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Wilfred Grenfell

Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell KCMG (28 February 1865 – 9 October 1940) was a British medical missionary to Newfoundland, who wrote books on his work and other topics.

Sir Wilfred Grenfell
Wilfred Grenfell and his wife in 1916

Early life and education Edit

He was born at Parkgate, Cheshire, England, on 28 February 1865, the Son of Rev. Algernon Sidney Grenfell, headmaster of Mostyn House School, and Jane Georgiana Hutchison.[1]

Grenfell moved to London in 1882. He then commenced the study of medicine at the London Hospital Medical College (now part of Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry) under the tutelage of Sir Frederick Treves. He graduated in 1888.

Career Edit

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen sent Grenfell to Newfoundland in 1892 to improve the plight of coastal inhabitants and fishermen.[2] That mission began in earnest in 1892[3] when he recruited two nurses and two doctors for hospitals at Indian Harbour, Labrador and later opened cottage hospitals along the coast of Labrador. The mission expanded greatly from its initial mandate to one of developing schools, an orphanage, cooperatives, industrial work projects, and social work. Although founded to serve the local area, the mission developed to include the aboriginal peoples and settlers along the coasts of Labrador and the eastern side of the Great Northern Peninsula of western Newfoundland.[4] One of the children Grenfell assisted was an Inuit girl, Kirkina, for whom he helped secure artificial limbs and later the Grenfell Mission educated her in nursing and midwifery.[5]

In 1907, Grenfell imported a group of 300 reindeer from Norway to provide food and serve as draft animals in Newfoundland. Unbeknownst to him, some of the animals carried a parasitic roundworm, Elaphostrongylus rangiferi, that then spread to native caribou herds. The reindeer herd eventually disappeared; however, the parasite took hold and causes cerebrospinal elaphostrongylosis (CSE) in caribou, a disease well known in reindeer in Scandinavia.[6]

In 1908, Grenfell was on his way with his dogs to a Newfoundland village for a medical emergency when he got caught in "slob", from which he managed to get onto an ice-pan with the dogs. He was forced to sacrifice some of his dogs to make a warm, fur coat for himself. After drifting for several days without food or fresh water, he was rescued by some villagers in the area.[7] Because of this experience he buried the dogs and put up a plaque saying, "Who gave their lives for me."

By 1914 the mission had gained international status. In order to manage its property and affairs, the International Grenfell Association, a non-profit mission society, was founded to support Grenfell's work. The Association operated until 1981, as an NGO. It had responsibility for delivery of healthcare and social services in northern Newfoundland and Labrador. After 1981 a governmental agency, The Grenfell Regional Health Services Board took over the operational responsibility. The International Grenfell Association, having divested itself of all properties and operational responsibility for health and social services, boarding schools and hospitals then became a supporting association making grants and funding scholarships for medical training.

For his years of service on behalf of the people of these communities he was later knighted by the King in 1927.

In 1931, Grenfell had a small speaking role in the film, The Viking, in which he narrated the film's prologue and gave a brief statement of the tragic circumstances involving the film's production. During the production of the film, which was filmed on location in Newfoundland, producer Varick Frissell felt that the film needed more action sequences and set out on the ice floes to film them. During filming, the ship, SS Viking on which filming was taking place, exploded killing Frissell and 27 others.[8]

Personal life Edit

He married Anne Elizabeth Caldwell MacClanahan (died 1938) of Chicago, Illinois, in 1909.[citation needed] They had three children and retired to Vermont after his work in Newfoundland. They were married in 1909 and came to live in the Grenfell House (which they designed together) in St. Anthony, Newfoundland. Anne gave Dr. Grenfell's life comfort and refinement. She became totally involved in his work. She organized his fundraising tours and lectures, edited his books and helped secure scholarships for the children of the area to continue their education. Although Anne was ill towards the end of her life, she kept her pain hidden from her husband and took care of him until she died in 1938.

Death and legacy Edit

Grenfell died of a coronary thrombosis at Kinloch House in Charlotte, Vermont on 9 October 1940.[9] His ashes were brought to St Anthony, where they were placed inside a rock face overlooking the harbour.

 
Postage issue of 1941

The Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell Historical Society was formed in 1978. The society purchased Grenfell's home in St. Anthony, Newfoundland and Labrador. The home has been restored as a museum and archives. The Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell Historical Society with the support of Provincial Government and the International Grenfell Association began construction of an interpretation centre in St. Anthony and it was opened in 1997. This facility added to the existing house and serves to promote the legacy to thousands of visitors each year. The Grenfell Interpretation Centre also is used by other organizations for meetings and events. A large interpretive display is housed there and provides historical background surrounding the work of Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell.[10]

In 1979, Memorial University's West Coast Regional College was renamed to honour Grenfell.[11]

Grenfell is honoured with a feast day on the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church (USA) on 9 October.

Literary inspiration Edit

A unique figure, Grenfell served to inspire at least two characters in Canadian literature: Dr. Luke in Norman Duncan's Doctor Luke of the Labrador (1904) and Dr. Tocsin in White Eskimo by Harold Horwood (1972).

A biography for children (middle-high school) was written in 1942, by Genevieve Fox. Published by Thomas Y. Crowell Co. The book had second and third printings as well.

The following statement has been widely ascribed to him, but cannot be found in any of his books: "The service we render to others is really the rent we pay for our room on this earth. It is obvious that man is himself a traveler; that the purpose of this world is not 'to have and to hold' but 'to give and serve.' There can be no other meaning."

Fabric Edit

Mill owner Walter Haythornthwaite of Burnley, Lancashire created a cloth for Sir Wilfred Grenfell after attending a Grenfell lecture. Designed to withstand the conditions of the Labrador coast, it is a 600 thread-per-inch woven cotton gaberdine that became known as 'Grenfell Cloth' from 1923.[12] The cloth became the signature fabric of the Grenfell Clothing brand which is, to this day, manufactured in the United Kingdom.[13]

Awards Edit

In 1979, the Corner Brook campus of Memorial University of Newfoundland was renamed Sir Wilfred Grenfell College in his honour. In 2010, following a debate to rename this campus, the name Grenfell Campus, Memorial University of Newfoundland was chosen, to reflect the campus' ties to the spirit of Sir Wilfred Grenfell's legacy.

Publications Edit

Essay by Grenfell include:

  • What the Bible Means to Me (1910)[14][15]

Books by Grenfell include:

  • Vikings of To-Day: or, Life and Medical Work among the Fishermen of Labrador (1896)
  • The Harvest of the Sea (1905)
  • Off the Rocks: Stories of the Deep-sea Fisherfolk of Labrador (1906)
  • Adrift on an Ice-Pan (1909)
  • What Will You Do with Jesus Christ (1910)
  • What the Church Means to Me: A Frank Confession and a Friendly Estimate by an Insider (1911)
  • The Adventure of Life (1912)
  • Down North on the Labrador (1912)
  • What Life Means to Me (1913)[16]
  • Tales of the Labrador (1916)
  • A Labrador Doctor[17] (1919)
  • Labrador Days: Tales of the Sea Toilers (1919)
  • Yourself and Your Body (1924), written at the time when he said his two sons had just reached the age of Whys? and Hows?
  • What Christ Means to Me (1926)
  • Labrador Looks at the Orient: Notes of Travel in the Near and the Far East (1928)
  • Forty Years for Labrador (1932)
  • The Romance of Labrador (1934)

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Wallace 1949.
  2. ^ "Wilfred Thomason Grenfell (1865 - 1940)". Grenfell Family History Site. Retrieved 26 November 2010.
  3. ^ . The Arctic Coastal Zone Management Newsletter. Barrow, Alaska: North Slope Burough. 9. February 1978. Archived from the original on 19 September 2016. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  4. ^ Blair, Louisa (15 December 1991). "Dr. Wilfred Grenfell and the forgotten people of Newfoundland and Labrador". Canadian Medical Association Journal. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Canadian Medical Association. 145 (12): 1633–1635. ISSN 0820-3946. PMC 1336097. PMID 1742705.
  5. ^ Forster, Merna (2011). 100 More Canadian Heroines: Famous and Forgotten Faces. Toronto, Canada: Dundurn. ISBN 978-1-4597-0086-4.
  6. ^ Drisdelle R (2010). Parasites. Tales of Humanity's Most Unwelcome Guests. Univ. of California Publishers, 2010. p. 92f. ISBN 978-0-520-25938-6.
  7. ^ Grenfell, Sir Wilfred Thomason (1909). Adrift on an Ice-pan. Houghton Mifflin Company.
  8. ^ "The Viking (1931)". TCM. Retrieved 11 February 2019.
  9. ^ "Wilfred Grenfell Of Labrador Dead. Founder in 1892 of Medical Mission Known Throughout World Stricken in Vermont". New York Times. 10 October 1940. Retrieved 17 January 2014. Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell, founder of the Labrador Medical Mission, who devoted his life to caring for the spiritual and physical needs of Eskimos, Indians and fishermen of ...
  10. ^ "Grenfell Historic Properties". www.grenfell-properties.com. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  11. ^ Baker, Melvin; Graham, Jean A. (1999). Celebrate Memorial: A pictorial history of Memorial University of Newfoundland (PDF). St. John's, NL: Division of University Relations, Memorial University of Newfoundland. p. 56.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 July 2008. Retrieved 22 August 2008.
  13. ^ "Grenfell Made in England".
  14. ^ Fitch, George Hamlin (1911). Comfort Found in Good Old Books. Paul Elder and Company. p. 52. ISBN 9780836918052.
  15. ^ Rompkey, Ronald (2009). Grenfell of Labrador: A Biography. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. p. 337. ISBN 9780773575196.
  16. ^ "Review of What Life Means to Me by Wilfred Grenfell". The Lancet: 1808. 28 June 1913.
  17. ^ Grenfell, Wilfred Thomason (1919). A Labrador Doctor: The Autobiography of Wilfred T. Grenfell (PDF). Houghton Mifflin. Retrieved 23 December 2016.

References Edit

  • Wallace, W.S. (1949). "Grenfell, Sir Wilfred Thomason (1865–1940)". Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Endnotes:
    • "The chief source of information is Grenfell's autobiography first published in 1919 under the title A Labrador Doctor, and republished in 1932, in a revised and expanded form, under the title Forty Years for Labrador. See also":
    • James Johnston (1908), Grenfell of Labrador
    • A. G. Hall (1919), Doctor Wilfred Grenfell
    • F. L. Waldo (1920), With Grenfell on the Labrador and
    • D. Wallace (1922), The Story of Grenfell of the Labrador
    • B. J. Mathews (1924), Wilfred Grenfell
    • F. L. Waldo (1924), Grenfell
    • E. H. Hayes (1930), Forty Years on the Labrador
    • Joyce Reason (1942), Deep-sea Doctor
    • Genevieve May Fox (1947), Sir Wilfred Grenfell, New York

Further reading Edit

  • CMHF staff (2016). "Sir Wilfred Grenfell". The Canadian Medical Hall of Fame.
  • Historica Canada. "Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  • Miller, Basil (1948). Wilfred Grenfell: Labrador's Dogsled Doctor. Grand Rapids: Zondervan.
  • Reason, Joyce (1940). Deep-Sea Doctor: Wilfred Grenfell. London: Edinburgh House Press.
  • Reason, Joyce (1974). "O Médico dos Mares Profundos". de Janeiro: União Feminina Missionária Batista do Brasil Portuguese, translation by Mein, Mildred Coz (translator)
  • Rompkey, Ronald (1991), Grenfell of Labrador: A Biography. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Rompkey, Ronald (May 2008). "Grenfell, Sir Wilfred Thomason (1865–1940)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/33565. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Rompkey, Ronald (2015) [2011]. "Grenfell, Sir Wilfred Thomason". In Cook, Ramsay; Bélanger, Réal (eds.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XVI (1931–1940) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  • Shannahan, Colleen (2006). Mission! : the extraordinary adventures of Sir Wilfred Grenfell. St. John's, NL: Belle Isle Press. ISBN 0978131304.

External links Edit

Anne MacLanahan Grenfell Edit

Academic offices
Preceded by Rector of the University of St Andrews
1928 - 1931
Succeeded by
Field Marshal Jan Smuts

wilfred, grenfell, wilfred, thomason, grenfell, kcmg, february, 1865, october, 1940, british, medical, missionary, newfoundland, wrote, books, work, other, topics, wife, 1916, contents, early, life, education, career, personal, life, death, legacy, literary, i. Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell KCMG 28 February 1865 9 October 1940 was a British medical missionary to Newfoundland who wrote books on his work and other topics Sir Wilfred GrenfellWilfred Grenfell and his wife in 1916 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Personal life 4 Death and legacy 4 1 Literary inspiration 4 2 Fabric 5 Awards 6 Publications 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External links 11 1 Anne MacLanahan GrenfellEarly life and education EditHe was born at Parkgate Cheshire England on 28 February 1865 the Son of Rev Algernon Sidney Grenfell headmaster of Mostyn House School and Jane Georgiana Hutchison 1 Grenfell moved to London in 1882 He then commenced the study of medicine at the London Hospital Medical College now part of Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry under the tutelage of Sir Frederick Treves He graduated in 1888 Career EditThe Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen sent Grenfell to Newfoundland in 1892 to improve the plight of coastal inhabitants and fishermen 2 That mission began in earnest in 1892 3 when he recruited two nurses and two doctors for hospitals at Indian Harbour Labrador and later opened cottage hospitals along the coast of Labrador The mission expanded greatly from its initial mandate to one of developing schools an orphanage cooperatives industrial work projects and social work Although founded to serve the local area the mission developed to include the aboriginal peoples and settlers along the coasts of Labrador and the eastern side of the Great Northern Peninsula of western Newfoundland 4 One of the children Grenfell assisted was an Inuit girl Kirkina for whom he helped secure artificial limbs and later the Grenfell Mission educated her in nursing and midwifery 5 In 1907 Grenfell imported a group of 300 reindeer from Norway to provide food and serve as draft animals in Newfoundland Unbeknownst to him some of the animals carried a parasitic roundworm Elaphostrongylus rangiferi that then spread to native caribou herds The reindeer herd eventually disappeared however the parasite took hold and causes cerebrospinal elaphostrongylosis CSE in caribou a disease well known in reindeer in Scandinavia 6 In 1908 Grenfell was on his way with his dogs to a Newfoundland village for a medical emergency when he got caught in slob from which he managed to get onto an ice pan with the dogs He was forced to sacrifice some of his dogs to make a warm fur coat for himself After drifting for several days without food or fresh water he was rescued by some villagers in the area 7 Because of this experience he buried the dogs and put up a plaque saying Who gave their lives for me By 1914 the mission had gained international status In order to manage its property and affairs the International Grenfell Association a non profit mission society was founded to support Grenfell s work The Association operated until 1981 as an NGO It had responsibility for delivery of healthcare and social services in northern Newfoundland and Labrador After 1981 a governmental agency The Grenfell Regional Health Services Board took over the operational responsibility The International Grenfell Association having divested itself of all properties and operational responsibility for health and social services boarding schools and hospitals then became a supporting association making grants and funding scholarships for medical training For his years of service on behalf of the people of these communities he was later knighted by the King in 1927 In 1931 Grenfell had a small speaking role in the film The Viking in which he narrated the film s prologue and gave a brief statement of the tragic circumstances involving the film s production During the production of the film which was filmed on location in Newfoundland producer Varick Frissell felt that the film needed more action sequences and set out on the ice floes to film them During filming the ship SS Viking on which filming was taking place exploded killing Frissell and 27 others 8 Personal life EditHe married Anne Elizabeth Caldwell MacClanahan died 1938 of Chicago Illinois in 1909 citation needed They had three children and retired to Vermont after his work in Newfoundland They were married in 1909 and came to live in the Grenfell House which they designed together in St Anthony Newfoundland Anne gave Dr Grenfell s life comfort and refinement She became totally involved in his work She organized his fundraising tours and lectures edited his books and helped secure scholarships for the children of the area to continue their education Although Anne was ill towards the end of her life she kept her pain hidden from her husband and took care of him until she died in 1938 Death and legacy EditGrenfell died of a coronary thrombosis at Kinloch House in Charlotte Vermont on 9 October 1940 9 His ashes were brought to St Anthony where they were placed inside a rock face overlooking the harbour Postage issue of 1941The Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell Historical Society was formed in 1978 The society purchased Grenfell s home in St Anthony Newfoundland and Labrador The home has been restored as a museum and archives The Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell Historical Society with the support of Provincial Government and the International Grenfell Association began construction of an interpretation centre in St Anthony and it was opened in 1997 This facility added to the existing house and serves to promote the legacy to thousands of visitors each year The Grenfell Interpretation Centre also is used by other organizations for meetings and events A large interpretive display is housed there and provides historical background surrounding the work of Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell 10 In 1979 Memorial University s West Coast Regional College was renamed to honour Grenfell 11 Grenfell is honoured with a feast day on the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church USA on 9 October Literary inspiration Edit A unique figure Grenfell served to inspire at least two characters in Canadian literature Dr Luke in Norman Duncan s Doctor Luke of the Labrador 1904 and Dr Tocsin in White Eskimo by Harold Horwood 1972 A biography for children middle high school was written in 1942 by Genevieve Fox Published by Thomas Y Crowell Co The book had second and third printings as well The following statement has been widely ascribed to him but cannot be found in any of his books The service we render to others is really the rent we pay for our room on this earth It is obvious that man is himself a traveler that the purpose of this world is not to have and to hold but to give and serve There can be no other meaning Fabric Edit Mill owner Walter Haythornthwaite of Burnley Lancashire created a cloth for Sir Wilfred Grenfell after attending a Grenfell lecture Designed to withstand the conditions of the Labrador coast it is a 600 thread per inch woven cotton gaberdine that became known as Grenfell Cloth from 1923 12 The cloth became the signature fabric of the Grenfell Clothing brand which is to this day manufactured in the United Kingdom 13 Awards EditCompanion of the Most Distinguished Order of St Michael and St George 1907 Honorary Doctorate of Medicine University of Oxford 1907 the first to be granted Murchison Prize Royal Geographical Society 1911 awarded for his charts of Labrador Knighthood 1927 recognition of medical educational and social work Honorary Knight for Life Loyal Knights of the Round Table Fifth Rank 1928 for great service to humanity Induction into the Canadian Medical Hall of Fame 1997In 1979 the Corner Brook campus of Memorial University of Newfoundland was renamed Sir Wilfred Grenfell College in his honour In 2010 following a debate to rename this campus the name Grenfell Campus Memorial University of Newfoundland was chosen to reflect the campus ties to the spirit of Sir Wilfred Grenfell s legacy Publications EditEssay by Grenfell include What the Bible Means to Me 1910 14 15 Books by Grenfell include Vikings of To Day or Life and Medical Work among the Fishermen of Labrador 1896 The Harvest of the Sea 1905 Off the Rocks Stories of the Deep sea Fisherfolk of Labrador 1906 Adrift on an Ice Pan 1909 What Will You Do with Jesus Christ 1910 What the Church Means to Me A Frank Confession and a Friendly Estimate by an Insider 1911 The Adventure of Life 1912 Down North on the Labrador 1912 What Life Means to Me 1913 16 Tales of the Labrador 1916 A Labrador Doctor 17 1919 Labrador Days Tales of the Sea Toilers 1919 Yourself and Your Body 1924 written at the time when he said his two sons had just reached the age of Whys and Hows What Christ Means to Me 1926 Labrador Looks at the Orient Notes of Travel in the Near and the Far East 1928 Forty Years for Labrador 1932 The Romance of Labrador 1934 See also EditCCGS Sir Wilfred GrenfellNotes Edit Wallace 1949 Wilfred Thomason Grenfell 1865 1940 Grenfell Family History Site Retrieved 26 November 2010 Labrador The Inuit Experience The Arctic Coastal Zone Management Newsletter Barrow Alaska North Slope Burough 9 February 1978 Archived from the original on 19 September 2016 Retrieved 19 August 2016 Blair Louisa 15 December 1991 Dr Wilfred Grenfell and the forgotten people of Newfoundland and Labrador Canadian Medical Association Journal Ottawa Ontario Canada Canadian Medical Association 145 12 1633 1635 ISSN 0820 3946 PMC 1336097 PMID 1742705 Forster Merna 2011 100 More Canadian Heroines Famous and Forgotten Faces Toronto Canada Dundurn ISBN 978 1 4597 0086 4 Drisdelle R 2010 Parasites Tales of Humanity s Most Unwelcome Guests Univ of California Publishers 2010 p 92f ISBN 978 0 520 25938 6 Grenfell Sir Wilfred Thomason 1909 Adrift on an Ice pan Houghton Mifflin Company The Viking 1931 TCM Retrieved 11 February 2019 Wilfred Grenfell Of Labrador Dead Founder in 1892 of Medical Mission Known Throughout World Stricken in Vermont New York Times 10 October 1940 Retrieved 17 January 2014 Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell founder of the Labrador Medical Mission who devoted his life to caring for the spiritual and physical needs of Eskimos Indians and fishermen of Grenfell Historic Properties www grenfell properties com Retrieved 27 March 2021 Baker Melvin Graham Jean A 1999 Celebrate Memorial A pictorial history of Memorial University of Newfoundland PDF St John s NL Division of University Relations Memorial University of Newfoundland p 56 How Grenfell Cloth Came to be Made Archived from the original on 23 July 2008 Retrieved 22 August 2008 Grenfell Made in England Fitch George Hamlin 1911 Comfort Found in Good Old Books Paul Elder and Company p 52 ISBN 9780836918052 Rompkey Ronald 2009 Grenfell of Labrador A Biography McGill Queen s Press MQUP p 337 ISBN 9780773575196 Review of What Life Means to Me by Wilfred Grenfell The Lancet 1808 28 June 1913 Grenfell Wilfred Thomason 1919 A Labrador Doctor The Autobiography of Wilfred T Grenfell PDF Houghton Mifflin Retrieved 23 December 2016 References EditWallace W S 1949 Grenfell Sir Wilfred Thomason 1865 1940 Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press Endnotes The chief source of information is Grenfell s autobiography first published in 1919 under the title A Labrador Doctor and republished in 1932 in a revised and expanded form under the title Forty Years for Labrador See also James Johnston 1908 Grenfell of Labrador A G Hall 1919 Doctor Wilfred Grenfell F L Waldo 1920 With Grenfell on the Labrador and D Wallace 1922 The Story of Grenfell of the Labrador B J Mathews 1924 Wilfred Grenfell F L Waldo 1924 Grenfell E H Hayes 1930 Forty Years on the Labrador Joyce Reason 1942 Deep sea Doctor Genevieve May Fox 1947 Sir Wilfred Grenfell New YorkFurther reading EditCMHF staff 2016 Sir Wilfred Grenfell The Canadian Medical Hall of Fame Historica Canada Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell The Canadian Encyclopedia Miller Basil 1948 Wilfred Grenfell Labrador s Dogsled Doctor Grand Rapids Zondervan Reason Joyce 1940 Deep Sea Doctor Wilfred Grenfell London Edinburgh House Press Reason Joyce 1974 O Medico dos Mares Profundos de Janeiro Uniao Feminina Missionaria Batista do Brasil Portuguese translation by Mein Mildred Coz translator Rompkey Ronald 1991 Grenfell of Labrador A Biography Toronto University of Toronto Press Rompkey Ronald May 2008 Grenfell Sir Wilfred Thomason 1865 1940 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 33565 Subscription or UK public library membership required Rompkey Ronald 2015 2011 Grenfell Sir Wilfred Thomason In Cook Ramsay Belanger Real eds Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol XVI 1931 1940 online ed University of Toronto Press Shannahan Colleen 2006 Mission the extraordinary adventures of Sir Wilfred Grenfell St John s NL Belle Isle Press ISBN 0978131304 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wilfred Grenfell Wikisource has original works by or about Wilfred Thomason Grenfell Grenfell Museum Properties International Grenfell Association Archived 30 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine Grenfell Photo Exhibit Town of St Anthony Grenfell s Town Works by Wilfred Grenfell at Project Gutenberg Works by Wilfred Grenfell at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Wilfred Grenfell at Internet Archive Works by Wilfred Grenfell at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Wilfred Grenfell Autograph Album at Dartmouth College Library Wilfred Thomason Grenfell papers MS 254 Manuscripts and Archives Yale University Library Anne MacLanahan Grenfell Edit Works by Anne MacLanahan Grenfell at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Anne MacLanahan Grenfell at Internet Archive Works by Anne MacLanahan Grenfell at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Academic officesPreceded byFridtjof Nansen Rector of the University of St Andrews1928 1931 Succeeded byField Marshal Jan Smuts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wilfred Grenfell amp oldid 1166515824, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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