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Love Strong as Death

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A transcription of Lucy Peel’s wonderfully readable journal was recently discovered in her descendent’s house in Norwich, England. Sent in regular installments to her transatlantic relatives, the j...
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  • 22 May 2001
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A transcription of Lucy Peel’s wonderfully readable journal was recently discovered in her descendent’s house in Norwich, England. Sent in regular installments to her transatlantic relatives, the journal presents an intimate narrative of Lucy’s Canadian sojourn with her husband, Edmund Peel, an officer on leave from the British navy. Her daily entries begin with their departure as a young, newlywed couple from the shores of England in 1833 and end with their decision to return to the comforts of home after three and a half years of hard work as pioneer settlers.
Lucy Peel’s evocative diary focuses on the semi-public world of family and community in Lower Canada’s Eastern Townships, and fulfils the same role as Susanna Moodie’s writings had for the Upper Canadian frontier. Though their perspective was from a small, privileged sector of society, these genteel women writers were sharp observers of their social and natural surroundings, and they provide valuable insights into the ideology and behaviour of the social class that dominated the Canadian colonies during the pre-Rebellion era.
Women’s voices are rarely heard in the official records that comprise much of the historical archives. Lucy Peel’s intensely romantic journal reveals how crucially important domesticity was to the local British officials. Lucy Peel’s diary, like those of such counterparts as Catherine Parr Traill, also suggests that genteel women were better prepared for their role in the New World than Canadian historians have generally assumed.

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Price: $41.99
Pages: 239
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Imprint: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Series: Studies in Childhood and Family in Canada
Publication Date: 22 May 2001
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780889203891
Format: Paperback
BISACs: HISTORY / Canada / Pre-Confederation (to 1867), BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Historical
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Love Strong as Death is the unabridged, annotated collection of Lucy Peel's journals home. And this little volume is a real treasure. For the first time we have an extensive and often quite detailed account of everyday life of British settlers on the Lower Canadian frontier, interspersed with commentary about the social and cultural mores of the community. What is more extraordinary is that Love Strong as Death recovers a voice `rarely heard in the official records' and offers a glimpse into one woman's world of emigration and settlement.... Historians of nineteenth-century colonial life, women's and social historians, and the general reader are fortunate that Little was able to persuade the Peel family to publish these recently discovered journals. And Jack Little is to be congratulated for bringing them to our attention.
J.I. Little is a professor of history at Simon Fraser University. He has published four previous books and thirty journal articles on the history of the Eastern Townships during the nineteenth century.

Table of Contents for Love Strong as Death: Lucy Peel’s Canadian Journal, 1833–1836, edited by J.I. Little
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Frequently Mentioned Names
Book One
Book Two
Book Three
Notes
Index