At six years old, I had yet to see the bigger picture,
as when President Kennedy was assassinated.
My only recollection of the event being
favorite cartoons preempted...on every channel,
by grownups discussing something
I couldn’t even begin to fathom.
I can still recall my parents trying to console me,
saying a great man had died. Great man? Death?
Concepts still unreachable to a child of 1963.
Four years later and four years older,
my innocence was still firmly intact.
Canada’s Centennial year,
and yet old enough to be caught up in the hoopla
of a nation’s one hundredth birthday,
I had still to grasp the bigger picture;
and though like many,
enjoying A Little Help From My Friends
on the radio, I was entirely unaware of the revolution
sweeping the world.
Sergeant Pepper? For all I knew, someone in the British army,
judging by the strangely accented news reports
out of a place called London, wherever that was.
“On the other side of the Atlantic,” my dad would say,
running his baby finger across a page in our atlas
from Newfoundland to England.
To a ten year old, there were more important things
in that summer of ‘67. My scrap books for example.
Two of them; one for the Centennial,
filled with all kinds of things clipped out of the newspaper;
parties at the Governor General’s mansion, which to me,
resembled a palace.
The Centennial train touring the country,
in fact a museum on wheels,
with its own audio visual show,
supposedly the wave of the future.
Celebrations, fireworks of all kinds across the nation,
and a place called Expo ’67.
Expo was so fascinating to me,
I devoted an entire scrapbook just to it,
and became an obsession. Built on ‘man made’ islands
in the middle of the St. Lawrence;
I knew every country’s pavilion by heart.
It also included Habitat; a futuristic apartment complex,
stacked in random order, hanging over one another.
A monorail, like at Disneyland, and hovercraft,
a new form of transportation,
resembling something out of a Johnny Quest cartoon.
There was also La Ronde; an amusement park,
complete with zoo,
and five story space ride called the Gyrotron.
Unlike Disneyland however, Expo ’67 wasn’t that far away.
Montreal in fact, only a couple of hours drive to the east.
Mom and dad had already been there; brought back photos…
real pictures of what up ‘til then I had only seen
in newspapers. I’d examine them for hours,
especially the hovercrafts.
My parents promised my brother and me
they’d take us in July.
I could barely sleep the week before.
Finally, the fateful day arrived.
It was like a dream come true;
the radio playing all the way down and back;
news reports of people called hippies, and smoking grass.
Grass? Were some so poor
they couldn’t buy tobacco cigarettes in a store?
Only one song from that trip still stands out in memory;
of a place called San Francisco, and if you should go there,
be sure to wear flowers in your hair.
Now, every time I hear that song, it reminds me of Expo ’67...
Habitat never did take off, and except in documentaries,
I’ve never seen a hovercraft again. As far as I know,
the pavilions and La Ronde are still there,
the latter turned into a permanent amusement park,
though long since losing its former grandeur.
Only years later would I see the bigger picture,
know the full meaning of that ‘summer of love’.
Not so innocent now, I realize
maybe some things are better left to the future...
and history.
What a blessing we couldn't grasp the future, or big picture then...how intrusive that would've been upon a time we can now look back and remember what it felt like to be care-free. I was ten in '67, too. Good stuff, Chris. Thanks.
You've brought back a pleasant memory of visiting the then amusement park at Montreal. It was a memorable day sometime in the early 1970s as I recall. Feel your childhood excitement and catch the spirit of the park.
By far, one of your most interesting, engaging pieces. There's nothing about this that I don't like. The images, the language, the conversational tone. All of it's perfect as hell.
I loved the interactive aspect of the visuals along with the text... complimenting your message every step of the way. Thank you for teaching us out here in the Pacific as well.. aloha
You trasport me to a time I remember fondly... older than you by several years, but perhaps all the more deeply etched in my memory. Thanks for this great little chronicle and for the photos. I DO remember habitat and Expo, striking images to this Cajun Texan at the time. I couldn't fathom how they built that structure or how it stood solid with those jutting rooms. Thanks for sharing a piece of your journey richly described.
I enjoyed reading this Chris. Such an interesting look into the state of the country, and what is going on around you--through a child's eyes. You bring that innocence into the seriousness that existed. I like how you bounce between a child's perspective and your adult one, very effective for the reader. Thank you sharing this, and I love the pictures too :)
Nice memoir, Chris, and I love the photos - takes me backto those times. I never made it to Expo '67, but I did go to the New York World's Fair in '65, but this really brings back the innocence of those times for me, too (I was 13 when I attended the World's Fair).... d:-)
...chris, A+ on the HTML, annnd my dear man an A++ on your writing of memories evoked and that seriously thoughtful last line, like glenn i too remember those times, i's 17-20 when those things were occurring/ '69 i was frog gigging (and east texas country) when armstrong was walking on that bright moon that was showing us the pond of life we were scavenging for their legs...and you started my thinking on alllll of those things...what a treat to click-on a gently (near always) poetic dance offered by you...kudos for real and kudos for the feel...you rock on this one!...peace, chaz