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From the archives

The Prognosis

Looking the consequences in the eye

The Passport

New-found meaning behind that slim and elegant booklet

The Canadian Conversation

A Polish journalist’s perspective on residential schools

Doctor Who?

Taking the Château Frontenac to court

Graham Fraser

L’affaire Cannon: Enquête sur le combat d’un médecin afro-américain contre la discrimination raciale au Château Frontenac

François Charbonneau

Les Éditions du Boréal

328 pages, softcover and ebook

On June 8, 2020, the University of Ottawa political scientist François Charbonneau turned on his computer and read a column by Jean-François Nadeau, who often writes about historical issues in Le Devoir. Nadeau told the story of George Cannon, a physician who had experienced racist treatment from the staff when he and his wife stayed at the Château Frontenac in August 1945. It was an incident, Nadeau argued, that confirmed the racism of Quebec society.

Something didn’t feel right about the account for Charbonneau. He found it improbable that the staff on their own initiative could have asked an American guest to leave the dining room. Later he stumbled across a 1948 article by the journalist Miriam Chapin, who referred to the absence of colour prejudice in Quebec. In her telling, when the historic hotel closed its dining room to a Black guest for fear of offending white American ones, the doctor who was the victim of the policy received dozens of calls from...

Graham Fraser is the author of Sorry, I Don’t Speak French and other books.

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