After earning a doctorate in classical archaeology, Cornelia Harcum moved from the United States to Toronto, where she published on ancient Greek and Roman culture.
Rigorously educated by her father, Deborah How Cottnam was renowned as a teacher and poet in Nova Scotia and Massachusetts. Her poems, which circulated in manuscript during her lifetime, have been...
Born in England, Diana Bayley spent close to twenty years in the Canadian colonies, where she contributed to the periodical press and became known as the first Canadian resident to publish children...
Feminist author and journalist Doris Anderson was active in many areas of Canadian life, and made a major impact as editor of Chatelaine magazine from 1957 to 1977.
Dorothy Abraham came to Canada as a war bride in 1919 and lived on the west coast of British Columbia, where she documented her experiences in several published volumes.
Best known for more than fifty popular romances issued under the pen name of Anne Duffield, Dorothy Dean Tate spent some of her childhood years in Canada, where she published her first novel in 1917.
American-born Dorothy Duncan moved to Montreal after her marriage to author Hugh MacLennan. A very effective author of non-fiction, she won the Governor-General’s Award for creative non-fiction...
Dorothy Burnham enjoyed a long career in the textile department at the Royal Ontario Museum, which led to her many publications in the field of Canadian and global textiles and costumes.
E. Cora Hind was a suffrage activist and a celebrated agricultural journalist in Western Canada, known for her ability to accurately estimate grain crop yields.
The daughter of a British father and a Chinese mother, Edith Eaton grew up in Montreal and became one of the first North American writers of Asian descent to address issues of race.
A lifetime resident of Kitchener-Waterloo, ON, Edna Staebler was an award-winning journalist and life-time diarist who was best known for her series of cookbooks based on Mennonite cuisine.