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Chapter 12
CANADA
Visitors to Canada would do
well to understand that it is a bilingual country, based on
the fact that its origins go back to a struggle for
possession between the French and the British. That struggle
was finally settled in 1759 with a British victory over the
French on the Plains of Abraham, near modern Quebec City.
However, the British were, considering the times, tolerant
rulers, and many French settlers remained in the country and
have subsequently played a major role in its history. Modern
Canada was established in 1867 by the British North America
Act. With it came a constitution, thought it is not an
imitation of the United States constitution, but rather the
British constitution federalized, which includes many
unwritten conventions. Today Canada is a modern “western
country,” with a relatively small population for its vast
territorial size. The capital city is Ottawa.
Until very recent times, Canadian science and medicine were
far more closely integrated with those of Britain, but with
the huge expansion of these fields in the United States from
World War II onwards, Canadian science and medicine have
inevitably accommodated to this fact. Nevertheless they have
their own independent traditions, and are likely to cling to
them.
TORONTO
Toronto, Ontario, is the number two city in Canada, and
along with Montreal, can certainly be considered the home of
Canadian medicine. It was here in 1921 that a truly great
medical event took place, namely, the demonstration of the
antidiabetic properties of insulin, and its subsequent use
in therapy. It was the first major therapeutic application
of a hormone. In its day it was sensational with its almost
miraculous results. It should be made clear that there are
several kinds of diabetes, but the one which has been of
such importance in human history is diabetes mellitus (form
the Latin, and it literally means honey diabetes). It is a
chronic form of diabetes, characterized by an excess of
sugar in the blood and urine, together with hunger, thirst,
gradual loss of weight and other side effects commonly
leading to death. It has plagued mankind throughout recorded
history, and it is only since 1921 that it has been brought
under control (there is still no cure) by the therapeutic
use of insulin. Indeed many millions of diabetics owe their
lives, and their ability to live a more or less satisfactory
existence, to this discovery. Traditionally the credit for
the discovery has always gone to Frederick Banting
(1891-1941), and Charles Best (1899-1978), but that is
certainly a simplification of the realities, if not an
outright distortion, and unfortunately instead of giving
full credit to all those responsible, “nationalism” reared
its ugly head with the inevitable misrepresentation. The
initial work was indeed carried out by Banting and Best, but
this was done in the laboratory of Professor John James
Macleod, a Scotsman, under his guidance and with the input
of his vast experience and knowledge. In addition the
biochemist J.B. Collip played a crucial role in purifying
the insulin. However, there was one organization that was
not intimidated by the “propaganda,” and that was the Nobel
Committee in Sweden. For when they awarded the Nobel Prize
in 1923, they awarded it to Macleod and Banting, albeit
under a storm of protest. They knew what they were doing—but
in Toronto it is still Banting and Best who are the heroes!
Frederick Bantin was born in Alliston, Ontario, and grew up
on the family farm. He went to local schools, and in due
course entered the University of Toronto to study theology,
but soon transferred to medicine, receiving a M.B. degree in
1916. At this time World War I was at its height, and
Banting was soon in the Canadian Army. He was wounded and
decorated, but at the end of the war returned to the
University of Toronto to study for his M.D. degree. He was
briefly associated with the University of Western Ontario in
London, but in the spring of 1921 returned to the University
of Toronto to undertake research with Charles Best on
diabetes, and this work was to be crowned with success. A
year later Banting and Best were world famous, and their
technique of treating diabetes with insulin is still in use
today. Banting was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1923, and
honors from all over the world poured in upon him. The same
year he became Director of Medical Research at the
University of Toronto, and the following year was knighted.
He himself pursued an active research career, mainly in the
fields of cancer and heart disease. In 1939 World War II
started, and Banting was again quickly in the Canadian Army
Medical Corps. This ended in tragedy, for in 1941 he was
killed in an air crash in Newfoundland while on his way to
England. His body was recovered, and now rests in Mount
Pleasant Cemetery in Toronto.
Charles Best was born in West Pembroke, Maine, of Canadian
parents, who soon afterwards moved back to Canada and
eventually to Toronto. Best received his education in
Toronto, which was interrupted by service in World War I. In
1921 he received a B.A. degree in physiology and
biochemistry from the University of Toronto. It was that
summer, while he was just 22, that he worked with Banting on
the diabetes problem. Despite his almost immediate fame, he
returned to the University of Toronto as a student,
receiving his M.D. degree in 1925, and until his retirement
was actively engaged in medical research. In 1929 he became
head of the university’s Department of Physiology, and in
1941 head of the newly established Banting and Best
Department of Medical Research. His name is closely
associated with the development of such new drugs as
histamine, heparin, choline and others. He died in Toronto
in 1978 and is buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery.
The Charles H. Best Institute
112 College Street
Toronto
Opening hours:
Normal business hours.
No charge for admission.
This is a working institute of medical research.
The Old Medical Sciences Building where Banting and Best
worked no longer survives. In place of it is a huge medical
complex on the west side of Queen’s Park. Outside this
complex is a large brass plaque which commemorates the event
which took place there. However, just across Queen’s Park on
College Street, is the Charles H. Best Institute. This was
opened in 1953 in honor of the great work of Charles Best
and Sir Frederick Banting. It is primarily devoted to
medical research, but visitors are welcome on the ground
floor where there are many portraits etc. of famous doctors,
including Best himself. In addition they have some of the
original equipment, including Best’s colorimeter, which he
and Banting used in the summer of 1921. It is fascinating to
see how primitive, by modern standards, this equipment was,
yet they achieved so much. The equipment, documents,
photographs, etc. may be seen by application to the business
office of the institute. It is well worth the effort
involved.
The Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library
120 St. George Street
Toronto
Opening hours:
October - April, Monday - Saturday, 9.00 - 17.00
May - September, Monday - Friday, 9.00 - 17.00
Closed on Sundays and public holidays.
No charge for admission.
This is under the direction of the main library of the
University of Toronto, but is a separate building (opened
1973) devoted to rare books and special collections. There
is also a display area on the second floor, where there are
regularly changing exhibitions. There are particularly fine
collections in English literature, Italian Renaissance
literature and for our particular purposes, incredible
collections of science and medicine from the Renaissance to
the 20th century. Included amongst these is perhaps the
finest Darwinian collection outside the Cambridge University
Library in England (see under Cambridge, England). We cannot
recommend this superb historical library too strongly.
The William Boyd Library and Medical Museum
The Toronto Academy of Medicine
288 Bloor Street West,
Toronto
Opening hours:
Monday - Friday only, 9.30 - 16.00
No charge for admission.
This institution has a small but excellent medical
historical library, and a limited but very good medical
museum.
The Ontario Science Center
770 Don Mills Road (at Eglinton)
Toronto
Opening hours:
Daily, 10.00 - 18.00
Small charge for admission.
This is an enormous science and technology museum. Many
years in the building, it was opened in 1964 in celebration
of the 100th year of the founding of the Province of
Ontario.
The museum’s main function is education in a broad field of
subjects, and the excellent displays range from aeronautics
and astronomy to medicine and natural history. It is not
necessary to mention them all here, suffice it to say there
are many, and we can hardly overstress the size of the
museum, it is enormous. Of particular interest to us is a
complete natural size replica of the laboratory used by
Banting and Best in 1921. It is most impressive. Some years
before his death we had an interview with Dr. Charles Best
and we asked him if indeed it was an accurate copy of the
original. “Yes” he replied, “as I recall things it is very
accurate, with the one exception that it is much cleaner
than the original!”
VANCOUVER
Vancouver, British Columbia, is the principle city of Canada
on the west coast, and is fast becoming a major cultural and
scientific center.
The Charles Woodward Memorial Room
Woodward Biomedical Library
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, B.C.
Opening hours:
Monday - Friday only, 9.00 - 17.00
No charge for admission.
This is open to the public, but permission to use it must be
obtained from
the librarian.
The Charles Woodward Memorial Room houses one of the finest
historical medical and biological libraries in North
America. In Canada it is second only to the Osler Library
(which regrettably we have not seen) at McGill University in
Montreal.
The library is divided into two parts, the working
historical biomedical library on the ground floor, and above
on the balcony is a superb collection of very rare and
valuable biomedical books. On the ground floor, there are
also very fine tapestries showing the history of medicine
and other beautiful portraits, busts, etc. From time to time
there are special exhibits on various aspects of biomedical
history. This library should not be missed by anyone going
to Vancouver.
VICTORIA
This is the capital city of British Columbia located on
Vancouver Island and a very pleasant ferry ride from
Vancouver.
The British Columbia Provincial Museum
Belleville and Government Streets
Victoria, B.C.
Opening hours:
Daily, 10.00 - 17.30
No charge for admission.
This museum is primarily devoted to science and technology
(not medicine), but we mention it here simply because it is
large, excellent and very new. They have used modern
techniques in all their displays, principally of biology and
Indian anthropology. We cannot speak too highly of it. It is
one of the best in the world.
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