Heritage Day 2000 Main Page
The Mace
by:
Richard Pereira, Daniel Neves, and Jack Mercer
Senior 1

Canada
The Procedures:
Before a session, the
Sergeant-at-Arms receives the mace from The Lord Chamberlain of
the Household. The Sergeant-at-Arms bearing the mace comes in
with the procession. The procession is strengthened by the
present of the mace. After the Speaker bows thrice to the Chair
the Sergeant-at-Arms puts the mace on the cushion which lies on
the Clerk's Table with the orb pointing towards the government
side of the Chamber. Then, for the whole session the
Sergeant-at-Arms stands next to the Speaker.
When the house is not in
session the mace is kept under the Table until the next one. The
mace is also kept under the Table when the elections for the
Speaker are going on, and that signifies that until the Speaker
is elected the House is not properly constituted. No one knows
why the mace is left under the Table and there are no records to
explain it; it is just a tradition. When the Speaker-Elect (the
new Speaker) goes to the appointment to hear Royal approve the
Sergeant carries the mace on his left shoulder, and when they
return the mace is carried in the normal position. When the
Speaker-Elect is seated the mace is lifted from under the Table
to the bracket on top of the Table.
After a session, the mace
is left in the custody of the Messenger outside the Doors of
Peers' Chamber. Then, he puts it under the Table and leaves. It
is a long-standing tradition that the House of Commons cannot
legally sit of conduct business without the Mace on the Table.
When the mace is not present, they cannot make laws, change laws,
repeal laws, begin a meeting, or do anything. Once a session was
suspended because the mace was not present, but all along, the
mace was right underneath the Table.
The Significance of the
Mace:
The Mace is a parliamentary
custom, an essential piece of furniture, and it has been used in
parliament for many hundreds of years. Over that time, the Mace
started to symbolize many things, but over all it symbolizes the
Royal authority and approval of Her Majesty the Queen. It also
symbolizes the authority of the Sovereign, the House of Commons,
the Speaker and the Sergeant-at-Arms.
However, there is some
controversy that the mace does not symbolize the authority of the
Speaker or the Sergeant-at-Arms. Some people think otherwise,
such as the late Lord Campion, who said that the mace does
represent the authority of the Sergeant-at-Arms when with the
mace, but not of the Speaker at all. He said that because the
Sergeant-at-Arms has the authority to arrest anyone without a
warrant when with the mace, but without the mace he needs to get
a warrant from the Speaker. Other people say that the Sergeant's
authority is only symbolized when the mace is borne before the
Speaker, or during the process to and from the Bar of the Lords.
Others believe that the mace does represent the Speaker and say
when the Mace is left underneath the Table on the leaving of the
Speaker its symbolism can only relate to the Speaker.
The History:
The mace was originally a
weapon made for war and protection. It was so powerful it could
dent the strongest armour and kill in seconds. Archers and other
types of amounted warriors used the mace as a hand arm. In the
Middle Ages it was used as a weapon to protect Kings and the
bearers of the maces were called the Sergeant-at-Arms who were
the body guards of the Kings. Gradually, it gained a ceremonial
character. Bishops also carried heavy maces made of iron. They
used them because their religion did not allow them to use
weapons that would draw blood like a sword. However, the maces
would leave huge bruises and dents.
By the thirteenth century,
the mace began to be ornamented with jewels and precious metals
(the origin of the modern mace). The shape changed and it no
longer looked like a brutal Middle Aged war weapon. Now, it is
purely ornamental and symbolic.
The original mace of Canada
was a copy of the mace in the British House of Commons, but
unfortunately, it was lost in a fire in 1916. The House used a
temporary wooden replica of the original mace, and that same
wooden mace still stands in the Speaker's office. On the
anniversary of the fire, the Sergeant-at-Arms brings out the
wooden replica. The present mace was introduced in May 1916.
Every part of the new mace was new except for one portion that
was found in the fire from the previous mace.
There have been a few cases
where members and even the Speakers have tried to get at the
mace, but all attempts failed. One example was in July of 1930
when a member, John Beckett, got up from his seat because he was
mad and took the mace from its brackets. The Sergeant-at-Arms
immediately took the mace back and put it back in it right full
place. Another one was in 1920, the Speaker got up from the Chair
and tried to get to the mace, but the Sergeant-at-Arms with the
help of a mob of members also stopped him.
Manitoba
The Manitoba Mace -
traditional symbol of the authority delegated to Parliament by
the people - plays an important role during sessions of the
Legislative Assembly.
In solemn ceremony it is
carried into the Chamber by the Sergeant-at-Arms and placed on a
large table- where it remains while the Assembly transacts its
business.
Made of gold plated metals,
it is five feet in length and approximately 22 pounds in weight.
The Royal Crown surmounting head of the mace is a symbol of the
Monarchs the head of the State and the unity that is necessary
between Crown and State to ensure the smooth functioning of
responsible government.
The original mace of the
Manitoba Legislature made its first appearance on March 15, 1871.
It was introduced at Manitoba's first Legislature, at the home of
Mr. A.G.B. Bannatyne, the merchant prince of the community. It
was entirely made of wood. Its head was carved out of the hub of
a Red River cartwheel and its staff was part of the flagstaff of
the Wolseley Expeditionary Force. It was gilded by the Hon. Henry
J. Clarke, Manitoba's first Attorney General and later he was the
Premier for a short time. On December 3, 1873 the mace escaped a
fire that destroyed the Legislature's first home. The original
mace served Manitoba for thirteen years and then was replaced by
the present mace we have today. The original mace still rests
here in the Provincial Library on a faded blue cushion on which
it had previously rested on the Table of the House.
The present mace made its
appearance in 1884 and is intricately designed with emblems and
insignia that tell the story of its background. The Rose,
Thistle, Harp and Fleur-de-Lis, national emblems of England,
Scotland, Ireland, and France symbolize the four mother countries
of the men and women who laid the laws, literature and tradition.
The Beavers on the four
arches of the Royal Crown indicate that Manitoba acknowledges
Canada's sovereignty.
New Brunswick
New Brunswick's sterling
silver mace is the symbol of parliamentary authority. The Hon.
Murray MacLaren, lieutenant- governor of the province, presented
it to the Legislative Assembly in 1937, the coronation year of
King George VI.
On top of the cushion of
the crown are the royal arms. On the head of the mace are the
arms of the province on one side, and the first great seal of the
province on the other. The Royal cypher GVIR is on both sides.
There are also sprays of purple violets, the provincial flower.
On the staff are representations of the purple violet, red spruce
and maple leaves to signify the connection between the province
and the Dominion.
The sergeant-at-arms is
responsible for the safekeeping of the mace, and the furniture
and fittings of the House. The sergeant-at-arms bearing the mace
escorts the speaker and the clerks upon their entry into and
withdrawal from the chamber. A desk is provided for the
sergeant-at-arms on the floor and he or she is available at all
times to enforce, if necessary, the orders of the speaker.
When the legislature is in
session, the mace is placed upon the table. When in committee and
when the speaker is not in the chair, the mace rests on brackets
beneath the table. When not in session, the mace remains in the
speaker's care.
Today in most Commonwealth
legislatures, a mace will be found in the House. It is the symbol
of the speaker's authority as a servant of the House.
The history of the
development of the mace in British parliaments is both
interesting and curious. In medieval times, it was a weapon of
defense used in close combat, especially by ecclesiastics to whom
the sword was a forbidden weapon. Later, when it came to be
associated with assembled lawmakers, it served as an effective
weapon for preserving order. Only gradually did it assume its
present ceremonial role. The speaker's procession and the mace
are the daily reminders that parliament won the battle for
supremacy over arbitrary government.
Ontario
The presence of the mace in
the House symbolizes the authority given to the Speaker to
oversee the Legislature and the process of creating new laws in
Ontario. Each day the house is in session, the Sergeant at Arms
leads the procession into the Chamber. Over his right shoulder,
he carries the mace, which is brought to the Clerk's table and
placed on a cushion. The crown of the mace always faces the
government, while the opposite end or the "club" faces
the opposition.
British Columbia
The Sergeant-at-Arms is
responsible for the care and custody of the mace, and carries it
to lead the Speaker in the Speaker's Procession at the opening
and closing of each day's sittings of the House. Centuries ago,
the mace was the personal weapon of a Sergeant-at-Arms, and also
his badge of office and authority, displaying the royal insignia
to people who could not read. In more modern times, the mace has
become the symbol of the authority of the House itself, and it
must be present upon the table for the House to conduct its
business. When the House is resolved into a Committee of the
Whole House, the mace is moved to a position below the table.
Since British Columbia
became a province of Canada in 1871, there have been three
successive maces in the Legislative Assembly. The first was used
from 1872 to 1897; it was made by Mr. C. Bunting in gilded,
carved wood, with a carved crown and Grecian cross. The second
mace was first used on 10 February 1898 at opening of the newly
completed Parliament Buildings, and was made of brass by Winslow
Brothers of Chicago.
The present mace of the
Legislative Assembly of British Columbia was adopted in 1954. It
was entirely handmade by Jefferies & Company, Victoria
silversmiths, from native British Columbia silver, plated with 24
carat gold, weighing 11 pounds. The traditional design has a long
shaft topped by a deep bowl surmounted by a representation of St.
Edward's Crown and the Royal Cypher. The bowl bears the coats of
arms of Canada and British Columbia, and four embossed scenes
depicting the province's forestry, fishing, agriculture and
mining industries. These scenes are similar to the murals in the
main rotunda of the Parliament Buildings.
When the Legislative
Assembly is sitting, the Sergeant-at-Arms or a deputy is always
present in the Legislative Chamber, and enforces the instructions
of the Speaker in the event of any disorder in the House, the
lobbies and corridors, or the public galleries. Under the
authority of the House, the Sergeant-at-Arms may take into
custody any persons who misconduct themselves. The
Sergeant-at-Arms may also, when instructed by the House or upon
the issuance of a Speaker's Warrant, ensure the attendance at the
Bar of the House of any persons who are summoned to account for
behaviour that breaches Parliamentary Privileges.
The Sergeant-at-Arms is a
permanent Officer of the House, whose functions have evolved over
several centuries of parliamentary tradition, beginning with the
appointment of the first Sergeant-at-Arms for the British House
of Commons in the year 1415. In the British Columbia Legislative
Assembly, the Sergeant-at-Arms has responsibility for the
ceremonial aspects of the House, the "preservation of
order," and related administrative and supports functions.
The Sergeant-at-Arms
ensures that the House, its Committees and Members are able to
conduct their business without disturbance or interruption. He
manages access to the Public Galleries of the House and other
parts of the Parliament Buildings, and is responsible for
managing the Legislative Security Staff and providing security
services to the Parliament Buildings complex, its occupants, and
the public. Related functions of the Sergeant-at-Arms include
custody of the Legislative Chamber and its furnishings, custody
of Bills prior to introduction, timely distribution of
Legislative documents, parking facilities, and messenger and
courier services.
Alberta
The mace, the ceremonial
staff that the Sergeant-at-Arms carries into the Chamber each
sitting day, is the symbol of the Speaker's authority and,
therefore, the authority of the Assembly. When the Assembly is
sitting, the Sergeant-at-Arms places the mace on the Table with
the orb and cross facing the government side of the Chamber. When
the Speaker leaves the Chair and the Assembly sits as a committee
of the whole, the mace is moved to brackets on the underside of
the Table. Although the mace has no constitutional significance,
it is so important as a symbol that the Assembly cannot conduct
its business unless the mace is present.
Like so many other features
of the Legislative Assembly, the Mace has a history going back to
medieval England. When soldiers went to battle for the monarch,
they were armed with swords, while the bishops who went with them
carried maces with the royal coat of arms engraved at the bottom
of the shaft. Far from being merely decorative though, the
earliest maces were lethal weapons with spikes and blades that
could penetrate armour.
Two kings of the 12th
century, Richard I of England and Philip II of France, armed
their bodyguards with maces, which were used both in battle and
in royal ceremonies. Gradually the Mace became a symbol of the
monarch's authority instead of a real weapon. As the mace
developed symbolic stature, its appearance changed accordingly.
Jewels, precious metals, and other lavish decorations replaced
the spikes and other warlike apparatus, and the royal coat of
arms became the mace's most important emblem. As a result, the
coat of arms was made larger and moved from the bottom of the
shaft to the top.
The mace probably appeared
in the British Parliament as early as the 14th century, when the
monarch first ordered a Sergeant-at-Arms to enter the Chamber
with the Speaker. As the monarch's power decreased and
Parliament's grew, the mace became Parliament's symbol as well.
The modern mace thus represents the authority of a parliament or
assembly as well as the monarch's.
Both Britain and Canada
have long recognized the symbolic importance of the mace. In
Britain, King Charles I tried in 1626 to close Parliament by
demanding the surrender of the mace, and Oliver Cromwell made
sure it was removed when he forcibly dismissed a Parliament in
1653. In the 19th century, the British House of Commons had to
delay a daily sitting when the keys to the cupboard holding the
mace went missing. Here in Alberta, the First Legislature was
caught off guard just before its first sitting: there was no
mace. Because nobody so much as suggested that a sitting could be
held without it, Alexander Rutherford's Liberal government
ordered the rush construction of one from Watson Brothers jewelry
in Calgary.
Watson Brothers hired Rufus
E. Butterworth, a Canadian Pacific Railway employee from Calgary,
to do the job. He came up with Alberta's first Mace in only a few
weeks' time, and it was made entirely of scrap. Its shaft was
plumbing pipe mounted on a toilet tank float, some ornamental
decorations around the orb were made from old shaving mug
handles, and bits of an old bedstead and other scraps of wood
formed the rest. A piece of red velvet and a coat of gold paint
provided the finishing touches, and the mace was sent to Edmonton
in time for the Legislature's March 15, 1906, opening ceremonies
at the Thistle curling rink.
Remarkably, the makeshift
mace was used for 50 years. It was finally replaced on February
9, 1956, when the provincial employees' union presented a new
mace Legislative Assembly as an expression of loyalty and in
commemoration of Alberta's Golden Jubilee 1905-1955."
The new mace was designed
by L. B. Blain of Irving Kline Limited, Edmonton, and built by an
English silversmith, Joseph Fray Limited, Birmingham. It is about
three feet long and contains 200 ounces of sterling silver
overlaid with gold. Engraved on the shaft's surface are some of
the emblems and symbols of Alberta, including wild roses, sheaves
of wheat, and a coloured shield. The crown features a hand-carved
beaver, engravings of wild roses and sheaves of wheat, and a ring
of precious stones that spell "Alberta": Amethyst,
Lapis Lazuli, Beryl, Emerald, Ruby, Topaz, Aquamarine. Two coats
of arms adorn the ball of the mace, those of Canada and of the
British monarch.
Nova Scotia
The mace is the elegant and
ancient symbol of the Royal Authority, delegated in Nova Scotia
to the House of Assembly. Originally a battle weapon, carried by
the royal bodyguard when medieval English kings conducted their
own assemblies, the mace became emblematic of the transfer of
power to the English Parliament. As the Speaker became
responsible to the House rather than the King, the power of the
Crown was represented in the ceremonial mace. When the Nova
Scotia Assembly is in session, the mace is the Speaker's
authority to conduct the business of the House, and is always in
the care of the.
The present mace was a gift
to the House of Assembly, in 1930, from the Chief Justice of Nova
Scotia, the Honourable Robert E. Harris and Mrs. Harris. It is
silver gilt and four feet tall. Depicted in the glittering
surfaces of the mace are the Royal Crown, the Armorial
Achievement of Nova Scotia, the Great Seal of the Province, and
the floral emblem of Nova Scotia, the mayflower.
Newfoundland
The mace is another symbol
closely associated with the Speaker. It embodies the ancient
authority of the Crown, today exercised by the Assembly. In the
House, it also represents the authority of the Speaker, because
"the authority of the Speaker and of the House are
indivisible."
In the Middle Ages, the
mace was the weapon of the Sergeant-at-Arms, who was then the
King's bodyguard. It was heavy enough to smash armour and was
used to defend the King's person from any attacker. It was also
used in summoning accused persons before the King for judgment.
In the thirteenth century, the mace began to be ornamented with
jewels and precious metals, the origin of the elaborate modern
mace object.
Nowadays the mace is an
integral part of parliamentary decorum. Without it, the House is
not constituted and proceedings cannot begin. It is borne on the
shoulders of the Sergeant-at-Arms when the Speaker processes from
place to place, and when the Speaker is seated in the Chair, the
mace rests on the Table. When the House sits in Committee of the
Whole, the mace is placed below the Table on special brackets.
Northwest Territories
At the beginning of each
day's sitting of the Legislative Assembly, a procession enters
the Assembly Chamber. Everyone in the Chamber stands respectfully
as the Sergeant-at-Arms, carrying the mace on his right should,
leads the procession, followed by the Speaker and the Clerks.
Without the mace, no
proceedings may take place in the Chamber. The mace is a symbol
of the authority of the Legislative Assembly and its Speaker.
The origin of the mace goes
back many centuries in history. Ancient traditions surround the
mace, an essential part of the Regalia of the British Parliament.
The mace was originally a
weapon, designed to be capable of breaking through the strongest
armour. Sergeant-at-Arms of the King's Bodyguards, established by
both French and English kings in the 12th century, were equipped
with maces to protect the King. Because the duties of these
officers include apprehending people threatening to the King and
summoning people to the royal presence, the mace came to be
regarded as a symbol of the King's authority.
Later, the mace developed
its ceremonial significance and, in the 13th century, maces were
ornamented with jewel and precious metals. In addition, in that
century, mayors and civic authorities were given the right to
carry ornamented maces. By the 16th century, they were in general
use. It is not known when a mace was first carried before a
Speaker in the British House of Parliament but its use probably
dates from before the separation of Parliament into the House of
Lords and the House of Commons in the 14th century. It is
probable that when the King appointed a Sergeant-at-Arms to
attend the Speaker, a mace went with him as a symbol of royal
authority delegated to the Speaker.
In other Parliaments of the
Commonwealth, maces, following a similar design to the original
maces, are also used to symbolize the authority of the
legislative body.
In the Legislative Assembly
of the Northwest Territories, the mace, carried by the
Sergeant-at-Arms precedes the Speaker, on entering and leaving
the Chamber.
When the Speaker is in the
Chair and the Legislative Assembly is sitting in formal session,
the mace lies the Table of the House, resting on cushions. When
the Speaker leaves the Chair and the Assembly sits as committee
of the Whole, the mace is removed and placed in brackets below
the Table.
In 1956, the Right
Honourable Vicent Massey, then Governor General of Canada,
decided the Council of the Northwest Territories should have its
own symbol of authority. He had a mace made and presented to the
Council during its session held in Ottawa on January 1956.
The mace, made almost
entirely of materials found in the North, was to include symbols
of the history and life of the Northwest Territories. It was made
by eight Inuit craftsmen from Cape Dorset, under the directed of
well-known artist James Houston. The 1.7 metre long, 15 kilogram
mace was completed in 21 days.
The most difficult detail
of its construction was the crown at the head of the mace. A 36
block of native copper was brought to Cape Dorset from the
Central Arctic to be used for the crown. The copper was pounded
into sheets with rocks and a sledgehammer and these sheets were
then cut and hammered into shape using rocks and forms. When the
crown was completed, one of its projections broke off but the
copper, by then, was gone.
One of the women in the
community donated a large copper kettle brought to Cape Dorset in
1921 by reindeer herders from Lapland. The copper from the kettle
was used to replace the damaged section and the woman later
received a new kettle as a gift from the Governor General.
Above the crown is an orb
made of whalebone left on the shore of Baffin Island a century
earlier by Scottish whalers. Below the crown, also carved of
whalebone, is a circle of bowhead whales and another showing a
muskox, polar bear, caribou, walrus, wolf, white whale, hunter
and mother and child. A third ring represents Arctic fox pelts,
staple of the northern economy. As well, the head of the mace
includes four muskox horns from the High Arctic and four discs of
pure gold from the Yellowknife mines. Two decorative bands of
porcupine quillwork were made by a Dene woman from Fort
Providence.
The mace's shaft is a
narwhal and at the foot is another set of rings, one of whalebone
showing seals and another of oak. The oak was salvaged from the
wrecked of HMS Fury, British explorer Sir William Parry's ship,
which ran aground on Somerset Island in 1825. The wood was found
in the early 1940's when the RCMP patrol vessel St. Roch
successfully navigated the Northwest Passages. Carvings in the
oak depicted European sailing ships and the entry of explorers
and traders into the Arctic.
After it was completed, the
mace was displayed extensively across Canada in provincial
legislatures and as a part of a Hudson's Bay Company display.
During the 1956 and 1957, it was viewed in every province except
Quebec.
Following its official
presentation at the Council session in Ottawa in January 1956,
the mace was shipped north for sessions in Inuvik, Frobisher Bay
and Chesterfield Inlet.
The constant moving from
the south to the north and back, with rapid changes in
temperature and humidity, caused cracks to develop in the
whalebone. Before more damage could result, it was decided a
replica be made.
This took two years to
complete and cost $3,000. The replica was made of gold-plated
brass, along with a narwhal tusk, muskox horns and porcupine
quillwork. With the brass, it is two kilograms heavier than the
original but can withstand changes in humidity and temperature
and the vibrations of travel.
The replica has been use at
all Legislative Assembly sessions since 1956. The original mace,
considered now to be priceless, is kept at the Prince of Wales
Northern Heritage Centre in Yellowknife.