Madge Macbeth

Madge Hamilton Lyons Macbeth (November 6, 1878[nb 1] – September 20, 1965) was an American-born Canadian writer.

Madge Macbeth 1937

Life and career

The daughter of Bessie Maffit and Hymen Hart Lyons, she was born Madge Hamilton Lyons in Philadelphia.[1] She attended Hellmuth Ladies' College in London, Ontario and worked on the school paper there. After graduation, she performed as a touring mandolinist in Maryland from 1899 to 1901.[2][3]

In 1901, she married Charles William Macbeth, a Canadian civil engineer. The couple lived in Detroit and then moved to Ottawa around 1904. Her husband died of tuberculosis in 1908, leaving her with two young sons.[1][2]

She began writing to support her family and published her first two stories in Canada West and the Canadian Magazine. She published The Winning Game, her first novel, in 1910. Macbeth was a founding member of the Ottawa Little Theatre. She published a column "Over My Shoulder" in the Ottawa Citizen. She also wrote advertisements, including brochures for the Canadian Pacific Railway, short stories for magazines, interviews with members of the Canadian parliament and articles on local history.[2]

She was elected president of the Canadian Authors Association in 1939, 1940 and 1941, becoming the first women head of that organization.[1]

Macbeth died in Ottawa at the age of 86.[1]

Selected works[1][3]

  • Kleath, novel (1917)
  • The Patterson Limit, novel (1923)
  • The Land of Afternoon, political satire (1924), using nom de plume Gilbert Knox
  • Shackles, novel (1926)
  • The Kinder Bees, political satire (1935), writing as Gilbert Knox
  • Over My Shoulder, memoir (1953)
  • Boulevard Career, memoir (1957)

Notes

  1. Some sources say 1880
gollark: Unless you want to call Thaumcraft a tech mod.
gollark: I mean, you could also say that a "tech mod" is... some mod providing automation tools and ways to make things or whatever, and a magic mod... isn't? But most magic mods do still have neat automation stuff.
gollark: I think the best way to judge if something is a tech mod is basically just the aesthetic, i.e. does it look like a "magic thing" or "tech thing".
gollark: You said speech *recognition*, not *generation*, make your mind up.
gollark: They're also a giant company which can throw lots of people, compute time, and other resources at it.

References

  1. New, William H (2002). Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada. p. 687. ISBN 0802007619.
  2. "Macbeth, Madge". SFU Digital Collections. Simon Fraser University.
  3. "Growing a Culture: An Artistic History of Ottawa" (PDF). Perley and Rideau Veterans’ Health Centre.
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