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Charles Tory Bruce

Charles Tory Bruce (May 11, 1906 - December 19, 1971) was a Canadian poet, journalist and fiction writer.[1] He was most noted for his poetry collection The Mulgrave Road, which won the Governor General's Award for English-language poetry or drama at the 1951 Governor General's Awards.[2]

Charles Tory Bruce
BornMay 11, 1906
Port Shoreham, Nova Scotia, Canada
DiedDecember 19, 1971
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
OccupationPoet, novelist, journalist
NationalityCanadian
Period1920s-1960s
Notable worksThe Mulgrave Road
Notable awardsGovernor General's Award for English-language poetry or drama (1951)

Born in Port Shoreham, Nova Scotia,[1] Bruce graduated from Mount Allison University in 1927.[1] He then joined the Halifax Chronicle, where he worked for eight months before joining Canadian Press.[1] He served as a war correspondent during World War II.[3] In this role, he was presumed missing for several days after accompanying the Royal Air Force into the ill-fated Battle of Arnhem, but was located safe and alive several days later.[3] By 1945, he was general superintendent of the news agency, holding that role until his retirement in 1963.[1]

As a creative writer, he published the poetry collections Wild Apples (1927), Tomorrow's Tide (1932), Personal Note (1941), Grey Ship Moving (1945), The Flowing Summer (1947) and The Mulgrave Road (1951), the novel The Channel Shore (1954) and the short story collection The Township of Time (1959).[1] His poetry also appeared in magazines such as Harper's, Saturday Night, Canadian Poetry and The Saturday Evening Post.[2] Mount Allison University awarded him an Honorary Doctor of Letters in 1952,[2] and the year after his Governor General's Award win he served as a judge in the same category.[4]

His final book, a history of the Southam News company titled News and the Southams, was published in 1968.[1]

He died on December 19, 1971, in Toronto.[3]

Works edit

  • Wild Apples, (1927)
  • Tomorrow's Tide, (1932)
  • Personal Note, (1941)
  • Grey Ship Moving, (1945)
  • The Flowing Summer, (1947)
  • The Mulgrave Road, (1951)
  • The Channel Shore, (1954)
  • The Township of Time, (1959)
  • News and the Southams, (1968)
  • The essential Charles Bruce, (2018) [posthumous]

Source:[5][6]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Charles Tory Bruce". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  2. ^ a b c "Notes on the Winners". The Globe and Mail, June 14, 1952.
  3. ^ a b c "CP newsman won recognition for his poetry". The Globe and Mail, December 20, 1971.
  4. ^ "Governor-General's Awards For Best Books of 1952". The Globe and Mail, May 30, 1953.
  5. ^ "Author - Charles Tory Bruce". Author and Book Info.
  6. ^ "Bruce, Charles 1906-1971". WorldCat Identities (OCLC). Retrieved March 11, 2022.


charles, tory, bruce, 1906, december, 1971, canadian, poet, journalist, fiction, writer, most, noted, poetry, collection, mulgrave, road, which, governor, general, award, english, language, poetry, drama, 1951, governor, general, awards, bornmay, 1906port, sho. Charles Tory Bruce May 11 1906 December 19 1971 was a Canadian poet journalist and fiction writer 1 He was most noted for his poetry collection The Mulgrave Road which won the Governor General s Award for English language poetry or drama at the 1951 Governor General s Awards 2 Charles Tory BruceBornMay 11 1906Port Shoreham Nova Scotia CanadaDiedDecember 19 1971Toronto Ontario CanadaOccupationPoet novelist journalistNationalityCanadianPeriod1920s 1960sNotable worksThe Mulgrave RoadNotable awardsGovernor General s Award for English language poetry or drama 1951 Born in Port Shoreham Nova Scotia 1 Bruce graduated from Mount Allison University in 1927 1 He then joined the Halifax Chronicle where he worked for eight months before joining Canadian Press 1 He served as a war correspondent during World War II 3 In this role he was presumed missing for several days after accompanying the Royal Air Force into the ill fated Battle of Arnhem but was located safe and alive several days later 3 By 1945 he was general superintendent of the news agency holding that role until his retirement in 1963 1 As a creative writer he published the poetry collections Wild Apples 1927 Tomorrow s Tide 1932 Personal Note 1941 Grey Ship Moving 1945 The Flowing Summer 1947 and The Mulgrave Road 1951 the novel The Channel Shore 1954 and the short story collection The Township of Time 1959 1 His poetry also appeared in magazines such as Harper s Saturday Night Canadian Poetry and The Saturday Evening Post 2 Mount Allison University awarded him an Honorary Doctor of Letters in 1952 2 and the year after his Governor General s Award win he served as a judge in the same category 4 His final book a history of the Southam News company titled News and the Southams was published in 1968 1 He died on December 19 1971 in Toronto 3 Works editWild Apples 1927 Tomorrow s Tide 1932 Personal Note 1941 Grey Ship Moving 1945 The Flowing Summer 1947 The Mulgrave Road 1951 The Channel Shore 1954 The Township of Time 1959 News and the Southams 1968 The essential Charles Bruce 2018 posthumous Source 5 6 References edit a b c d e f g Charles Tory Bruce The Canadian Encyclopedia a b c Notes on the Winners The Globe and Mail June 14 1952 a b c CP newsman won recognition for his poetry The Globe and Mail December 20 1971 Governor General s Awards For Best Books of 1952 The Globe and Mail May 30 1953 Author Charles Tory Bruce Author and Book Info Bruce Charles 1906 1971 WorldCat Identities OCLC Retrieved March 11 2022 nbsp nbsp This article about a poet from Canada is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Tory Bruce amp oldid 1144955276, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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