Joan O'Malley (née Donovan
) is a retired
Canadian public servant who, on November 6, 1964, sewed the first
Canadian flag. She is sometimes referred to as Canada's
Betsy Ross.
November 6, 1964
During the
1963 federal election campaign, Prime Minister
Lester Pearson
Lester Bowles "Mike" Pearson (23 April 1897 – 27 December 1972) was a Canadian scholar, statesman, diplomat, and politician who served as the 14th prime minister of Canada from 1963 to 1968.
Born in Newtonbrook, Ontario (now part of ...
promised that Canada would have a new flag within two years of his election. Three designs were chosen from a list of more than 3,500 entries.
The designs included the current Canadian flag, the “Pearson Pennant”, and a third design that resembled the current flag, but with a
Union Jack and three
fleurs-de-lis.
On November 6, 1964 – a Friday – Pearson requested that prototypes of the three flag designs under consideration be delivered to
24 Sussex Drive
24 Sussex Drive, originally called ''Gorffwysfa'' and usually referred to simply as 24 Sussex, is the official residence of the prime minister of Canada, located in the New Edinburgh neighbourhood of Ottawa, Ontario. Built between 1866 and 1868 by ...
so that he could see them displayed at his summer residence at
Harrington Lake
Harrington Lake (french: La résidence du lac Mousseau) is the summer residence and all-season retreat of the prime minister of Canada, and also the name of the land which surrounds it. The farm that surrounded most of the lake was the property ...
that weekend.
The request came to Ken Donovan, O'Malley's father, who was the assistant purchasing director with the Canadian Government Exhibition Commission.
The flags had to be entirely “Canadian content”.
However, the request had come after normal business hours and the only company that could supply the material – S.E. Woods – had no overtime staff to sew the flags.
Donovan contacted O'Malley, then 20 years old, and explained his dilemma.
A secretary at the Indian Affairs Branch of the Department of Citizenship,
O'Malley did not consider herself a professional seamstress and, at the time, her sewing experience was limited to sewing her own clothing.
Nevertheless, she agreed to prepare the prototypes. She packed up her
Singer sewing machine and drove to the Exhibition Commission office shortly after 7:00 pm.
O'Malley completed the six flags – two flags of each design – shortly after midnight. They were delivered to 24 Sussex in the middle of the night and hoisted at Harrington Lake the next morning.
Legacy
O’Malley was initially told to keep her role in creating the Canadian flag secret and she did not speak of her experience for 10 years.
In recent years, however, she has increasingly become an ambassador for the flag and has attended dozens of flag-related events.
At a ceremony on
Parliament Hill on November 14, 2014, O'Malley was presented with the flag that had been flown on the
Peace Tower on November 6 of that year, exactly 50 years after she had sewn the first prototype.
At the ceremony, she noted that while she was never paid to create the flags,
she considered the recognition she received to be payment enough.
The Singer sewing machine that O'Malley used to create the six prototypes was displayed at the
Canadian Museum of History's Canadian History Hall from 2017 to 2019.
The whereabouts of the prototypes themselves is unknown.
Comparison to Betsy Ross
O'Malley is sometimes compared to Betsy Ross, an American upholsterer who, according to legend, created the first
American flag. However, she rejects the comparison, noting that much of the story surrounding Ross is more myth than fact.
Personal life
O'Malley continued to work for the federal government and eventually took a job with the
Ontario Attorney General's office in Ottawa. She retired in 1996.
O'Malley was born in
Dauphin, Manitoba. She and her husband, Brian, raised two children. They reside in Ottawa South.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:OMalley, Joan
1940s births
Canadian women civil servants
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
People from Ottawa
People from Dauphin, Manitoba