American-born writer Martha Banning Thomas was strongly associated with Nova Scotia, although she did not move there until the last decades of her life.
During her time in Canada, Irish-born Martha Craig wrote about her various experiences that ranged from meetings with Indigenous people to theories of reincarnation.
Martha Louise Black was a colourful figure in the Yukon, where she variously engaged in mining, botany, and politics, becoming Canada's second female Member of Parliament in 1936. She published...
Mary Adair, who spent most of her life in Ontario, was a pioneer kindergarten teacher who authored a book of short pieces for the kindergarten classroom.
Mary Wilson Alloway spent much of life in Montreal where her interest in local history inspired her descriptive book, Famous Firesides of French Canada (1899), and her historical romance,Crossed...
Although she was born and died in the US, Mary Ann Shadd spent a significant portion of her life in Canada West, and was known for her pamphlets and journalism promoting racial equality.
Alternately residing in Montreal and Ottawa, Mary Ann McIver contributed poems to Canadian and American periodicals and issued one book, entitled simply Poems, in 1869.
In 1851, Mary Bibb helped establish The Voice of the Fugitive, one the first Canadian periodicals directed by and intended for people of African descent, and likely wrote much of the content herself.
Born in Ontario, Mary Bourchier Sanford spent much of her life in the US, where she contributed fiction and non-fiction to many periodicals and published several works of historical fiction.
Dedicated to improving education for young women, Mary Electa Adams enjoyed a 50-year career that took her to 10 different institutions in Ontario and New Brunswick. At the end of her life, her...
Mary Grannan was beloved by Canadian children for her Just Mary and Maggie Muggins stories broadcast over CBC radio (and later television) from the late 1930s to 1960 and published in many volumes.
A lifelong resident of Nova Scotia, Mary Jane Katzmann Lawson was involved in various aspects of literary production as an editor, bookstore owner, local historian, and published poet.