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Joseph Howe, Volume II
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In this concluding volume of the biography of the great Nova Scotia tribune, Joseph Howe extends his horizon well beyond his native province and in the climactic period of a tumultuous political ca...
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01 October 1983

Professor Beck shows how, in Churchillian fashion, the final resolution was preceded by a series of setbacks and disappointments in Howe's public life. These were the result of a bold colonization scheme encompassing an inter-colonial railway between Halifax and Quebec; a quixotic mission of recruitment in the United States for the British armies in the Crimea; the embattled leasdership of an unstable provincial administration in the early 1860s; and the hard-fought campaign to prevent passage of the British North America Act. Disillusioned by the indifference of British politician to his long-standing advocacy of a refurbished British Empire in whose government colonial leaders could share, Howe turned his energies to making the new Canadian federation work. A whole-hearted supporter of Confederation in his later years, Howe displayed an irrepressible vitality that Professor Beck sees as the trademark of the man.
Price: $44.95
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date:
01 October 1983
ISBN: 9780773560833
Format: eBook
BISACs:
HISTORY / Canada / General
"This volume completes Professor Beck's epic work, providing us with a definitive study of the man who is generally conceded to be the greatest Nova Scotian ... a major contribution to Canadian historical writing ... captures the colour and vitality of this belated father of Confederation whose tempestuous career had few parallels." Donald C. MacDonald, Toronto Star.