Home > News > Fifty Years On, Big Nickel...

Fifty Years On, Big Nickel Shines Brightly

Jul 23, 2014

Big Nickel creator Ted Szilva, left, and his wife, Betty, examine a plaque that was created in his honour and unveiled during the Big Nickel celebration at Dynamic Earth in Sudbury, ON. on Tuesday, July 22, 2014. The Big Nickel turned 50.

Arguably Sudbury’s most iconic image, the Big Nickel, celebrated its 50th birthday Tuesday, drawing hundreds of people to the monument to welcome in its golden anniversary.
 
The event kicked off at noon with a full day of live music, activities for all ages, and celebrations of what it means to be a Sudburian.
 
At 1 p.m. Mayor Marianne Matichuk decreed July 22nd to henceforth be Big Nickel Day.
 
People young and old celebrated with face painting, gold panning, live music from local artists including Chicks with Picks and Larry Berrio and more, with the event wrapping up with a fireworks display late last night.
 
The Blue Saints Drum and Bugle Corps performed at the start of the event, in honour of their group, which performed at the unveiling of the nickel 50 years ago.
 
"Commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Big Nickel was really important to us, it's a big milestone and we're the keepers of this iconic landmark in Sudbury," said Dynamic Earth senior manager Julie Moskalyk. "We're pretty proud to be able to celebrate the Big Nickel like this with the entire community."
 
"Fifty years ago, the Sudbury region was a pretty black, barren rock area so the Big Nickel was one of the first ways that Sudbury started to draw tourists," Moskalyk said. "Today it's one of the top 10 roadside attractions and it's a part of a significant tourism draw to the Greater Sudbury region."
 
"What's Sudbury all about? Nickel," she continued. "We're the nickel mining capital of the world so what better way to commemorate that than with a big nickel? So, for me personally, it commemorates our mining heritage, the science of isolating nickel and the great scientific work that continues to happen today."
 
All the festivities aside, a large focus of the event was to pay tribute to the creative inspiration of the monument, Ted Szilva, who co-authored a book along with his son that they released yesterday, entitled The Big Nickel: The Untold Story.
 
"A lot has happened over the last 50 years," said Szilva. "The task of creating such a project had its own challenges, the most questions in the last 50 years have been, by whom, and how and where was the Big Nickel built. That's why my son Jim and I collaborated and wrote (the book) that contains all the answers anyone might ask.
 
"A lot of things have changed (since the monument was created), but things have to keep changing because if nothing changes then people stop coming — you need to have perpetual growth," he added. "I'm very grateful for everyone who came to celebrate.
 
"There was a lot of naysayers that said it was going to be an eyesore, that it wouldn't do anything for Sudbury, that it was a stupid idea, but it grew from year to year and I hope it continues to grow. It's very gratifying to see so many people come from all over the world to see the nickel and this is what I had envisioned and this is what I had hoped for so for that to have come to fruition it's a great feeling."
 
Polly Rutenberg attended the unveiling of the monument 50 years ago when she was a baton twirler for the Majorettes, who marched alongside the Blue Saints at the base of the monument half a century ago. Rutenberg spoke about the changes that have occurred over the past 50 years.
 
"The whole area is just so nice now. It's great to come up here and be able to do more than just come and see the Big Nickel," she said. The Big Nickel now stands besides Dynamic Earth, an interactive earth sciences museum that has also become a major tourist draw.
 
"It's so great to be here, that nickel shines bright and everybody knows where the Big Nickel is when they are travelling through Sudbury."
 
"It reminds me of home and going for rides with my mom and dad on Sunday and going out for ice cream and then coming out to see the nickel ... we were so proud of that," Rutenberg said.
 
Attendee Gilles Laporte talked about what the Big Nickel symbolizes for him.
 
"The Big Nickel to me is a direct reflection of what Sudbury stands for. Sudbury is a mining town and as much as the industry has changed, at the end of the day mining is what founded Sudbury," Laprote said.
 
Another attendee, Carol Conroy, summed up her view on the nickel in a few simple words.
 
"It's a symbol of our city - everybody knows the Big Nickel."
 
Before closing a speech he gave at the opening of the event, Szilva left the crowd with a few inspirational words.
 
"I also want to challenge everyone here to follow their dreams - they can come true."

Source: http://www.thesudburystar.com/2014/07/23/fifty-years-on-big-nickel-shines-brightly