organized around a particular theme Cochrane agreed to both suggestions 7 In 1927 the annual meeting was held at the University of Toronto The format in 1927 became the basic format of the annual meeting In 1928 the annual meeting was held in Winnipeg 7 In 1929 Rodolphe Lemieux became president he was succeeded by Robert Borden 7 In 1931 Frederic William Howay became president and he was succeeded by John Clarence Webster in 1932 8 In 1933 the Canadian Historical Association held its annual meeting in conjunction with the Canadian Political Science Association They met separately but gathered for a joint session and some social events 9 Based on the success of their joint meeting they established a joint membership in 1936 at the cost of four dollars 9 In 1937 the CHA was invited by the CBC to prepare a series of radio broadcasts on forgotten Canadians The Association created a Radio Committee with Toronto s George Glazebrook as chair Over twelve months the committee paired specific historians with specific topics in a series of twenty seven broadcasts 10 In late 1939 the Royal Society of Canada approached the CHA with an offer to become a subgroup of the Society 11 but after Donald Creighton and Reginald Trotter met with representatives of the Society it was decided that the Canadian Historical Association would not accept this offer 12 Recent years Edit In 2017 in response to public conversations about the legacies of Canadian historical figures and in particular their roles in the genocide of Indigenous peoples the CHA council proposed changing the name of one of its flagship awards the Sir John A Macdonald Prize 13 The award was an annual prize established in 1977 and given to the book making the most significant contribution to Canadian historical understanding 14 In 2014 the prize had been awarded to James Daschuk for his book Clearing the Plains Disease Politics of Starvation and the Loss of Aboriginal Life which in part highlighted Macdonald s role in the forced starvation of Plains Indigenous peoples in the late 19th century 15 Daschuk noted that winning the award for this book was ironic and was vocally in favour of rebranding the prize 13 In May 2018 at its annual meeting in Regina CHA members voted overwhelmingly in favour of the name change by a margin of 121 11 16 The prize was renamed the CHA Best Scholarly Book in Canadian History Prize 17 Controversy EditSeveral Canadian historians are concerned that the CHA has been recently more about activism than good scholarship or that from the 1990s onwards the CHA has moved too close to social history at the expense of political history diplomatic history and military history 18 For example on 1 July 2021 the CHA issued a statement regarding Canada s past treatment of Indigenous peoples claiming the existence of a broad consensus among historical experts that genocidal intent has been amply established 19 In response on 12 August The Dorchester Review published an open letter from 53 historians many of whom were past members of the CHA disputing this claim Authors included Margaret MacMillan Robert J Young Robert Bothwell J L Granatstein author of Who Killed Canadian History and Prof Jim Miller emeritus professor of history at the University of Saskatchewan 20 This letter was in turn criticized immediately by seven historians in Native American studies 21 Prizes EditAs part of its mandate to promote and recognize excellence in historical research the CHA administers the following prizes Francois Xavier Garneau Medal awarded every five years honours an outstanding Canadian contribution to historical research 22 CHA Best Scholarly Book in Canadian History Prize an annual prize for non fiction work of Canadian history judged to have made the most significant contribution to an understanding of the Canadian past 23 The Wallace K Ferguson Prize an annual prize for an outstanding scholarly book in a field of history other than Canadian history The Clio Prizes given for meritorious publications or for exceptional contributions by individuals or organizations to regional history The Albert B Corey Prize an award once every two years jointly with the American Historical Association for best book dealing with the history of Canadian American relations or the history of both countries The John Bullen Prize awarded for the outstanding historical dissertation written for a doctoral degree at a Canadian university The CHA Journal Prize awarded every year for the best essay published each year in the Journal of the Canadian Historical Association CCWH Book Prize in Women s and Gender History awarded every two years to the best book published in the field in the previous two years in either English or French The Hilda Neatby Prize awarded annually for the best articles in French and English on women s history Other prizes include The Canadian Aboriginal History Book Prize Political History Prize Best Book Political History Prize Best Article Public History Prize The Eugene Forsey Prize The Neil Sutherland Article Prize and Best article on the History of Sexuality Presidents EditL J Burpee 1922 25 Thomas Chapais 1925 26 George M Wrong 1926 27 A G Doughty 1927 28 Chester Martin 1928 29 Rodolphe Lemieux 1929 30 Sir Robert Borden 1930 31 F W Howay 1931 32 J C Webster 1932 33 Duncan McArthur 1933 34 F J Audet 1934 35 E R Adair 1935 36 Chester W New 1936 37 D C Harvey 1937 38 R G Trotter 1938 39 J B Brebner 1939 40 Gustave Lanctot 1940 41 Fred Landon 1941 42 Arthur Lower 1942 43 George W Brown 1943 44 W N Sage 1944 45 Frank H Underhill 1945 46 H N Fieldhouse 1946 47 Fred H Soward 1947 48 Arthur Maheux 1948 49 A L Burt 1949 50 George E Wilson 1950 51 Jean Bruchesi 1951 52 C P Stacey 1952 53 M H Long 1953 54 J J Talman 1954 55 G F G Stanley 1955 56 Donald Creighton 1956 57 W Kaye Lamb 1957 58 Antoine d Eschambault 1958 59 W L Morton 1959 60 Wallace K Ferguson 1960 61 R A Preston 1961 62 Hilda Neatby 1962 63 Marcel Trudel 1963 64 Mason Wade fr 1964 65 Margaret Ormsby 1965 66 R M Saunders 1966 67 J M S Careless 1967 68 P B Waite 1968 69 Fernand Ouellet 1969 70 W R Graham 1970 71 Ivo N Lambi 1971 72 Lewis G Thomas 1972 73 S F Wise 1973 74 J B Conacher 1974 75 Jacques Monet 1975 76 Margaret E Prang 1976 77 David M L Farr 1977 78 Desmond Morton 1978 79 Robert C Brown 1979 80 Pierre Savard 1980 81 John Kendle 1981 82 Jean Pierre Wallot 1982 83 Ramsay Cook 1983 84 Susan M Trofimenkoff 1984 85 William Acheson 1985 86 Rene Durocher fr 1986 87 H Blair Neatby 1987 88 Cornelius J Jaenen Wikidata 1988 89 Jean Claude Robert fr 1989 90 J E Rea 1990 91 Gail Cuthbert Brandt 1991 92 Phillip Buckner 1992 93 Veronica Strong Boag 1993 94 James A Leith 1994 95 Nadia Fahmy Eid 1995 96 James R Miller 1996 97 Judith Fingard 1997 98 Gregory Kealey 1998 99 Irving Abella 1999 00 Chad Gaffield 2000 01 Mary Vipond 2001 03 Gerald Friesen 2003 05 Margaret Conrad 2005 07 Craig Heron 2007 09 Mary Lynn Stewart 2009 11 Lyle Dick 2011 13 Dominique Marshall 2013 15 Joan Sangster 2015 17 Adele Perry 2017 19 Penny Bryden 2019 21See also EditCategory Canadian historians Historiography of Canada List of learned societiesReferences Edit What is the CHA cha shc ca Retrieved 2020 07 23 Statement on Research Ethics cha shc ca Retrieved 2020 07 23 What we do cha shc ca Retrieved 2020 07 23 Michel Duquet and Jacqueline Holler 2018 The Journal of the Canadian Historical Association Revue de la Societe Historique du Canada on the Eve of Its Centennial Scholarly and Research Communication 9 1 a b Wright Donald 2003 The Canadian Historical Association A History The Canadian Historical Association Historical Booklet No 62 5 Retrieved 18 October 2017 Wright Donald 2003 The Canadian Historical Association A History The Canadian Historical Association Historical Booklet No 62 6 7 Retrieved 18 October 2017 a b c Wright Donald 2003 The Canadian Historical Association A History The Canadian Historical Association Historical Booklet No 62 8 Retrieved 18 October 2017 Wright Donald 2003 The Canadian Historical Association A History The Canadian Historical Association Historical Booklet No 62 9 Retrieved 18 October 2017 a b Wright Donald 2003 The Canadian Historical Association A History The Canadian Historical Association Historical Booklet No 62 14 Retrieved 18 October 2017 Wright Donald 2003 The Canadian Historical Association A History The Canadian Historical Association Historical Booklet No 62 12 Retrieved 18 October 2017 Wright Donald 2003 The Canadian Historical Association A History The Canadian Historical Association Historical Booklet No 62 13 Retrieved 18 October 2017 Wright Donald 2003 The Canadian Historical Association A History The Canadian Historical Association Historical Booklet No 62 13 14 Retrieved 18 October 2017 a b Dec 21 The Canadian Press Published on 2017 5 06pm 2017 12 21 Canadian Historical Association council seeks to pull Sir John A s name off award iPolitics Retrieved 2020 07 23 CHA Prizes cha shc ca Retrieved 2020 07 23 When Canada used hunger to clear the West Retrieved 2020 07 23 Historical association rebrands award named for John A Macdonald National Post Retrieved 2020 07 23 A key player in Indigenous cultural genocide Historians erase Sir John A Macdonald s name from book prize National Post Retrieved 2020 07 23 Ira Basen 2022 05 14 The past is present The Globe and Mail p O1 Canadian Historical Association 2021 07 01 Canada Day Statement The History of Violence Against Indigenous Peoples Fully Warrants The Use of the Word Genocide Historians Rally vs Genocide Myth The Dorchester Review 2021 08 12 Open letter to the Council of the Canadian Historical Association and the Canadian Public 2021 08 13 CHA website The Francois Xavier Garneau Medal Archived from the original on 2012 03 25 Retrieved 2012 02 14 About the Awards CanadasHistory ca Canada s History Society Retrieved 18 October 2017 External links EditCanadian Historical Association website Archival papers of Robert Craig Brown President from 1979 1980 of the Canadian Historical Association held at the University of Toronto Archives and Records Management Services Archival papers of J M S Careless President from 1968 1969 of the Canadian Historical Association held at the University of Toronto Archives and Records Management Services Archival papers of the CHA Committee on Historical Broadcasting held at the University of Toronto Archives and Records Management Services Canadian Historical Association fonds R6802 at Library and Archives Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canadian Historical Association amp oldid 1140796087, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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