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Just a Larger Family

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Letters from Canada to the mother of child war guests from Britain are "an extraordinary slice of wartime Canadian life." — J.L. Granatstein The Second World War had been under way for a year when ...
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  • 04 May 2011
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Letters from Canada to the mother of child war guests from Britain are "an extraordinary slice of wartime Canadian life." — J.L. Granatstein

The Second World War had been under way for a year when Marie and John Williamson welcomed two English brothers to join them and their two children in their small house in north Toronto for the duration of the conflict. Marie wrote over 150 letters to the boys’ mother, Margaret Sharp, imagining that she could make Margaret feel she was still with her children. She shepherded the boys through education decisions and illnesses, eased them into a strange new life, and rejoiced when they embraced unfamiliar winter sports. The letters brim with detail about family holidays, the financial implications of an extended family, their involvement in their church, and the games and activities that kept them occupied. Marie’s letters reflect the lives and concerns of a particular family in Toronto, but they also reveal a portrait of what was then Canada’s second-largest city during wartime.

The introduction is by Mary F. Williamson, Marie’s daughter, and Tom Sharp, Margaret’s youngest son. The book features a foreword by Jonathan Vance that puts the letters in historical context.

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Price: $31.99
Pages: 408
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Imprint: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Series: Life Writing
Publication Date: 04 May 2011
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781554583232
Format: Paperback
BISACs: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Personal Memoirs, HISTORY / Social History
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We know a great deal about the consequences of World War II in Europe, but in this wonderful book we discover an untold part of the story. Here's what life was like in Canada for three British children who came to escape the bombing and for the Toronto family that took them in. In letters written by the mother of the host family, this book brilliantly captures the wartime years of food shortages, air raid precautions, gas rationing, and the raising of the young British evacuees in her care.

Mary F. Williamson is a retired fine-arts bibliographer and adjunct faculty in graduate art history at York University. She co-authored Art and Architecture in Canada (1991), and her recent writings on nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century cookery have appeared in Covering Niagara: Studies in Local Popular Culture (WLU Press, 2010) and The Edible City (2009).
|Tom Sharp is the younger of the two boys who came to live with the Williamsons in Canada. He had a civil service career in trade policy and was awarded the Commander of the British Empire (CBE) in 1987. He was an elected local councillor in Guildford, Surrey, a governor of two local schools, and a citizens' advice bureau member.

Table of Contents for Just a Larger Family: Letters of Marie Williamson, from the Canadian Home Front, 1940–1944, edited by Mary F. Williamson and Tom Sharp
Foreward | Jonathan Vance
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Biographical Notes
Family Tree
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
Epilogue
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
Appendix 3
Appendix 4
Appendix 5
Notes
Index