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Full Description
Creating Colonial Pasts explores the creation of history and memory in Southern Ontario through the experience of its inhabitants, especially those who took an active role in the preservation and writing of Ontario's colonial past: the founder of the Niagara Historical Society, Janet Carnochan; twentieth-century Six Nations historians Elliott Moses and Milton Martin; and Celia B. File, high-school teacher and historian of Mary Brant.
Examining the grand narratives of colonial Ontario - the Loyalists, the War of 1812, and the creation of settler society - Cecilia Morgan argues that place played an important role in shaping memory and narrative in locations such as Niagara-on-the-Lake, the Six Nations territory at the Grand River, and the Mohawk community at Tyendinaga. Illuminating the pivotal role of women and Indigenous people in historical commemoration and uncovering the existence of a lively and interconnected circle of historians and heritage activists in late nineteenth and twentieth-century Ontario, Creating Colonial Pasts is a virtuoso study of history-making.
Contents
Introduction: Pulling on Threads: Unravelling Histories and Historians
Chapter One: Books and Mortar: Janet Carnochan's Historical Town
Chapter Two: "To Turn the Light on the Other Side": History and the Six Nations
Chapter Three: "Among the Six Nations": Celia B. File and the Politics of Memory, History, and Home
Chapter Four: "Where Nature Had Joined Hands with Man": History, Tourism, and Landscape in Niagara-on-the-Lake
Conclusion: Mending the Threads of the Past