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Encyclopedia > Catharine Parr Traill

Catharine Parr Traill (née Strickland) (January 9, 1802 - August 29, 1899) was a British author who wrote about life as a settler in Canada.


Catharine was the older sister of Susanna Moodie. She began her career writing children's books, publishing 12 before her marriage in 1832, often on the benefits of obedience to one's parents (such as Disobedience, or Mind What Mama Says, and Happy Because Good). She married Thomas Traill, a retired officer of the Napoleonic Wars and a friend of her sister's husband John Moodie, although the rest of her family (aside from Susanna) did not approve of him. Soon after their marriage they left for Canada, with Susanna's family, settling near Peterborough, Upper Canada, where her brother Samuel was a surveyor.


She described her new life in letters and journals, and collected these into a book in 1836, The Backwoods of Canada, which is an important source of information about early Canada. She describes everyday life in the community, the relationship between Canadians, Americans, and natives, as well as the climate and wildlife. More observations were published in Canadian Crusoes in 1851. She also collected information concerning the skills necessary for a new settler, published in two books, one in 1854 as The Female Emigrant's Guide and the second in 1855 as The Canadian Settler's Guide.


After suffering through the depression of 1836, her husband Thomas joined the militia in 1837 to fight against the Upper Canada Rebellion. In 1840, dissatisfied with life in "the backwoods," the Traills and the Moodies both moved to the city of Belleville. While Susanna was more concerned with the differences between rural and urban life, Catharine spent her years in Belleville writing about the natural environment. She often sketched the plant life of Upper Canada, publishing Canadian Plant Life in 1865 and Studies of Plant Life in Canada in 1885.


She died in 1899. Catharine Parr Traill College, a campus of Trent University in Peterborough, is named for her.


External link

  • Project Gutenberg (http://promo.net/pg/) contains the text of some of Traill's works





  Results from FactBites:
 
Catharine Parr Traill - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (375 words)
Catharine Parr Traill (née Strickland) (January 9, 1802 – August 29, 1899) was a British author who wrote about life as a settler in Canada.
She married Thomas Traill, a retired officer of the Napoleonic Wars and a friend of her sister's husband John Moodie, although the rest of her family (aside from Susanna) did not approve of him.
Catharine Parr Traill College, a campus of Trent University in Peterborough, is named for her.
Literary Encyclopedia: Traill, Catharine Parr (2090 words)
Traill was a prolific, diverse writer and her output includes instructive emigrant manuals, children’s literature, a novel, and botanical texts.
Catharine recognized that practicality was essential for survival in the backwoods, and despite being an educated, cultured woman, she happily acquired the necessary domestic skills.
Traill was keenly interested in narratives of lost children, and she explored this rather fearful consequence of living in the backwoods in some of her earlier magazine publications, including “The Mill on the Rapids” (Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal,1838) and “A Canadian Scene” (The Ladies Garland,1841).
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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