Preserving, exploring, and sharing Portuguese Canadian history

WHAT’S NEW?

  • Interview with punk rocker Sandy Miranda of ‘Fucked Up’

    Our filming for RTPi’s “A Hora dos Portugueses” continues. Last week we interviewed Sandy Miranda, the bass player for Fucked Up, one of the most prolific and international punk/hardcore bands from Toronto, winner of the Polaris Prize in 2009 (nominated again in 2012). We sat down with Sandy on the stage of the legendary Horseshoe…

  • PCHP & RoughCut collaboration & RTPi

    (Texto em português segue-se ao inglês) Earlier this month Gilberto Fernandes (PCHP) started a new project with Pedro Rodrigues of RoughCut Audiovisual (and Luis Moreira) producing content for Portugal’s international public broadcaster RTPi’s new daily TV show “A Hora dos Portugueses.” We are now interviewing various individuals at the heart and on the fringes of…

  • The PCHP has a new address

    Here is the PCHP’s new address: Portuguese Canadian History Project The Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies Room 728, Kaneff Tower York University 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ON, M3J 1P3 CANADA You can reach us by email at prtcan.history@gmail.com

What we do

Archive

We seek historical records in the hands of private individuals and organizations; assess their contents and state of preservation; facilitate their donation to the CTASC; provide context, translation, and metadata for their archival processing; and assist in their digitization. Since September 2009, we have helped transfer 10 collections from authors, community advocates and organizers, a documentary filmmaker, a newsman, a poet, a politician, scholars, a social service agency, and a union local.

Educate

Using the records that we have transferred to the CTASC and our own expertise has historians of the Portuguese in Canada, we have developed multiple public and digital history initiatives, including physical and online exhibitions, public lectures and panels, TV documentaries, and walking tours. When possible, we include our archival donors in the development of these educational projects.

Collaborate

Besides creating and animating the archives, our model is predicated on a pragmatic collaborative approach, whereby we complement and empower our partners as we seek common goals. Besides the CTASC, we have worked with numerous organizations and individuals, including academics, artists, researchers, diplomats, high school teachers, secondary and post-secondary students, documentary filmmakers, public history professionals, and local businesses. We are also proud to have served as a template and inspiration to other community archives and public history organizations in Toronto.

Want to donate your records, participate in our activities,
or learn more about us?

Send us a message and we will get back to you as soon as we can.