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1917, July 8 – Tom Thomson drowns on about this day in Canoe Lake in his beloved Algonquin Park.

This Canadian History for Kids exclusive looks at Canadian legend, Tom Thomson.

No one can be certain what happened on Sunday, July 8th, 1917, the day that Tom Thomson disappeared. He died sometime between July 8, when he was last seen, and July 16, 1917, when his body was found floating in Canoe Lake. The cause of death was recorded as accidental drowning. This Canadian History for Kids, Sketches of Canada, looks at the amazing life of one of Canada’s most influential artist’s.

This Canadian History for Kids article begins with Thomas John “Tom” Thomson being born near Claremont, Ontario to John and Margaret Thomson. He grew up in Rose Hill, Ontario, near Owen Sound. In 1899, he entered a machine shop apprenticeship at an iron foundry owned by William Kennedy, a close friend of his father. In 1901, he enrolled in a business college in Chatham, Ontario, but dropped out eight months later to join his older brother, George Thomson, who was operating a business school in Seattle. In 1904, he returned to Canada joined Grip Ltd., an artistic design firm in Toronto, where many of the future members of the Group of Seven also worked.

This Canadian History for Kids article continues when Thomson first visited Algonquin Park in 1912. Thereafter he often traveled around Ontario with his colleagues, especially to the wilderness of Ontario, which was to be a major source of inspiration for him. In 1912 he began working, along with other artists who would go on to form the Group of Seven after his death. This Canadian History for Kids article continues when he first exhibited with the Ontario Society of Artists in 1913, and he became a member in 1914 when the National Gallery of Canada purchased one of his paintings. For several years he shared a studio and living quarters with fellow artists, before taking up residence on Canoe Lake. Beginning in 1914 he worked now and then as a fire fighter, ranger, and guide in Algonquin Park, but found that such work did not allow enough time for painting. This Canadian History for Kids article continues during the next three years when he produced many of his most famous works, including The Jack Pine, The West Wind and The Northern River.

This Canadian History for Kids article continues when Thomson disappeared during a canoeing trip on Canoe Lake in Algonquin Park on July 8, 1917, and his body was discovered in the lake eight days later. The official cause of death was accidental drowning, but there were questions about how he actually died. Thomson’s body was examined by Dr. Goldwin Howland, and interred in Mowat Cemetery, near Canoe Lake, the day after his body was discovered. Under the direction of his older brother, George Thomson, the body was exhumed two days later and re-interred in the family plot beside the Leith Presbyterian Church on July 21.

This Canadian History for Kids article continues in 1970 when Judge William Little published a book, The Tom Thomson Mystery, recounting how – during 1956 – he and three friends dug up Thomson’s original gravesite, in Mowat Cemetery on Canoe Lake. They believed that remains they found were Thomson’s. In the fall of 1956, medical investigators determined that the body was that of an unidentified Aboriginal.

Since the publication of The Tom Thomson Mystery, there have been many theories regarding Thomson’s cause of death, including suicide and murder. Many suggest that Thomson may have committed suicide over a woman who holidayed at Canoe Lake being pregnant with his child. Others have suggested that Thomson was in a fatal fight with one of two men who were living at Canoe Lake, or killed by poachers in the park.

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1976, July 17 – Queen Elizabeth II officially opens the Montréal Olympic Games.

This Canadian History for Kids exclusive looks at the the Montreal Olympics.

The Opening Ceremony of the 1976 Summer Olympic Games was held on Saturday, July 17, 1976 at the Olympic Stadium in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. This Canadian History for Kids, Sketches of Canada, looks at the ’76 summer olympics.

This Canadian History for Kids article begins in front of an audience of some 73,000 in the stadium, and an estimated half billion watching on television, when Queen Elizabeth II officially opened the 1976 Montreal Summer Olympic games. Following an air show by the Royal Canadian Air Force’s Snowbirds flying squad in the sunny skies above the stadium, the ceremony officially began at 3:00 pm with a trumpet fanfare and the arrival of Queen Elizabeth II . The Queen was accompanied by Michael Morris, Lord Killanin, President of the International Olympic Committee, and was greeted to an orchestral rendition of ‘O Canada’, an arrangement that for many years later would be used in schools across the country.

However, this Canadian History for Kids article also notes how the 1976 Olympic Games were stained by boycotts and drug allegations. Before the Olympic Games, New Zealand’s rugby team toured South Africa (still caught up in apartheid) and played against them. Because of this, much of the rest of Africa threatened the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to ban New Zealand from the Olympic Games or they would boycott the Games. Since the IOC had no control over the playing of rugby, the IOC tried to persuade the Africans not to use the Olympics as retaliation. In the end, 26 African countries boycotted the Games.

The drug allegations were rampant at these Olympics. Though most of the allegations were not proven, many athletes, especially the East German women swimmers, were accused of using anabolic steroids. When Shirley Babashoff (United States) accused her rivals of using anabolic steroids because of their big muscles and deep voices, an official from the East German team responded: “They came to swim, not to sing.”

This Canadian History for Kids article continues with how the Games were also a financial disaster for Quebec. Since Quebec built, and built, and built for the Games, they spent the enormous figure of $2 billion, placing them in debt for decades.

This Canadian History for Kids article continues on a more positive note because these Olympic Games saw the rise of the Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci who won three gold medals.

Approximately 6,000 athletes participated, representing 88 countries.

A Canadian History for Kids fact is that a record number 414 athletes participate for Canada, and Canadians came up with their best medal performance to date. The 11 medals won by Canadian athletes more than double the total of the previous two Olympic games.

The five silver medals – highlighted by Greg Joy in the high jump competition – equal the total won by Canadian athletes in 1932. Nancy Garapick became the only double medalist for Canada, winning two bronze in the 100 metere and 200 metre backstroke.

Unfortunately, the Montreal Olympics also marked the first time that an athlete from the host nation failed to win a gold medal.

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