When I was growing up in the County in the 1960s, it was a beautiful place. But it was also one of the poorest areas in Ontario. I don’t believe the “Good Old Days” were all that good for most of the families who ran small farms and businesses. As a child, I was oblivious to the many struggles of my parents — and the generations before them.
We are now at another time in our history. I prefer it. Prosperity provides more options even if it brings new challenges. One of those challenges is how we preserve what is “special” – the key assets that attract people to remain, retire, invest, and to visit.
I’m very familiar with these issues. Over the 20 years since I returned to my hometown, Picton, I have engaged in multiple efforts to preserve and promote the County’s many heritage spaces. I’ve served on committees, helped raise money for a wide range of heritage properties and projects, developed heritage products such as walking and bus tours, plays, re-enactments, and The History Moments series of historical vignettes, which played before movies at The Regent Theatre. I’ve worked to save some irreplaceable buildings, like the Glenwood Cemetery Chapel, from demolition.
I’ve also lost many heritage battles.
Now, with so much development underway, the great danger is that we will lose precious farmland, conservation areas, and other special spaces to short-term planning driven by economic considerations alone.
We’re facing another major threat as well – our aging volunteers.
This place runs on volunteers. Myriad local groups compete for limited sponsorship dollars, donations, event dates, and venues. The County runs 7 museums. We have 100 cemeteries, nearly 60 of which are still in operation. There are 10 churches in Picton alone. 30 or 40 volunteer groups working in the history, heritage and conservation sectors look after the many special spaces that dot the County and require constant care. Mount Tabor. Glenwood Chapel. Macaulay House. Friendship United Church. The Wellington Town Hall.
Each year, more and more groups are cancelling events because they cannot find younger volunteers to run them. There has been a Herculean volunteer effort over many decades and countless community projects. We’ve achieved great things together. But there are limits to volunteerism. And I think we’re reached it. We cannot continue this way. We need to embrace profound change.
One thing we could do is sell some of the municipality’s many heritage buildings and invest the revenues into a dedicated heritage fund to support the maintenance of the properties we decide to keep.
This is painful, I know, as some years ago we sold a farm that had been in the family for 100 years. But the farm is still farmed by local farmers. The barn and original house have been respectfully transformed by its new owners. I don’t think it gets much better than that. So, I believe it is time we let go of our emotional ties to some of these properties; it could be the best way to preserve them.
Another initiative is to work collectively to package our history into a social enterprise business retailing heritage products and experiences to visitors worldwide – to develop a Heritage Economy.
Many communities around the world have adapted to change by retailing their history. We could easily create memorable travel packages, including gourmet meals and accommodation, wine, walking and nature tours, re-enactments, and plays. Events like the Christmas House Tour, Flashback February, Maple In The County, the Arts Trail, local fairs and other events are already in place. But they are fragmented and uncoordinated. And most don’t contribute to any central heritage fund supporting the maintenance of our special spaces.
We need to bring these many capacities together in a collective effort that “upsells” our estimated one million annual visitors to spend more during their stays with a portion of the proceeds donated to the Built Heritage Fund administered by the County Foundation, or other funding programs supporting local heritage projects.
In many places in the world where I’ve travelled, history makes money. We have lots of history, but we are not making any money from it. We’re going to need to soon start making money from it if we are to maintain the many heritage properties currently supported by aging volunteers.
We need to develop a Heritage Economy – the notion that history can be a suite of products, services, and experiences retailed worldwide as a community, social enterprise business.
Let’s aspire to become a sort of “Gettysburg North” after the small Pennsylvania town that retails its three days of Civil War History. It’s worth nearly $700 million a year to the economy of a town with only 6,500 residents, but with three million annual visitors. Closer to home, The Kingston Penitentiary Museum has transformed a mothballed 1830s prison into a frequent movie set and tour experience generating about $24,000/day seven days a week during the tourism season. In our community, Base31 is transforming an historic former military base into an event venue and destination as a market-based business.
Let’s embrace change. Let’s think bigger and act more boldly. Let’s create a Heritage Economy transforming local history into a community business and significant economic driver.
See it in the newspaper