Hamilton's Sir John A Macdonald statue anchors the east side of Hamilton's Gore Park. Credit: Joey Coleman / The Public Record

Ward 3 Councillor Nrinder Nann says it is time for the City of Hamilton to remove the Sir John A Macdonald statue from Gore Park. Nann plans to move a motion on Thursday afternoon at the Emergency and Community Services meeting to direct staff to remove the statue immediately.

The decision will go to a final vote at the full Council ratification meeting scheduled for Friday morning.

Sir John A Macdonald is Canada’s first Prime Minister. He played a critical role in the creation and expansion of the residential schools.

Calls to remove the statue from Gore Park have grown since the publication of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Reports in 2015.

Hamilton’s Aboriginal Advisory Committee asked Council to remove the statue in 2015. City staff reported promising to review the request. The Committee passed subsequent motions repeating the request.

In December 2020, City staff told the Committee they are “seriously” considering the removal, and City Manager Janette Smith would present a report to Council in early 2021. The report is not yet public.

In recent weeks, following protests at the statue, the City Manager’s Office states the overdue report is forthcoming to Council. The report will not be specific to the Macdonald statue and will outline a process for reviewing monuments across Hamilton.

Nann states the City needs to act now, and this is why the motion is being put to Council next week.

The Hamilton motion comes less than a month after the City of Kingston’s Council voted to move its Sir John A Macdonald statue from a predominant location in that city’s downtown City Park. Kingston’s statue is now in storage, with consultation underway with Indigenous communities regarding its relocation into Cataraqui Cemetery, a National Historic Site where Sir John A. Macdonald is buried. Macdonald lived in Kingston after coming to Canada, and he was born in Glasgow, Scotland.

Hamilton was the first place in Canada to erect a statue of Sir John A Macdonald.

In recent weeks, protesters covered the statue with a tarp. A few days later, a white nationalist injured himself attempting to remove the tarp. The next night, the white nationalists pulled the tarp off the statue. The City Manager’s Office initially claimed that City staff removed the tarp. The white nationalists posted a video of themselves removing it, and the CMO retracted their claim.

On Wednesday of this week, the statue was covered in red painted handprints to symbolize the thousands of Indigenous children who died at residential schools. Within hours, the City Manager’s Office ordered the cleaning of the statue to remove the handprints.

The Emergency and Community Services Committee meets at 1:30 pm on Thursday. Anyone can request to delegate to the Committee by filling out this form on the City of Hamilton website.

During the same meeting, a motion to rename Ryerson Recreation Centre will be presented on behalf of Ward 1 Councillor Maureen Wilson.

3 replies on “Councillor Nann will put Sir John A Macdonald Statue to Vote at Council Next Week”

  1. If the founder of our Canada statues are removed then any thing could be. I understand the residential schools & sir John a McDonald’s connected history and its this and what John a McDonald did in creating Canada that it would be dangerous to remove Hamilton statues why not add a equal statue at opposite side of Gore park because honestly removing national history is for many including myself a more destructive act than throwing red paint on monuments, please please 🙏 don’t remove our country’s history from site or textbooks and find out who is vandalized government property at gore Park im hopeful you the elected city hall folks will find a way to keep my faith in canadian heritage if not I fear worse things could happen

  2. We live in a beautiful country with a constitution and democratic freedom because of John A. Macdonald.
    Can we please have the humility to acknowledge that no person then or now was without failings. Likewise, there was no society, the or now, that was similarly perfect.
    We hope as individuals to be assessed not based on our worst moments, but rather upon the entirety of the contribution we make in our lives.
    Many of those targetting the legacy of Macdonald are well intentioned, but others do it because they view everything about Canada to be rotten.
    I hope Hamilton Council can appreciate the majority of Hamiltonian’s wish the preservation of Macdonald’s statue and his legacy.

  3. It would be an act of love and support for our Indigenous community to remove the statue of the man responsible for enacting generational harm and trauma. Sir John A. will have his place in history, and will not be forgotten. It’s taught in the grade 8 curriculum. What we can remember now is our compassion for survivors and the ancestors of survivors. I am happy to see we have councilors who are finally admitting to, and making actions against racism and white nationalism. I hope we keep going this way.

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