Showing posts with label Strickland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Strickland. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Susanna Moodie

Born Strickland (1803 – 1885), was an English-born Canadian author who wrote about her experiences as a settler in Canada, which was a British colony at the time.
Susanna Moodie was born in Bungay, on the River Waveney in Suffolk, the younger sister of three other writers, including Agnes Strickland and Catharine Parr Traill. She wrote her first children's book in 1822, and published other children's stories in London, including books about Spartacus and Jugurtha. In London she was also involved in the Anti-Slavery Society, transcribing the narrative of the former Caribbean slave Mary Prince. On 4 April 1831, she married John Moodie, a retired officer who had served in the Napoleonic Wars. In 1832, with her husband and daughter, Moodie emigrated to Canada. The family settled on a farm in Douro township, near Lakefield, north of Peterborough, Upper Canada, where her brother Samuel worked as a surveyor, and where artifacts are housed in a museum. Founded by Samuel, the museum was formerly an Anglican church and overlooks the Otonabee river where Susanna once canoed. It also displays artifacts concerning both Samuel and Catharine Parr Traill.

Moodie continued to write in Canada and her letters and journals contain valuable information about life in the colony. She observed life in what was then the backwoods of Ontario, including native customs, the climate, the wildlife, relations between the Canadian population and recent American, and the strong sense of community and the communal work,known as "bees" (which she, incidentally, hated). She suffered through the economic depression in 1836, and her husband served in the militia against William Lyon Mackenzie in the Upper Canada Rebellion in 1837.

As a middle-class Englishwoman Moodie did not particularly enjoy "the bush", as she called it. In 1840 she and her husband moved to Belleville, which she referred to as "the clearings". She studied the Family Compact and became sympathetic to the moderate reformers led by Robert Baldwin, while remaining critical of radical reformers such as Lyon Mackenzie. This caused problems for her husband, who shared her views, but, as sheriff of Belleville, had to work with members and supporters of the Family Compact.
The Moodies in 1844 helped found the Congregational Church of Belleville where the constituent preamble stated that, "The undersigned . . . have resolved upon forming themselves into a Church of Christ." The Moodies were among the twelve signatories.
In 1852, she published Roughing it in the Bush, detailing her experiences on the farm in the 1830s. In 1853, she published “Life in the Clearings Versus the Bush”, about her time in Belleville. She remained in Belleville, living with various family members (particularly her son Robert)after her husband's death, and lived to see Canadian Confederation. She died in Toronto, Ontario on 8 April 1885 and is buried in Belleville Cemetery.

Her greatest success was Roughing it in the Bush. The inspiration for the memoir came from a suggestion by her editor that she write an "emigrant's guide" for British people looking to move to Canada. Moodie wrote of the trials and tribulations she found as a "New Canadian", rather than the advantages to be had in the colony. She claimed that her intention was not to discourage immigrants but to prepare people like herself, raised in relative wealth and with no prior experience as farmers, for what life in Canada would be like.
You’ve seen the ads on television, or in magazines or books the newspaper where someone makes wild and wonderful claims and presents endorsements where you have no idea whether the have any basis in fact. It has varied from Real Estate, stocks and bonds, starting a business, automotive waxes, healing and 2012. Someone even claimed half a million Mayans ascended, just vibrated off the planet.
“Facts in magnetism, mesmerism : somnambulism, fascination, hypnotism, sycodonamy, etherology, pathetism, etc., explained and illustrated” was published in 1849 written by by W H Rodgers.
The book made reference to Moodies husband, John Moodie the sheriff in Belleville, Ontario, Canada. But in her book of 1853 titled “Life in the Clearings versus the Bush” Susanna Moodie painted s an entirely different view and offered an eye witness account of Rodgers visit to the area. It makes for interesting reading. More here: http://goalhypnosis.blogspot.com/2012/02/claims-and-endorsements-are-they-always.html

Catharine Parr Traill

Born Strickland (1802 – 1899) was an English-Canadian author who wrote about life as a settler in Canada. She was born Catharine Parr Strickland in Rotherhithe in 1802. She was the first of the sisters to commence writing. She began writing children's books in 1818, after the death of her father. Her early work, such as Disobedience, or Mind What Mama Says (1819), and "Happy Because Good", were written for children, and often dwell on the benefits of obedience to one's parents.
She described her new life in letters and journals, and collected these into The Backwoods of Canada (1836), which continues to be read as an important source of information about early Canada. She describes everyday life in the community, the relationship between Canadians, Americans, and natives, the climate, and local flora and fauna. More observations were included in a novel, Canadian Crusoes (1851). She also collected information concerning the skills necessary for a new settler, published in The Female Emigrant's Guide (1854), later retitled The Canadian Settler's Guide. She wrote "Pearls and Pebbles" and "Cot and Cradle Stories".
Trent University, in Peterborough, Ontario, named their Catharine Parr Traill College campus after her. Trent University, in Peterborough, Ontario, named their Catharine Parr Traill College campus after her.

Trent University is a liberal arts and science-oriented institution located along the Otonabee River in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada.
Motto nunc cognosco ex parte
Motto in English Now I know in part - 1 Corinthians 13:12
Established 1964
http://www.trentu.ca/

Agnes Strickland

(1796–1874) was an English historical writer and poet.
Agnes was educated by her father, and began her literary career with a poem, Worcester Field, followed by The Seven Ages of Woman and Demetrius. Abandoning poetry, she next produced, among others, Historical Tales of Illustrious British Children (1833), The Pilgrims of Walsingham (1835), Tales and Stories from History (1836). Her chief works, however, are Lives of the Queens of England from the Norman Conquest, and Lives of the Queens of Scotland, and English Princesses, etc.. (8 vols., 1850–1859), Lives of the Bachelor Kings of England (1861), and Letters of Mary Queen of Scots, in some of which she was assisted by her sister Elisabeth. Strickland's researches were laborious and conscientious, and she remains a useful source, but she failed to exercise the level of objectivity that a modern historian would aspire to.