housed the Cartier Square Military Museum from 1880 to 1896. The military museum served as the predecessor to the Canadian War Museum
Background The collections of the Canadian War Museum originated from the collections of the Cartier Square Military Museum, established through a
general order on 5 November 1880. Established with the intention to be a museum of national interest, the institution sought to preserve historical records and materials relating to the
Canadian Militia, and any of its colonial predecessors. A proposal to establish a library operated by the museum was made in 1882, although these plans never came to fruition. As the museum continued to solicit donations for its collection the museum quickly outgrew its space in the drill hall, and appeals for a new facility were made by 1886. The museum was closed in 1896, to make room for a new shipment of
Lee-Enfield rifles and space training. The militia office originally intended for the museum to be relocated, storing its collections in an old military warehouse below
Parliament Hill (present location of the
Bytown Museum). In July 1901, the
Department of Militia and Defence negotiated a lease to house the museum in a building in
Ottawa. However, little effort was put into reopening the museum, with the department opting to not renew the building's lease in 1905. On 26 January 1907, the Militia Council was informed by
Eugène Fiset, the quartermaster-general of the Canadian Militia, that there was "no interest being taken by the officers of the garrison" to reopen the museum, and recommend to not reopening it. The collection from the Cartier Square Military Museum remained at the warehouse until Dominion Archivist,
Arthur Doughty, requested the transference of the items to the archives to display some of them. The militia approved the request, and transferred 105 items to the
Dominion Archives between 1910 and 1919; although in doing so, the militia believed the archives had assumed responsibility for establishing any future military museum. By the 1910s, the militia began to redirect potential donors of military artifacts to the Dominion Archives. These artifacts, in addition to captured German weapons from the
First World War, were exhibited for the first time in a
travelling exhibition in 1916. In December 1918, the Commission on War Records and Trophies was established to distribute German
war trophies and war-related materials to memorials across Canada. However, the Commission retained several pieces at the Dominion Archives with the hope they would eventually be exhibited in a national museum. In 1924, the War Trophy Building was built adjacent to the original Dominion Archives building to house the military collection. In 1935, Doughty struck a deal with General
Andrew McNaughton, the
Chief of General Staff, for the militia to support the establishment of the museum. A War Trophies Review Board was established between the archives and militia, charged with selecting the best items to preserve for a future museum.
Establishment The Canadian War Museum was formally opened at the War Trophies Building in January 1942; initially operated by the Dominion Archives, and partially funded by the
Department of National Defence. In 1958, management of the Canadian War Museum was assumed by the National Museum of Canada (predecessor to the
Canadian Museum of History and the
Canadian Museum of Nature). The museum relocated to the original Dominion Archives building, adjacent to the War Trophies building in June 1967; after the
Public Archives of Canada moved its operations to a new facility. However, the museum continued to use the War Trophies building as a storage facility. In the same year, management of the war museum was assumed by the National Museums of Canada Corporation; a
crown corporation which managed several national institutions, including the war museum. In 1983 the museum relocated its storage facilities from the War Trophies building to
Vimy House; with the former building demolished to make way for the
National Gallery of Canada's new building. In 1990, the Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation (later renamed the Canadian Museum of History Corporation) was formed through
The Museum Act, and assumed management of several
national museums of Canada, including the war museum. By the 1990s, the museum's staff had voiced that the space in the building was inadequate, with some areas of the building deemed environmentally hazardous for the exhibition of certain artifacts. In 1991, the government established the Task Force on Military History Museum Collections in Canada, whose final report called for more resources to be given to the museum, referring to its shape in the original Dominion Archives building as "embarrassing," and a "national disgrace." Although the Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation invested
C$1.7 million for new exhibit designs as a result of the report; funds remained limited for expansion, with the federal government implementing a number of
austerity measures during the mid-1990s. A museum supporter's group, the "Friends of the Canadian War Museum" was established in 1995 to assist the museum in fundraising efforts. . From 1983 to 2004, items from the museum's collection that were not on display were stored at Vimy House. Between 1996 and 1997, the museum considered opening a large
Holocaust exhibition within the museum. In addition to the exhibition, the architectural expansion plans released in November 1997 included enhanced exhibit spaces, a theatre, and a memorial chamber. However, the proposed exhibit was opposed by Canadian veterans, who felt a sense of neglect by the museum, and believed an exhibition on the Holocaust would further marginalize them; in addition to some historians who believed the museum was an inappropriate space for such an exhibition. Following events commemorating the 50th anniversary of the end of the Second World War passed, public debate over the museum's future intensified; with the Senate Subcommittee on Veterans Affairs convening a hearing in February 1998 to determine the future of the exhibition and the museum itself. Following the Senate Subcommittee hearings, the chair of the Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation,
Adrienne Clarkson announced the museum would abandon its plans for a Holocaust exhibition, although proceed with its plans to expand the museum.
Barney Danson was appointed to the board of trustees and the war museum advisory committee in 1998. This led to an increase in the museum's research capacity and towards the establishment of the Centre of Military History. Danson later secured for the museum the acquisition of property near
CFB Rockcliffe.
21st century In March 2000, the
Government of Canada formally announced plans to build a new museum building at CFB Rockcliffe. However, in 2001,
Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien intervened to have the proposed location changed to
LeBreton Flats, a formerly industrial area of the city. In 2001, a design submitted by
Moriyama & Teshima Architects and Griffiths Rankin Cook Architects was selected for the design of the new building.
Groundbreaking for the new building took place in November 2002, followed by a major decontamination effort of the property by the
National Capital Commission. The total cost to build a new building for the museum, and the exhibitions was approximately C$135 million. Shortly after its opening of the new building, the museum became the centre of controversy over its interpretation of the
Combined Bomber Offensive during World War II, in which some 20,000 Canadians participated. Much of the controversy stemmed from two assertions made on a
museum label, that the bombing offensive was largely ineffective until later in the war, and that its morality and value of strategic bombings remained contested. Complaints from Canadian veterans prompted another Senate Subcommittee to be launched. Museum staff eventually removed the offending museum label, replacing it with another label with text three times in length that "glossed over the salient facts;" although the offending images remained. ==Site==