Our Mandate and History
Our Mandate
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To assist in educational, cultural and aesthetic
pursuits connected with the Canadian Rockies through the
collection, preservation, study, exhibition and interpretation of
cultural resources from the Canadian Rockies;
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To examine the relationship between culture and
mountains through the exhibition, study and interpretation of
materials from mountains around the world.
Our History
On September 3, 1958, the Wa-Che-Yo-Cha-Pa Foundation,
the earliest name for the present Peter and Catharine Whyte
Foundation, which operates the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies,
was registered under Part 9 of the Companies Act of Alberta.
Three of the objectives mentioned in the Memorandum of Association
were:
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To encourage the development of the arts and
culture in Banff and its vicinity either directly or through
grants to charitable organizations engaged in such
work;
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To acquire by gift, lease, purchase or otherwise
buildings and appurtenances to be used as library and/or art
galleries and/or institutions for the development of the arts and
culture as aforesaid;
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To acquire by gift, purchase or otherwise objects
or properties relating to or having historical association with
the Canadian West and in particular the Town of Banff and its
vicinity.
However, some of the Foundation's objectives also
related to such causes as supporting medical research and native
education and much of its activities in its early years related to
these concerns.
Catharine Whyte was a member of a distinguished New
England family and her grandfather Edward S. Morse was one of the
first directors of the Peabody Museum in Salem, Massachusetts.
The fact that the Foundation now operates a privately-endowed museum
based more on the American than the Canadian (government funded)
model was a result of this and her familiarity with institutions in
Boston, such as the Boston Museum of Science and Museum of Fine
Arts, where both she and Peter attended art school. Peter
Whyte was a member of one of Banff's pioneer families. His
father, Dave White, was a local merchant.
The Whytes already had an extensive collection of
artifacts and historical materials in their home when the Foundation
was first created, and it continued to grow. In October of
1965 the archival component of their collections began to be moved
into the basement of a house they owned adjacent to their own home
between Bear Street and the Bow River. Under the supervision
of Maryalice H. Stewart, the Foundation's first Director, this
collection formed the nucleus of what became known as the Archives
of the Canadian Rockies.
The Archives shared the premises with the Banff
Library (started by a group of volunteers), also supported by the
Foundation, and quickly outgrew the space available. This led to a
plan to build a modern, fireproof archives, art gallery and library
on the site occupied by the house.
Peter Whyte passed away in December, 1966, and
Catharine continued to work with architect Philippe Delasalle on
the unique design of the new 15,000 square foot building. It
officially opened on June 16, 1968 and incorporated storage, work
and exhibit space for the archives and Banff Library as well as an
art gallery, the Peter Whyte Gallery, whose permanent collection
initially came largely from the Whytes' personal collections,
including their own work as artists.
In 1970 the Foundation took over complete operation of
the Banff Library, hired Bruce Ferguson as its first Gallery Curator
and contracted museum consultant Archie Key to recommend future
development. The name "The Whyte Centre" was adopted to
describe the overall operation. In 1971 the Archives took over
custodianship of the Alpine Club of Canada's library and
archives. After Catharine Whyte increased the
Foundation's endowment in 1971, it was decided to rename the
Foundation in honor of the memory of Peter Whyte in February,
1972. The size of the Board of Directors was increased
from three to five, and from this point onward the Foundation ceased
to distribute funds to other causes, utilizing all income for the
operation of the archives, art gallery and library. In 1972,
E. J. (Ted) Hart became the Foundation's first Archivist, the duties
previously having been handled by Mrs. Stewart in addition to those
of Director.
In 1974 the Banff School District (Banff's sole taxing
authority at that time) began to contribute towards the operation of
the Banff Library and a separate library board was created to
oversee the library's operation. In 1976 the Foundation constructed
a photographic lab in what was formerly a caretaker's suite in the
building, beginning what would eventually become a separate
photographic and technical services department, originally under the
direction of Edward Cavell. The same year Maryalice Stewart resigned
as Director and was replaced by E. J. Hart. That fall the
Foundation's newsletter, The Cairn, first appeared and in 1977 it
produced its first publication, Timberline Tales. Meanwhile,
the Foundation's Board began to give consideration to the future of
several historic log buildings that had either originally been on
the site or had been moved to it, and to a growing but underutilized
collection of human history artifacts relating to the Canadian
Rockies.
In March, 1979, Catharine Whyte, a founder,
benefactress and President of the Foundation, passed away and it was
renamed the Peter and Catharine Whyte Foundation. The
Foundation's endowment was increased through her bequest and the
remainder of the Whytes' historic and artistic collections,
including their log home and the neighbouring Colonel P. A. Moore
home, which had been moved to the site in 1971, were left to the
Foundation. After an inventory and cataloguing of their
contents, these homes were opened to the public on a limited guided
tour basis. This led to the creation in 1980 of a new
Foundation agency, Banff Heritage Homes, and Jon Whyte was appointed
as the first curator.
Because of limited storage space and a desire to have
exhibition space for a growing artifact collection, negotiations
began with the Banff Library Board in 1979 concerning a new location
for the public library. In 1980 the Foundation offered the
Banff School District a piece of its property on which to construct
a new Library and Seniors Centre and work began in the spring of
1983.
Meanwhile, the Foundation had commissioned a Master
Plan Study to aid it in planning the future and when the library
vacated its premises in October, 1984, work immediately began on one
of the Master Plan recommendations, the renovation of the former
library space for a new museological exhibition hall and collections
storage area. Because of public confusion over the name of the
institution and its constituent agencies, the Master Plan also
called for a unitary name and image. On June 16, 1985, in
conjunction with the opening of its new exhibition hall, the public
name of the institution was changed to the Whyte Museum of the
Canadian Rockies (legally it remained the Peter and Catharine Whyte
Foundation), and its three former agencies became departments named
Archives, Gallery and Heritage Collection.
On the same day, the official opening of Windy Cabin,
outfitted by the Warden Service, took place as part of the Banff
National Park centennial celebrations. At this time as well,
an admission charge was instituted for the Museum with research use
of the Archives remaining free.
In 1983, the Museum's Board, which by then had been
increased to twelve members, began a submission process to choose an
architect to begin planning for an addition and renovation to the
Museum, as recommended in the Master Plan. Vancouver architect Henry
Hawthorn emerged from this process with the successful submission
and he began to generate initial conceptual ideas in 1984. Mr.
Hawthorn's first work centred around a proposed addition to house a
new art gallery space, but he also carried out plans for a temporary
Museum Shop (in the former Archives corridor) opened in 1987.
In the fall of 1984 the Museum's Board decided to launch a capital
fund-raising campaign for a new addition (at this time estimated at
$1.25 million) and to continue the planning process, but as time
went on it became apparent that more space and expense than
originally contemplated would be required. Active work on the
campaign therefore did not commence until 1987 and several different
proposals for the addition were discussed over the following few
years. In 1988 it was decided that the addition would occupy the
space between the existing building and the Library/Seniors
Centre. In 1990, a consultants' study recommended an expansion
of 18,000 square feet, and in 1991 Henry Hawthorn completed new
plans for the addition/renovation.
Meanwhile, the Museum's operations continued to grow
in preparation for its physical expansion, with a separate
Admission/Shop department added in 1987, a public relations
department added in 1989, and an Education/Interpretation department
added in 1990. Also, the Board continued to review the
organization's mandate and in 1991 expanded it to encompass
exhibitions and programs relating to mountain cultures around the
world. Government grants and private donations continued to be
vigorously pursued in order to accomplish the expansion/renovation
plan, but ultimately the ever increasing costs and the challenge of
raising all the funds at once led to a decision to do the project in
two phases. Work on Phase I (13,000 square feet) began in
August, 1992, and was completed in June, 1993, at a cost of $3.5
million. The new facility incorporated new art gallery
exhibition space, renovated archives, heritage collection space, a
new shop and front entrance foyer on the main floor, and
administration, curatorial and office support areas, shipping and
receiving, preparation, and storage facilities on the lower
level. The official opening of the new facility took place on
June 13, 1993, the 25th anniversary of the opening of the original
building, with over 1000 guests in attendance. Since
the completion of the new wing, the Museum has continued to build on
its strength of mountain-related collections, programs and
exhibitions. A particular area of emphasis has been the
protection and acquisition of Banff’s built heritage. In the
early years of the new century, the Museum has acquired such
important buildings as the Crosby family home (Abegweit) on Bow
Avenue, two homes belonging to Dorothy Boyce on St. Julien Road, the
Vera Unwin (Holmes) McGinn home on Beaver Street, and Tarry A-While,
the home of famous Canadian Rockies explorer Mary Schaffer Warren on
Grizzly Street. The latter property, operates as a bed and
breakfast, and contributes financially to the operation of the
organization, as does the Museum’s first off-site gift shop which
opened on Banff Avenue in the Foundation-owned Buffalo Block in
2003.
In the period between 1998 and 2003, the operations of
the Foundation were reorganized under two separate organizations –
the Museum and the Foundation – with E.J. Hart serving as Executive
Director of the Foundation and Doug Leonard as Executive Director of
the Museum. Mr. Leonard left the Museum in 2003, and in 2004
the Board of Directors decided to re-amalgamate the Foundation with
two distinct branches – Museum and Endowments – with E.J. Hart
serving as Executive Director. In September of 2004 the Board
approved a new mission statement to guide the organization into the
future:
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In the spirit of Peter and Catharine Whyte, the
Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies acquires, preserves,
interprets, and makes accessible the history and culture of the
Rocky Mountains of Canada by inspiring and cultivating the
exchange of knowledge and ideas through our collections, programs,
and exhibitions.
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 Peter and Catharine Whyte
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