
audiobook
by R. G. (Robert Grant) Haliburton
A vivid portrait unfolds of a 19th‑century Nova Scotian who rose from a modest riverside home to become one of the colony’s most celebrated writers. Born in Windsor in 1796, he grew up amid the lingering echoes of Loyalist settlement, his family’s roots stretching from Scottish borders to Jamaica and New England. The narrative weaves together his lineage, the dramatic migrations of his ancestors, and the striking geography of the Avon River that shaped his early world.
His education at the venerable King’s College, steeped in classical Latin and Tory tradition, left an indelible mark on his literary voice. Within the college’s ancient halls, Latin prayers and old‑world textbooks coexisted with the rugged life of a frontier town, offering a unique blend of scholarly rigor and colonial adventure. This sketch captures the formative influences that forged his sharp wit and lasting contribution to early Canadian literature.
Language
en
Duration
~51 minutes (49K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Larry Harrison, Cindy Beyer, Ross Cooling and the Project Gutenberg team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net
Release date
2014-12-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1831–1901
A Canadian lawyer, writer, and amateur anthropologist, he moved easily between public life and big theories about history and identity. His work is a window into 19th-century Nova Scotia and the ideas that shaped English Canadian nationalism, including some views now understood as deeply harmful.
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