Shuswap Community Foundation Arts, Culture & Heritage Icon

Arts, Culture & Heritage

Shuswap Community Foundation Arts and Culture Icon

Arts, Culture & Heritage

Blair Borden was a founding member of the Shuswap District Arts Council in 1970. Before she passed away in 2006, Blair offered to establish the Arts Council endowment fund with a gift of $10,000. At the time, the BC Arts Renaissance Fund was matching funds raised by arts organizations for endowment funds, and the Arts Council was able to double that gift right away. Blair’s original gift remained separate from the Arts Council’s general endowment fund so that it could specifically be directed toward scholarships. Blair stated, “I’d like to see the focus on music and not necessarily on youth. I think learning goes on all your life.”

A music enthusiast all of her life, Blair recalls learning to sing “at mother’s knee as a kid riding in the car.” Her mother had a powerful alto voice. And while her father claimed to have a “tin ear,” Blair’s paternal grandfather played the fiddle. Blair sang in school and university choirs and played trombone in the Montreal Junior Symphony.

Born in Toronto, Blair grew up in Montreal and attended McGill University, after graduation, she spent two years travelling and working in recreation in both London and South Africa.

She arrived in Salmon Arm in 1968 to teach school and was encouraged by then principal Tom Brighouse to move into music teaching. “I’ve always enjoyed music and learned to play a diversity of instruments and enjoyed their relationship to each other.” When she first lived in Salmon Arm she played with the Okanagan Symphony for 10 years and later, after a move to Sorrento, played for another 10 years in the Kamloops Symphony. Blair also joined the Shuswap Singers. During these years with the symphonies she played the string bass and brass instruments. “I consider myself a specialist in low brass instruments,” she said.

Blair played string bass in the Salmon Arm Community Band for many years. “I was one of the seven originals,” she said, “and at that time played the E-flat tuba.” She also instructed an Adult Beginner Band class through Okanagan College for a couple of years, and was a founding member of the Shuswap Recycling Society (long before it was a global trend).

Blair’s three scholarships are awarded annually to a musician at the Shuswap Music Festival, an adult musician who is embarking on an educational adventure, and a Salmon Arm Fair exhibitor for artwork created with recycled materials.

Shuswap District Arts Council acknowledges it carries out its work on the traditional territories of the Secwepemc People. We pay our respects to the Elders, past and present, descendants and custodians of these lands. We honour the knowledge keepers and the continuing relationships with Secwepemc Peoples in the BC interior. The Arts Council is grateful to the Neskonlith First Nations, on whose traditional territories we operate the Arts Centre and its programs.

Blair Borden
Blair Borden
Blair Borden

Blair Borden was a founding member of the Shuswap District Arts Council in 1970. Before she passed away in 2006, Blair offered to establish the Arts Council endowment fund with a gift of $10,000. At the time, the BC Arts Renaissance Fund was matching funds raised by arts organizations for endowment funds, and the Arts Council was able to double that gift right away. Blair’s original gift remained separate from the Arts Council’s general endowment fund so that it could specifically be directed toward scholarships. Blair stated, “I’d like to see the focus on music and not necessarily on youth. I think learning goes on all your life.”

A music enthusiast all of her life, Blair recalls learning to sing “at mother’s knee as a kid riding in the car.” Her mother had a powerful alto voice. And while her father claimed to have a “tin ear,” Blair’s paternal grandfather played the fiddle. Blair sang in school and university choirs and played trombone in the Montreal Junior Symphony.

Born in Toronto, Blair grew up in Montreal and attended McGill University, after graduation, she spent two years travelling and working in recreation in both London and South Africa.

She arrived in Salmon Arm in 1968 to teach school and was encouraged by then principal Tom Brighouse to move into music teaching. “I’ve always enjoyed music and learned to play a diversity of instruments and enjoyed their relationship to each other.” When she first lived in Salmon Arm she played with the Okanagan Symphony for 10 years and later, after a move to Sorrento, played for another 10 years in the Kamloops Symphony. Blair also joined the Shuswap Singers. During these years with the symphonies she played the string bass and brass instruments. “I consider myself a specialist in low brass instruments,” she said.

Blair played string bass in the Salmon Arm Community Band for many years. “I was one of the seven originals,” she said, “and at that time played the E-flat tuba.” She also instructed an Adult Beginner Band class through Okanagan College for a couple of years, and was a founding member of the Shuswap Recycling Society (long before it was a global trend).

Blair’s three scholarships are awarded annually to a musician at the Shuswap Music Festival, an adult musician who is embarking on an educational adventure, and a Salmon Arm Fair exhibitor for artwork created with recycled materials.

Shuswap District Arts Council acknowledges it carries out its work on the traditional territories of the Secwepemc People. We pay our respects to the Elders, past and present, descendants and custodians of these lands. We honour the knowledge keepers and the continuing relationships with Secwepemc Peoples in the BC interior. The Arts Council is grateful to the Neskonlith First Nations, on whose traditional territories we operate the Arts Centre and its programs.

Blair Borden

Donate to this fund

Donations to this fund can be made by e-transfer (preferred), by cheque, donated securities, in person at any SASCU branch, through a gift of securities, or online through CanadaHelps.

The simplest way to donate to this fund is by sending e-transfer to:

Recipient: info@shuswapfoundation.ca
Add a memo to your e-transfer naming the specific fund you are donating to.

Include your address and full name for a tax receipt. A security question is not required (funds will be auto-deposited).

Send a cheque to:

Shuswap Community Foundation
102 – 160 Harbourfront Drive NE
Salmon Arm, BC, V1E 3M3
Canada

Cheques should be payable to “Shuswap Community Foundation“ and include the fund name in the memo field.

You can make a donation to this fund through Salmon Arm Savings and Credit Union (SASCU). Simply visit any branch and ask to donate to Shuswap Community Foundation, along with the specific fund name.


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Receipts for taxation purposes can be provided by emailing a copy of your deposit receipt to info@shuswapfoundation.ca.

A gift of publicly traded securities can be an attractive option. The Income Tax Act provides that capital gains on securities donated to a charity are exempt from tax, but the donor will receive a tax receipt for the full appreciated value. You will receive a tax receipt for the value of the stock at the time of transfer, and may carry forward for up to five years any unused portions of the gift.

Please talk to your professional adviser or broker to make stock transfers easily. You may download the Share Transfers Form for when you meet with your broker.

Learn more about the Benefits of Donating Securities or contact us by email at info@shuswapfoundation.ca or phone 250-832-5428 for more information.

Donations to this fund can be made securely and conveniently through the CanadaHelps online platform.

Be sure to select the correct fund from the “Fund” field (near the top of the form).


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