Voice of the Vanishing Minority
Robert Sellar and the Huntingdon Gleaner, 1863-1919
Format:Paperback
Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press
Published:20th Apr '99
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The biography of one of the first and most controversial champions of the English-speaking minority in Quebec.
At the turn of the century Robert Sellar, editor of the "Huntingdon Gleaner", was the most-quoted rural newspaperman in Canada. This work recounts his crusade for English rights in Quebec, for which he endured obloquy, legal harassment, arson, clerical condemnation, loss of family and the indifferent support of the people he was championing.In his newspaper and his book, The Tragedy of Quebec, Sellar lamented the exodus of Quebec's English-speaking farmers from the Eastern Townships, attributing it to the frenchification of the region. His provocative views were shared by grass-roots supporters in Ontario and the Prairies but were largely dismissed as Anglo-Protestant francophobia and bigotry. Drawing on Sellar's diary, the Gleaner, and a wealth of other original materials, Robert Hill recounts Sellar's one-man crusade for English rights in Quebec, a crusade for which he endured obloquy, legal harassment, physical violence, arson, clerical condemnation, loss of family, and the indifferent support of the people he was championing. Exploring the earliest origins of "English exodus" and the English-speaking minority rights battle in Quebec, Voice of the Vanishing Minority makes for timely reading in light of recent developments in Quebec.
Reviews of the hardcover: Hill has produced a fine piece of scholarship, an important one and a though-provoking one. It is a giant step toward giving Robert Sellar the place in history he deserved but that was denied to him for so very long: the place of being the first Quebecer to articulate the principles of Refus Global. Montreal Gazette. a fascinating picture of the times. Dialogue.
ISBN: 9780773520110
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
392 pages