The Harmony Singers have more than 50 years of history!
November 1953. After
weeks of talking about starting a choir the following notice appeared
in the church bulletin: "On Thursday evening at 8 p.m. November
17, 1953 at the home of Mr. & Mrs. De Kleer, 394 Nepean Street
an attempt will be made to organize a choir. Everyone is welcome to
join". That Thursday an organizing committee of 12 Dutch Canadians
(who were also the first singers) established a Dutch ethnic choir.
The founding committee consisted of members of the (then Dutch) Christian
Reformed Church who chose a religious name for the group: "Praise
the Lord". The first practices were held in the kitchens of the
De Kleer and Nyhuis families (back then dues were 15 cent per week!),
and after 1954 in various churches. Alice De Kleer,who joined the
choir in 1953 at the age of 15, is the only founding member still
with the group. In the beginning the choir sang mainly at church services.
The first performance took place on December 26, 1953 during a Sunday
school Christmas concert. They made their 2nd appearance on February
6 , 1954 at a congregational meeting. They kept their rehearsals going
despite the bad winter weather, encouraged by the organist, who said,
that, if he could slide into the ditch 3 times in one week and still
show up for choir practice, there was no excuse for the rest of the
choir members not to show up.
By 1956 the choir was beginning to perform more at community events and it was in that year that the name "The Ottawa Dutch Choral Society" was adopted. Since that time the choir has been non-denominational and now has 20 members, from many ethnic backgrounds. In 1994 the name was changed to the "Dutch Choral Society" to reflect the fact that members are from many communities in the region.
In 1967 we become the proud owners of formal dresses & suits and sang at Expo '67. In 1968 the choir got Dutch (Volendam) costumes complete with wooden shoes.
In 1970 the choir sang at the National Arts Centre to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the liberation of Holland and the installation of the organ funded by Dutch immigrants from across Canada and built in the Netherlands.
The choir has sung on numerous
occasions for members of the Dutch royal family: in 1988 for
Queen Beatrix and again in 2002 at a reception for Princes
Margriet at Dow's Lake during the Tulip Festival.
For the choir's 50th Anniversary in 2003, the Dutch Embassy donated new scarfs in the Dutch orange (representing the Royal House of Orange) trimmed with red, white & blue (colours of the Dutch flag) to wear with our white shirts, black skirts & trousers.
The choir sang for television and radio broadcasts. They have taken special pleasure in collaboration with other choirs, bands and instrumentalists in the region.
In 2008, the choir changed its name to Harmony Singers and decided to pursue an even more international repertoire.
Some pictures from our history

