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Marco Polo
Project
More than two-million
marigolds have been grown and planted by thousands of children from Greater
Saint John in the past 12 years. The marigolds make people feel good
about themselves. Photo credit: Jackie Henneberry |
The Marigold
Man He may not work miracles per se, but Barry Ogden
has spearheaded projects like building a Marco Polo replica, and involving kids
to plant marigolds on main street, helping to highlight Saint John on the map
by David Goss May /June 2010
SALTSCAPES
Among the
collectibles found in the basement of Barry Ogdens home, in Quispamsis,
NB, is a model of an unknown three-masted ship. Ogden remembers the day his
grandfather brought the model to the West Saint John motel his father ran. He
was 12. I would lay on the lawn by that ship with
its tin sails rattling in the wind, he says, and dream of the great
sailing ship days of Saint John.
Many boys
might have done the same for a timeperhaps until they were called to
dinner. But Barrys passion for tall ships has stayed with him to this
day, and his desire to embrace Saint Johns past and chart its future
course has influenced his career as a historian, teacher and activist.
Ogden was inducted early on into a fast-paced, full
lifestyle. Besides the motel, his father owned six businesses; his parents
insisted he and his two sisters help out. My mom and dad instilled a work
ethic, he says. That meant rising early and working hard, as well
as doing whatever school assignments you had. As a
university student, Barry was able to turn his fascination with seafaring into
a part-time job, working nights on the Princess of Acadia ferry. Hed sail
overnight to Digby, NS, return to Saint John early the next morning, and then
have a full day of classes at the University of New Brunswick. When he began
teaching half days at Saint John High School in 1982, he would arrive back in
the city at 7:30 am, and be at the school an hour later, ready for work.
Barry has now coached athletics at Saint John High for 36
years, and taught history there for 28. Students taking his classes or playing
on his football, hockey, or soccer teams have to make a pledge, which he refers
to as the BMW oath.
 Ogden founded the UNB Saint John Seawolves
football team, shown above, as well as the Atlantic Football Leaguewhich
will help kids who want to play competitive football at that level stay closer
to home. That was the selling point, he says. Photo Credit: Mike
Foster |
When I worked in the tourism industry,
I realized that many of our guests were on their way somewhere else,
Ogden says
No one ever
refused, he says with a chuckle, explaining the initials mean no
bitching, no moaning and no whining. He tells students,
If you have a problem, offer a solution. Offering a solution is exactly what Ogden did after a conversation
he had with Bernie Morrison, Saint Johns parks and rec manager, in which
they both expressed a desire to beautify the traffic median on Main Street.
Ogden suggested planting marigolds; to overcome Morrisons cost concerns,
he then suggested the students at nearby schools grow and plant the flowers.
In typical Ogden fashion, he went from the meeting to
immediately seek sponsors. Today, Ogden oversees the Marigolds on Main
Street project. It involves 100 sponsoring businesses and 32 schools,
with students planting at about 50 sites in the Greater Saint John area. Main
Street is still the most dramatic of the marigold sites, with 40,000 plants
alone. As of this year, two-million marigolds will have been planted.
For 25 years Ogdens also been volunteering with the
citys South End food bank, involving approximately 2,000 students in the
process. It is more than just raising fundsyes, we do thator
bringing in food, which we do, too. Its about educating the students,
teaching them that there is a poverty problem in the city, and there are ways
it can be solved. Few may know that side of Ogden.
But ask any Saint Johner who is behind the drive to build a replica of the
Marco Polo, and they will likely tell you: Barry Ogden.
When I
worked in the tourism industry, I realized that many of our guests were on
their way somewhere else, Ogden says. He taught
them the story of the Marco Polo, which was built in Saint John in 1851. It
claimed to be the worlds fastest sailing ship, and had connections with
England, Australia, Quebec and Cavendish, PEI, where it sank in 1883. I
knew people were fascinated by tall ships, and would go miles out of their way
to see one. The Marco Polo brought fame and fortune to the city once, and it
could do it again, I thought. As originally
conceived in 1986, it was to be a full-size replica whose masts would tower
over the nine-storey downtown Hilton Hotel, and completed by 1992. The plan has
been scaled back due to costs, however: the replica will now be one-third the
originals size90 feet long and 65 feet tallbut Ogdens
enthusiasm is in tact. The hull is now complete,
constructed [with] 225-year old pine, he says. Its in a shed on the
citys west side, and could be moved across the harbour to the city centre
any time a spot is made available. He admits he is anxious for the project to
be completed, but despite the delays and obstacles, he says building the Marco
Polo replica has put the city on the map.
Ogdens bite-size
advice Whats the secret to Barry Ogdens success?
Get people to envision the idea, break the idea into small parts, show
people how they can help even if it is in a small way, and stay focused.
Someone has to have the dreamthe big vision, the overall pictureand
keep if before those who can help.
There have been stamps issued,
coins struck, the NFB created a film, and five books have been published. There
have been dozens of stories in newspapers and magazines nationally and
internationally, he says. The projects website (new-brunswick.net/
marcopolo) has had half-a-million hits. The Marco
Polo project isnt just about building a ship, its about telling a
story, he says. The most successful tall ships have great stories
and we believe we have one of the best stories in the world.
Ogdens ability to tell a story and lead by example
have inspired others to take action alongside him. And like his parents did
before him, hes often involving his family in his causes.
He is quick to say that his wife, Debbie, has been his
biggest supporter, and hes incredibly proud of his sons, Chris, 21, and
Josh, 20, who excel in school and sports. The Marco
Polo replica is older than both my sons. They now know why theres no
money for college, he jokingly told a Telegraph-Journal reporter last
year. With his sons and other young Atlantic Canadian
athletes in mind, Ogden recently established the Atlantic Football League for
college-level players. Five post-secondary schools in the Maritimes now have
AFL teams, which Ogden says help local kids who want to play competitive
football at that level stay closer to home. That was the selling
point, he says, estimating it costs about $18,000 annually in tuition and
living expenses for someone to go to university outside the province, compared
with about $6,100 to enroll at a school at home, such as the University of New
Brunswick, Saint John. Ogden has also secured about $7
million in fundraising for the Saint John Canada Games Stadium refurbishment
project. On his 54th birthday, Barry Ogden reflected on what he would focus on
next. I have seven or eight years of teaching ahead of me, and so long as
I continue to be blessed with lots of energy, with the ability to pull people
together, to get them to believe in themselves, to solve problems, lots of
projects will come to mind.

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