Quote:
Originally Posted by Urbanarchit
I don't know if what I say will make any sense, but I'll try.
I've lived off Gladstone for most of my life and never once thought about it being named after someone nor did I care. It was a street with a memorable name compared to generic streets like Lewis or Primrose. There's Dundonald Park on Somerset Street. Who was Dundonald and Somerset and do I care? What about Elgin? To me, they're just names of important streets rather than people we're memorializing - people who may have a past we judge nowadays as atrocious. Honestly, I think you'll find a good number of people in history who are memorialized in a number of ways who are virulently racist, sexist, homophobic. But should we research every street and park to see who they're named after and purge them if they were objectionable by today's standards? When does a street name become a name for a street rather than a street named after someone forgotten/ unimportant to people nowadays?
I like the way "Gladstone" sounds and would rather keep such names Somerset, Wellington, Preston, Elgin, Holland, Byron, Churchill, Metcalfe, O'Connor, Sparks. I can forget who they're named after and accept it as just a name.
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The "archit" in your user name suggests you are involved in architecture in some way. So you're probably sensitive to the notion of "sense of place".
Street names and other toponyms, IMHO, contribute to sense of place.
I don't know much about Wellington other than he defeated Napoléon at Waterloo and I think was also British PM. Which is probably more than the majority of people know. I have no idea if he was a good guy or a scoundrel, aside from those claims to fame.
But I do know that if the street in front of Parliament was renamed something like Cliff Street, Ottawa would move up a few notches on the banality scale, at least in my book.