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George Frederick Clarke

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Nationality
  
Canadian

Name
  
George Clarke

Resting place
  
Woodstock

Occupation
  
dentist

Role
  
Author

Born
  
December 29, 1883 (
1883-12-29
)
Woodstock, New Brunswick

Known for
  
writing, environmental activism

Spouse(s)
  
Mary Schubert (m. 1912; wid. 1974)

Died
  
October 23, 1974, Woodstock, Canada

Books
  
Six Salmon Rivers and Another, Song of the Reel, Expulsion of the Acadians

Dr. George Frederick Clarke (1883–1974) was a New Brunswick author, historian and archaeologist.

Biography

He was born in Woodstock, New Brunswick, in 1883. He started writing from an early age. His first published story appeared in Canada Monthly in 1904. Tappan Adney was one of his boyhood friends. He supported himself working as a dental assistant. In 1910, he attended a dental college in Philadelphia, where he met his wife, Mary Schubert. The two married in 1912. He graduated the next year. They returned to Woodstock and bought a house, on 814 Main Street, now considered a historic place.

He eventually retired from his dentistry practise. He wrote several books and many magazine articles. During the 1960s, he campaigned against the construction of the Mactaquac Dam. Poor health prevented him from continuing archaeology. He received an honorary degree from the University of New Brunswick in 1969, and a mountain was named after him in July 1974, Mount Frederick Clarke. In October 1974, he died of a stroke.

His house was formally recognized as a Provincial Historic Site on October 27, 1978.

References

George Frederick Clarke Wikipedia