Prince of the realm receives Book of Best Wishes from citizens of Burlington on his first birthday.

News 100 redBy Pepper Parr

July 21, 2014

BURLINGTON, ON

He will begin his second year of life on Tuesday. HRH Prince George Alexander Louis of Cambridge, the fourth in line to the Throne and the person, who will at some point become the Monarch of Canada, is also the recipient of a handsomely bound Book of Best Wishes from the people of Burlington.

The idea for the Book of Best Wishes came from the community and was made real by a small committee of four people: Joe Veitch, Susan Fraser, Selina McCall and publisher of the Burlington Gazette Pepper Parr.

Once the fundamentals were in place the group met with the Mayor to get a buy in at that level.  While the initiative came from the community, it was important for the city to be onside.  The Mayor loved the idea – “cool” he said, and then suggested that the signing period be extended a few days to include Canada Day.

RR books in for restoration

No fancy “apps” in the classic binding business. Our binder is in the business of restoring ancient volumes and making presentation copies of original work. We are looking forward to their doing our binding for 50 years and then some.

Joe Veitch recruited the volunteers needed to be at the tables, where people could sign the sheets and write their greeting.

Final banner

This banner, which stood 7 feet high was set out wherever the public was invited to sign the Book of Best Wishes. The challenge now is for the “trust” running this project, to determine what the picture will be for next year. Joan Krygsman and Selina McCaul, designed the banner.

First time out on this project, we learned a lot of lessons – almost everything ended up costing more than we had planned.

Many wondered why they couldn’t see the finished product, when they were signing. We had people at a number of places on the same day – and we didn’t know how many signatures we were going to manage to collect – and thus didn’t know how thick the book was going to be.

Special metal plates had to be made for the gold embossing that was to be stamped into the leather.  We would set the type, send it to the book binder, who would have the metal plate made.  We had to do some guessing as to how many signatures might be collected – that would determine the thickness of the book and also the size of the plate that had to be made.

The book couldn’t be shown to anyone until it was bound and it couldn’t be bound until all the pages with signatures had been collected..

To get around this problem we endured the expense of having a demonstration copy made – a book bound the way the actual version was to be bound, but with blank pages inside.

One doesn’t just send a book to a Prince.  Anything of any significance that gets sent to members of the Royal family, goes through the offices of the Governor General at Rideau Hall in Ottawa.  Rideau Hall, home of the Governor General has staff that communicates with the various members of the Royal family – well not the Dukes or Princes or the Duchesses personally – but with their staff.  All this communication is bound by more protocol than you can imagine.

Because the Book of Best Wishes was a new idea, it took a bit of talking to convince Rideau Hall to go along with us; it wasn’t until they saw a picture of a sample binding that they understood just what we had in mind.

Resident signing Best Wishes Royal Reading

Citizens signing the Book of Best Wishes at the Burlington Library on New Street.

The Mayor convinced us to set up in Spencer Smith Park on Canada Day – that worked out very well.

RR Keith and Parr with pages

Burlington Gazette publisher Pepper Parr works with binder Keith Felton on the way pages will be gathered together for binding into the first Book of Best Wishes being sent to HRH Prince George Alexander Louis to celebrate his first birthday.

The volume was ready in a few days and shipped to Ottawa where it had to be x-rayed before it could be accepted and then sent off to Kensington Palace where the Prince will celebrate his very first birthday.

We have no idea if the Prince will actually see the book – who knows how Royal Families work, but we believe that the parents will see and handle the book – and perhaps wonder just where Burlington is anyway.

The project has been organized as a “trust” so that its members can replicate themselves and ensure that a Book of Best Wishes is sent to the Prince every birthday of his life.

There is more to the project – stay tuned.

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