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British Columbia

UBC unearths time capsule to mark 100 years since 'great trek' student protest

Newspapers, menus and postcards were among items pulled from a time capsule buried on UBCs campus 50 years ago to mark the anniversary of a student protest, which helped usher in the school as its known today on its Point Grey campus.

Items pulled from capsule marked anniversary of protest that pushed for campus at Point Grey

A time capsule unearthed at UBC on Friday Oct. 28, 2022 to mark 100 years since the 'great trek' student protest in 1922.
The time capsule unearthed at the University of British Columbia on Friday, Oct. 28, to mark 100 years since the 'great trek' student protest in 1922. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC News)

Newspapers, menus and postcards were among items pulled from a time capsule buried on the University of British Columbia'scampus 50 years ago to mark the anniversary of a student protest, which helped usher in the school as it's known today on its Point Grey campus.

Five students were drawn at random to open the time capsule, which was buried in 1972 to mark 50 years since students at the school marched to demand provincial funding to finish building thecampus.

The ceremony on Friday included present-day and historical student society leaders, local politicians and even former Canadian prime minister Kim Campbell, a former student at the school.

"I'm a little terrified about what might be in the time capsule," saidGordon Blankstein, who was a student executive at UBC'sAlma Mater Society (AMS) in 1972 when the capsule was buried.

"I hope there's nothing offensive to anybody because it was definitely different times."

UBC student society president Eshana Bhangu holds a time capsule from 1972 over her head on Friday during a ceremony at the school to open it. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC News)

Most of the items were made of paper such as a Province newspaper, school records detailing the number of students enrolled in the school, a menu from the ceremony when the 1972 capsule was buried and an engineering student newspaper, which featured some off-colour content.

Blanksteinwas among several dignitaries to speak at Friday's event, which also looked back to the 1922 protest that ushered inthe change needed to create the school as it's known today.

"I can remember the trekkers from 1922. Many of them were First World War veterans that came and wanted an education," he said.

On Oct. 28, 1922, more than 1,000 students marched through Vancouver to Point Grey, a distance of about eight kilometres, to the mostly barren location where efforts to finalize and build a proper campus for the school had stalled during and following the First World War.

UBC students march to Point Grey on Oct. 28, 1922 to protest a delay to finishing the school's campus there.
UBC students march to Point Grey on Oct. 28, 1922 to protest a delay in finishing the school's campus there. (University of British Columbia Library)

The University of British Columbia opened on Sept. 30, 1915, occupying facilities in the Fairview area of Vancouver, what is now Vancouver General Hospital.

The school soon outgrew its modest beginnings, as students overcrowded lecture halls and laboratory facilities. This soon led to students organizing a petition calling for the province to put up funding for the new campus.

Students protesting the delay to finishing UBC's Point Grey campus sit in a half-built science building following a protest march from downtown Vancouver on Oct. 28, 1922.
Students protesting the delay in finishing UBC's Point Grey campus sit in a half-built science building following a protest march from downtown Vancouver on Oct. 28, 1922. ( University of British Columbia Library)

Historical documents and newspaperaccounts from the time said that around 56,000 signatures were delivered to the legislature in Victoria, while the protest march, later named the "great trek," helped to secure $1.5 million from the province to move forward with the Point Grey campus.

"It represents the first big win for students who really cared on this campus," said current UBC AMS PresidentEshana Bhangu.

UBC student society president Eshana Bhangu, right, helps students, chosen at random, remove items from a time capsule opened on Oct. 28, 2022, 50 years after being buried to mark the 'great trek' student protest at UBC in 1922.
UBC student society president Eshana Bhangu, right, helps students, chosen at random, remove items from a time capsule opened on Oct. 28, 2022, 50 years after being buried to mark the 'great trek' student protest at UBC in 1922. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC News)

The ceremony on Friday also put a new time capsule in the ground to be opened in October 2072.

Items included an "Every Child Matters" orange t-shirt with the text written in the Musqueam language, a medalcommemorating the 100-year anniversary of the great trek, a lab coat, a COVID-19 test, KN95 face mask, an iPhoneand hundreds of letters students wrote to be read 50 years from now.

Bhangu said the project has helped create a sense of togetherness on campus and a link to the past.

"We're very happy to see the participation and celebration of this kind of an effort because while the fight may not be to build a new campus these days, there are a lot of issues that students have to advocate for."

With files from CBC's Early Edition and Maggie MacPherson