Canada Post millennium stamps explained

Common Name:Canada Post Millennium Collection
Country Of Production:Canada
Face Value:46¢x4 per minisheet
Commemorates:Events and people of the 20th century in Canada in 17 minisheets that commemorates various aspects of Canada
Depicts:Various people, things, events in 4 stamps per minisheet
Notability:Not notable
Designer:Various
Engraver:various
Dimensions:112x
Nature Of Rarity:Not rare

Due to popular demand, Canada Post released the 68 specially designed stamps as a series of 17 Millennium souvenir sheets from December 17, 1999 to March 17, 2000 each depicting four different stamps.

December 1999

This first series highlights pivotal Canadian subjects in the world of entertainment and the arts, including IMAX motion-picture technology, the Calgary Stampede, singer Félix Leclerc and the National Film Board. The simultaneously released Millennium Souvenir Sheet OFDCs will be cancelled in Ottawa.[1]

The Millennium Collection, Canadian Entertainment

Famous throughout the world, the Calgary Stampede has put the wild in the West for more than eight decades, thrilling visitors with traditional rodeo events such as chuckwagon racing, calf roping and bareback bronc riding.[1]

A spectacular blend of music, theatre, dance and acrobatics, Cirque du Soleil has blossomed from a group of Quebec buskers into an award-winning troupe of more than 550 performers whose shows have wowed millions worldwide.[1]

Play-by-play announcers have brought the excitement of Canada's national game into our living rooms since Foster Hewitt first went on the air in 1923. Today few broadcasting institutions are as entrenched in our culture as Hockey Night in Canada and the French-language La Soirée du hockey.[1]

Today, few broadcasting institutions are as entrenched in our culture as Hockey Night in Canada and the French-language La Soirée du hockey. During his 33 years with La Soirée, announcer René Lecavalier created a unique lexicon for the sport that is still used today.[1]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 December 1999Cirque du Soleil

A World of Fun

46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Marc Serre and Daniel Fortin, Designed by George FokBased on a photograph by Al Seib
17 December 1999Hockey Night in Canada: "He Shoots, He Scores" 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Sheri Hancock and Hélène L'Heureux, Based on a photograph by Bernard Bohn and the Hockey Hall of Fame
17 December 1999La Soirée du hockey: Live From the Forum 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Sheri Hancock and Hélène L'Heureux, Based on a photograph by Bernard Bohn and Radio-Canada
17 December 1999The Wild West Comes Alive at the Calgary Stampede 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Terry Gregoraschuk

The Millennium Collection, Extraordinary Entertainers

Considered the father of modern Quebec song, playwright and actor Félix Leclerc paved the way for the popular chansonnier movement and influenced the careers of many successful singers.[2]

Glenn Gould was one of the 20th century's most brilliant pianists. Celebrated for his unique interpretations of the work of Bach, Beethoven and other composers, the Toronto native's legacy included more than 80 works and numerous awards.[2]

The leader of the top band in North America in its day, Guy Lombardo was best known for his legendary 48-years stint in New York City, where he and his Royal Canadians performed live for annual New Year's Eve broadcasts.[2]

Nova Scotia-born contralto Portia White helped break the colour barrier in classical music during the 1940s, dazzling concert hall audiences in North America and abroad with her stunning voice.[2]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 December 1999Félix Leclerc: Father of Quebec's New Song 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Yvon Laroche, Based on a photograph by Jean-Louis Frund
17 December 1999Glenn Gould's Variations 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Avi Dunkelman, Based on a photograph by Walter Curtin and by Don Hunstein
17 December 1999Guy Lombardo: Happy New Year 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Russ Willms
17 December 1999Portia White: Irrepressible Talent 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Fraser Ross, Based on an illustration by Bonnie Ross, Based on a photograph by Yousuf Karsh

The Millennium Collection, Fostering Canadian Talent

One of the country's most valued institutions, the Canada Council fosters the creativity of new and established artists by providing a range of grants and services to individuals, groups, professional organizations, galleries and publishing houses.[3]

From its early days in radio to its present dynamic television networks, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation has helped shape our national consciousness through its commitment to high-quality current affairs and entertainment programming.[4]

Dedicated to showcasing the voice and vision of Canadian filmmakers, the National Film Board of Canada, represented here by John Spotton, has produced more than 9,000 original films and earned numerous international awards over the past 60 years.[4]

The Toronto-based Royal Canadian Academy of Arts is the oldest national organization of professional Canadian artists, and was instrumental in establishing the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa.[4]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 December 1999The Canada Council: Friend to the Arts 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Paul Haslip
17 December 1999Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Clermont Malenfant, Based on a photograph by Brian Willer and by Ashley Crippen
17 December 1999National Film Board of Canada 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Geneviève Caron, Based on a photograph by National Film Board of Canada
17 December 1999Royal Canadian Academy of Arts 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Jean Michaud, Based on a photograph by Notman & Sandham

The Millennium Collection, Media Technologies

Originated at Montreal's Expo 67, IMAX gives movie audience a larger-than-life experience by projecting dazzling images shot on special large-format film onto screens up to eight storeys high.[5]

Before becoming an Allied super spy during the Second World War, Sir William Stephenson developed a radio facsimile device that revolutionized the newspaper industry by enabling the wireless transmission of publishable photographs.[5]

Montreal-based Softimage Co. is the world's leading 2-D and 3-D animation software designer and the wizard behind the stunning special effects in such Oscar-winning blockbusters as Jurassic Park and Titanic.[5]

Ted Rogers Sr. invented a tube which allowed hum-free radios to be plugged directly into electrical outlets. His work lives on in his son's telecommunications empire, which spans everything from cable television to Internet access.[5]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 December 1999IMAX: A New Kind of Movie 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Kostas Tsetsekas, Geoff Kehrig. Photos: Girl (Larry Goldstein), Africa's Elephant Kingdom (Courtesy Discovery Channel Pictures), Destiny in Space (© Smithsonian Institution/Lockheed Martin Corporation)
17 December 1999Softimage: From the Computer Age to the Dinosaur Age 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Hoover Chung
17 December 1999Sir William Stephenson: A Man Called Inventor 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Bryan Canning and Malcolm Waddell, Based on a photograph by Syd Davy
17 December 1999Ted Rogers Sr.: Plugging in the Radio 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Darrell Corriveau, Peter D.K. Scott and Glenda Rissman, Based on photographs by Liam Sharp and Rogers Communication Inc.

January 2000

January's series of four Millennium souvenir sheets features, among others, Lester B. Pearson, Terry Fox and CIDA. These bold 112-by-108 mm souvenir sheets frame four 36-by-48 mm stamps in thematic groupings that celebrate Canadian giants in fields as diverse as medicine, finance, peacekeeping and international development.[6]

The Millennium Collection, Hearts of Gold

Established in 1968, the Canadian International Development Agency is responsible for administering the bulk of Canada's foreign aid budget to provide assistance for sustainable development projects in more than 100 countries.[6]

For more than a century, Canadian missionaries have dedicated their lives to working in the developing world. Montreal-born surgeon Lucille Teasdale spent more than 30 years running a hospital in Uganda before dying of AIDS she contracted while operating on an infected patient.[6]

Introduced in Brantford, Ontario, in 1963, Meals on Wheels has grown to a nationwide movement with thousands of volunteers delivering nutritious meals to seniors, many of whom are poor and homebound.[6]

Although his illness forced him to give up his Marathon of Hope, the spirit of one of Canada's most courageous young men lives on in the annual Terry Fox Run, which has earned more than $200 million for cancer research.[6]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 January 2000CIDA: Sharing the Nation's Heart Globally [7] 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Ralph Tibbles and based on photographs by Doug Hall
17 January 2000Lucille Teasdale and Missionaries: Helping the Poor and Sick 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Pierre-Yves Pelletier
17 January 2000Marathon of Hope 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed and illustrated by Ken Fung, based on an illustration by Ken Koo and Samuel Tseng
17 January 2000Meals and Friends on Wheels 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Lou Cable and based on photographs by David Campbell

The Millennium Collection, Humanitarians and Peacekeepers

Canada has played an integral role in banning anti-personal landmines, which claim an average of 500 victims a week. In 1997, 122 countries signed the historic Ottawa Convention prohibiting the use of these devices and calling for their destruction.[8]

Lester B Pearson's involvement in the creation of an international force to maintain peace in the Middle East during the Suez Crisis earned him a Nobel Peace Prize and highlighted Canada's role as a global peacekeeper.[8]

The wife of future Governor General Georges Vanier, Pauline Vanier served as a Red Cross volunteer in Paris during and after the Second World War. Elizabeth Smellie, the first female colonel in the Canadian Army, headed nursing services at home and abroad during both World Wars and organized the Canadian Women's Army Corps.[9]

A tireless promoter of equality, peace with justice, and security through cooperation, Montreal-born lawyer Raoul Dandurand spent 44 years as a senator and was named president of the League of Nations.[6]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 January 2000Canada's Historic Role in Banning Land Mines 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Carisa L. Romans and by Robert L. Peters
17 January 2000Lester B. Pearson: On Guard for World Peace 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Kiky KambylisBased on an illustration by Thom Sevalrud
17 January 2000Pauline Vanier and Elizabeth Smellie: The Humanitarian Work of Women in Time of War 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Margaret Susan IssenmanBased on photographs by National Archives of Canada = ArchivesBased on an illustration by Bonnie Ross
17 January 2000Raoul Dandurand: Senator and Diplomat 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Raymond BellemareDesigned by Tom Yakobina, Based on a photograph by Christine Guest and by Paul McCarthy, Based on a painting by Mary Alexandra Bell Eastlake

The Millennium Collection, Medical Innovators

Nobel Prize-winner Sir Frederick Banting was one of the century's greatest medical heroes. His discovery of a pancreatic extract called insulin, achieved with his assistant Charles Best and other colleagues, has saved the lives of millions of diabetics.

A champion in the war against disease, Quebec physician Armand Frappier helped establish a preventative treatment for infant leukemia and founded studies in immunology, advanced microbiology and hygiene at the Université de Montréal.[10]

Curator of the McGill University Medical Museum and a founder of the Federation of Medical Women of Canada, Dr. Maude Abbott overcame the gender-based odds against her to become an internationally respected pathologist and a world authority on heart defects.[11]

The scientific work of Vienna-born Hans Selye, an endocrinologist at the Université de Montréal, greatly increased our understanding of the biological factors causing stress and of how to control it.[10]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 January 2000Armand Frappier

Champion Disease Fighter

46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Louise Delisle and Jean-Claude Guénette, Based on photographs by François Brunelle and Federal Newsphotos of Canada
17 January 2000Maude Abbott: The Heart of the Matter 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Tom Yakobina, Based on a photograph by Christine Guest and by Paul McCarthy, Based on a painting by Mary Alexandra Bell Eastlake
17 January 2000Dr. Hans Selye: Documenting the Stress of Life 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Stéphane Huot, Based on a photograph by Fondation Hans Selye

The Millennium Collection, Social Progress

Founded a century ago by Alphonse and Dorimène Desjardins, the caisse populaire is Quebec's largest financial institution and the global model for savings and loan cooperatives where customers are both owners and users.[11]

Canada's tradition of universal access to health care owes much to the efforts of the religious orders that established Quebec's first hospitals, and to the example set by Saskatchewan when it became the first province to enact full medicare coverage.[11]

Moses Coady's vision of social betterment through adult education launched a revolutionary cooperative movement in the Maritimes that is still emulated by social activists and educators, particularly in developing countries.[11]

Tireless dedication to equal rights spurred five Alberta women to victory in a historic court ruling that recognized women as qualified for Senate appointments - thereby paving the way for Canada's first female senator in 1930.[11]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 January 2000Alphonse and Dorimène Desjardins: Small Savings, Big Results [12] 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by François Dallaire, Based on an illustration by Bernard Leduc
17 January 2000From Les Hospitalières de Québec to Medicare 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by François Blais, Based on a photograph by Yves Lacombe
17 January 2000Moses Coady and the Cooperative Movement 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Derek Sarty, Based on a photograph by Yousuf Karsh
17 February 2000Women are Persons...46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Susan Lee, Based on a photograph by Verve Photographics,Based on a sculpture by Barbara Paterson

February 2000

February's Millennium souvenir sheets continue the tribute to the wide range of Canadian people, events and institutions that have helped shape our nation. This third release - the second last in the series - presents such individuals as philosopher Northrop Frye and "Plouffe Family" author Roger Lemelin and celebrates the spirit and vision of Canadian philanthropy. Aboriginal contributions to peace, healing and sport are featured, as well as Canada's proud heritage in the theatre and popular literature.[12]

The Millennium Collection, A Tradition of Generosity

After drillers struck oil on land where he held mineral rights, lawyer Eric Lafferty Harvie used much of the resulting multimillion-dollar fortune benevolently. He assisted such diverse organizations as Glenbow Foundation, the Calgary Zoo and the Banff Centre for the Arts.[12]

The wealthiest Canadian of his day, Nova Scotia-born financial wizard Izaak Walton Killam and his wife Dorothy donated a large part of their fortune to supporting the arts, education and sciences in Canada. Established in 1968, the Canadian International Development Agency is responsible for administering the bulk of Canada's foreign aid budget to provide assistance for sustainable development projects in more than 100 countries.[12]

Hart Massey's estate, which became the Massey Foundation in 1918, has supported many philanthropic endeavours.[12]

This Montreal-based foundation has promoted and preserved a great deal of Canada's historical and cultural heritage.[12]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 February 2000Eric Lafferty Harvie: Alberta's Heart of Gold 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Tim Nokes
17 February 2000The Killam Legacy 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Dennis George Page, Based on an illustration by Todd Hawkins
17 February 2000Massey Foundation 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Tim Nokes
17 February 2000Macdonald Stewart Foundation 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Dennis George Page, Based on an illustration by Todd Hawkins

The Millennium Collection, Canada's Cultural Fabric

The oldest known European settlement in the New World, l'Anse aux Meadows, Newfoundland, was established by Norse colonists a thousand years ago.[13]

Halifax is home to a cultural tradition that took root in the early 17th century, when the Neptune Theatre's predecessor, Le Théâtre de Neptune de la Nouvelle-France held its first performance at Port Royal, Nova Scotia.[13]

In the past century, some 1.5 million immigrants, refugees and displaced persons arrived on our shores at Halifax's Pier 21, which served as a symbol of hope, dreams and opportunity for newcomers to Canada.[13]

Although its history spans just less than 50 years, Ontario's Stratford Festival has become the jewel of North American classical theatre, specialized in showcasing the works of William Shakespeare.[13]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 February 2000L'Anse aux Meadows: World Heritage Site 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Susan Warr and based on a photograph by James Steeves
17 February 2000The Neptune Story 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Bruce Kierstead and based on photographs by James Steeves and Wally Hayes, and based on illustrations by Kevin Sollows and Graham Tuck
17 February 2000Pier 21: Welcome to Canada 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Horst Deppe and Fraser Ross, based on a photograph by National Archives of Canada
17 February 2000The Stratford Festival: Canada's Midsummer Night's Dream 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Les Holloway, based on a photograph by Cylla von Tiedemann and by Terry Manzo

The Millennium Collection, Canada's First Peoples

Aboriginal peoples have always been a vital part of Canada's heritage. Believed to possess supernatural powers, the shaman plays an integral role in Aboriginal life, serving as a mystical guide who helps heal the sick, influence the weather, and interpret dreams. Shamans and elders take a holistic approach to health based on physical, emotional, psychological and spiritual balance.[13]

Believed to possess supernatural powers, the shaman plays an integral role in Aboriginal life, serving as a mystical guide who helps heal the sick, influence the weather, and interpret dreams. Shamans and elders take a holistic approach to health based on physical, emotional, psychological and spiritual balance.[13]

A noble warrior and chief of the Odawa tribe during the 18th century, Pontiac persuaded the British crown to recognize the legal rights of Aboriginal tribes to claim title to the lands they occupied.[14]

Nicknamed "Wildfire" for his amazing speed, Onondaga distance runner Tom Longboat was one of the most celebrated athletes of the early 1900s, and the fastest professional in the world over 15 miles.[14]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 February 2000Healing From Within 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed and illustrated by Jerry Evans
17 February 2000Pontiac: Warrior and Peacemaker 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Rolf P. Harder
17 February 2000The Powers of Inuit Shamans 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by James Skipp and based on a photograph by Gary Fiegehen, based on a sculpture by Paul Toolooktook
17 February 2000Tom Longboat

Marathon Man

46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Sunil Bhandari and by Georges Khayat, Based on a photograph by Canada's Sports Hall of Fame

The Millennium Collection, Canada's Great Thinkers

Head of the history department at the University of Saskatchewan, Hilda Marion Neatby had a lifelong love of learning, and stressed the importance of challenging the human mind.[13]

Edmonton-born Marshall McLuhan remains a cultural icon as Canada's pioneer pop philosopher and oracle of the electronic age. An English professor and literary critic, his books revolutionized thinking about media and communications.[13]

Regarded as one of the world's most influential literary critics, Northrop Frye's prolific and frequently cited writings outlined the shape of human thought and helped educate our imaginations about the power of the written world.[13]

The literary patriarch of the fictional Plouffe family whose exploits were later immortalized on both film and television, Roger Lemelin was a pioneer of social realism in French-speaking Canada.[13]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 February 2000Hilda Marion Neatby: In Love with Learning 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Stacey Zabolotney and based on an illustration by Stephanie Carter
17 February 2000Marshall McLuhan

The Man with a Message

46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Ian Drolet and based on a photograph by Robert J. Fleming
17 February 2000Northrop Frye: The Well-Tempered Critic 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Brian Tsang and based on a photograph by Lutz Dille
17 February 2000Roger Lemelin and the Plouffe Family 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Pierre Fontaine and based on a photograph by Radio-Canada

The Millennium Collection, Literary Legends

A talented actor, director, producer and playwright, Gratien Gélinas is considered the father of contemporary Quebec theatre. His remarkable career ran the gamut from staging theatrical revues to co-founding Montreal's National Theatre School.[15]

Manitoba's chilly capital is the birthplace of a sizzling romantic literary tradition that transformed Harlequin Books from a small company into the world's leading paperback publisher. Today, its titles appear in 24 languages.[15]

Pierre Tisseyre promoted Canada's French-language literary tradition by adapting the book-of-the-month club concept for a Quebec readership. His publishing house has help launch the careers of numerous Quebec writers.[6]

W.O. Mitchell is one of Canada's most celebrated writers. The Saskatchewan-born novelist and dramatist's carefully crafted prose - which include the classical Who Has Seen the Wind - reveal a gifted artist intrigued by the human experience.[15]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 February 2000Gratien Gélinas: On Stage in Montreal 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Pierre Fontaine, Based on a photograph by André Le Coz
17 February 2000Harlequin: Winnipeg's Romantic Side 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Gary Ludwig, Based on a photograph by Siede Preis
17 February 2000Pierre Tisseyre and the Cercle du livre de France 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Catharine Bradbury,Based on an illustration by Dean Bartsch
17 February 2000W.O. Mitchell: The Prairie Son 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Catharine Bradbury,Based on an illustration by Dean Bartsch

March 2000

March's series of four Millennium Souvenir Sheets features among other, Bell Canada, Bombardier, the Canadian Space Program and McCain Foods. These bold 112 x 108 mm souvenir sheets frame four 36 x 48 mm stamps in thematic groupings that celebrate Canadian giants in fields as diverse as engineering, commerce and innovation.

The Millennium Collection, Engineering and Technological Marvels

The longest tunnel in North America provides safe passage through the avalanche prone Rogers Pass in British Columbia.[7]

Québec's 455-km long Manicouagan River supports one of the world's largest hydroelectric operations.[16]

A world leader in space exploration, Canada's technological innovations include a robotic Canadarm used aboard US shuttle missions and the Mobile Servicing System foe the International Space Station.[17]

Standing 553.33 metres tall, the CN Tower, which was built in 1976, was the world's tallest building and free standing structure until 2009.[17]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 March 2000Rogers Pass: Building Bridges and Tunnels 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Neville Smith
17 March 2000Manic Dams: Triumph of Quebec Engineering 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Susan Scott
17 March 2000Canadian Space Program 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Monique Dufour and Sophie Lafortune
17 March 2000CN Tower - Canada's National Tower 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Doreen Colonello and Stuart Bradley Ash, based on a photo by Robert Wigington

The Millennium Collection, Enterprising Giants

Canada's largest communication company, Bell Canada Enterprises is a global industry player that offers telephone, satellite television and other communication services to clients in 150 countries.[7]

Over the more than three centuries since it began as a fur trading business in the Canadian wilderness, the Hudson's Bay Company has grown into our nation's largest non-food retailer through its chain of Bay and Zellers department stores.[16] Canada's largest communication company, Bell Canada Enterprises is a global industry player that offers telephone, satellite television and other communication services to clients in 150 countries.[16]

From the kitchen where founder Rose-Anna Vachon perfected her tiny treats to a modern bakery that turns out some two million cakes daily, the Vachon company of Sainte-Marie-de-Beauce, Quebec, has been tantalizing tastebuds since 1923.[17]

Founded in 1882, George Weston Limited has expanded from baking bread and biscuits to a conglomerate that includes the country's largest food distributor, Loblaws Companies Limited.[17]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 March 2000Bell Canada Enterprises: Bringing the World Together 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Neville Smith
17 March 2000Hudson's Bay Company 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Susan Scott
17 March 2000Rose-Anna Vachon: Baker from the Beauce 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Monique Dufour and Sophie Lafortune
17 March 2000Weston: The Bread Man Cometh 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Doreen Colonello and Stuart Bradley Ash, based on a photo by Robert Wigington

The Millennium Collection, Fathers of Invention

Abraham Gesner gave the world a better light by creating a new lamp oil called kerosene in 1846. Recognized as the founder of the oil industry, his process for distilling bituminous material was later used to produce petroleum.

Known around the globe as the father of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell made numerous scientific discoveries at his home on Cape Breton Island, where he worked on everything from a person-carrying kite to a record-setting hydrofoil.

Canada's most prolific modern inventor, Hamilton-born engineer George Klein developed ground-breaking technologies in the fields of health, space and transportation, and headed the design of Canada's first nuclear reactor.[18]

Quebec mechanic Joseph-Armand Bombardier changed winter recreation and travel forever with his invention of the snowmobile. Since selling its first Ski-Doo in 1959, Bombardier has also expanded into the rail, aerospace and defence sectors.

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 March 2000Abraham Gesner: Father of the Oil Industry 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Steven Slipp and based on an illustration by David Preston-Smith
17 March 2000Alexander Graham Bell: An Inquiring Mind 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Julien LeBlancBased on a photograph by Alexander Graham Bell National HistoricBased on an illustration by Bonnie Ross
17 March 2000George Klein: Canada's Inventor of the 20th Century 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Tiit TelmetBased on a photograph by National Research Council Canada =Based on an illustration by Marko Barac
17 March 2000Joseph-Armand Bombardier: Getting Around in the Winter 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Michèle CayerBased on a photograph by Musée J. Armand BombardierBased on an illustration by Tom Kapas

The Millennium Collection, Food, Glorious Food!

Ontario-born marine biologist Archibald Gowanlock Huntsman pioneered methods of packaging frozen fish fillets in the late 1920s, thirty years before the technique became a viable business.[16]

Thanks to the strong business acumen of a New Brunswick family, McCain Foods Limited has grown from a small factory to a group of companies that earns $5.1 billion annually from its frozen food products.[16]

Babies of the world have Canadian pediatrician Frederick Tisdall and his collaborators to thank for the popular ready-to-eat cereal Pablum. Developed as a healthy yet tasty solid food, its sales have raised millions for pediatric research.[16]

Sir Charles Saunders established Canada's reputation as a leading producer of quality wheat by developing a new strain called Marquis, which matured early, produced a high yield and had superior milling and baking qualities.[16]

Date of IssueThemeDenominationPrinterQuantityPerforationCreator
17 March 2000Dr. Archibald Gowanlock Huntsman: The Fisherman's Friend 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed and illustrated by Paul-Michael Brunelle, Based on a photograph by James Steeves, Based on an illustration by David Preston-Smith
17 March 2000McCain Foods, Lord of the Freezer 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Jim Hudson, Based on a photograph by Rod Stears, Based on a photograph by Tourism and Parks New Brunswick = Tourisme et parcs Nouveau-Brunswick
17 March 2000Sir Charles Saunders: The Marquis of Wheat 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Ivan Novotny and John Taylor, Based on a photograph by Canadian Agriculture Library = Bibliothèque canadienne de l'agriculture, Based on a photograph by Canada Science and Technology Museum = Musée des sciences et de la technologie du Canada, Based on an illustration by Patrick Sayers
17 March 2000Pablum: Babies Actually Like It 46 centsAshton-Potter Canada Ltd.1,000,00013.5Designed by Mark Koudis, based on a photograph by Ron Baxter Smith

See also

Notes and References

  1. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 14-15.
  2. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 14, 16.
  3. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 14, 16-17.
  4. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 14, 17.
  5. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 14.
  6. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 18, 20.
  7. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 2, 2000, p. 16, 18-19.
  8. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 18, 21.
  9. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 18, 20-21.
  10. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 18.
  11. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 18-19.
  12. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 22, 25.
  13. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 22-23.
  14. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 22.
  15. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2000, p. 22, 24.
  16. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 2, 2000, p. 16, 18.
  17. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 2, 2000, p. 16, 19.
  18. Canada Post Corporation, Canada's Stamp Details, Vol. 9, No. 2, 2000, p. 16-17.