Canadian Armed Forces Tattoo 1967
Fort ready for the show | |
Date | March 1967 |
---|---|
Location | Canada |
Organised by | Canadian military |
Participants | 1700 |
The Canadian Armed Forces Tattoo 1967 was a series of military tattoos or displays performed by members of the Canadian military portraying more than three hundred years of Canada's military history. The Tattoo, which was the Canadian military's contribution to Canada's centennial year celebrations in 1967, toured the country from coast to coast. This was the largest such event in the history of the Canadian military.[1]
The Tattoo shows started in late March 1967 and ended in October after approximately 150 performances in over 40 cities across Canada. The Tattoo performed in every Province in Canada.[2] After several years of planning, rehearsals for the show commenced in late February of 1967 at Camp Picton (later CFB Picton) in Ontario.[3] All branches of the military - the Royal Canadian Navy, Canadian Army, and Royal Canadian Air Force - participated.
There were three parts to the Tattoo:
- Between March and May two identical shows, one traveling in a blue train and the other in a red train, each with about 450 men, toured across Canada and performed in arenas. [4]
- The two trains united in Victoria, BC and were augmented by more military personnel to form a show of 1700 men and woman. This second part of the tour played in larger stadiums, for example, Empire Stadium in Vancouver, Autostade at Expo 67 in Montreal and the CNE Stadium in Toronto, then Ottawa and finally in Hamilton, Ontario. Hamilton was the last stadium show.
- Following the Hamilton stadium show, a troupe similar in size to the train shows toured the Maritimes in the late summer and early fall of 1967. The tattoo has never been repeated.
Upon the completion of the last show in October 11, 1967 all the hundreds of uniforms, costumes, muskets, swords, etc. where put into storage and over the years have been sold off to museums and private collectors.
References
- ↑
- "Canadian Armed Forces Tattoo" Ottawa Citizen, 28 June 1985
- ↑ Aykroyd, Peter H. The Anniversary Compulsion: Canada's Centennial Celebrations, A Model Mega-Anniversary Dundurn Press, 1 January 1992.
- ↑ Courneya-Fralick, Joanne. Camp Picton: A Storied 70 Years in a Canadian Military Training Camp FriesenPress, 12 September 2013.
- ↑ Centennial News: Manitoba Pageant, Spring 1966, Volume 11, Number 3.
- Gimblett, Richard H., Hadley, Michael L. Citizen Sailors: Chronicles of Canada's Naval Reserve, 1910-2010. Dundurn, 16 Nov 2010.
- Wilson, Keith. "Tattoo 1967 can live again in 2017". The Windsor Star, 20 April 2012
- Concert band plays tribute to retired captain
- "The Canadian Armed Forces Tattoo" The News and Eastern Townships Advocate, 22 Jun 1967.