Angus McGill Mowat

Angus McGill Mowat
B.A., M.A.

Mowat c. 1930
Born Angus McGill Mowat
(1892-11-19)November 19, 1892
Trenton, Ontario, Canada
Died September 21, 1977(1977-09-21) (aged 84)
Northport, Ontario, Canada
Resting place Northport, Ontario
Occupation Author, soldier & librarian
Language English
Nationality Canadian
Education English literature
Alma mater Queen's University, University of Saskatchewan
Genre Novel
Spouse Helen (Thomson) Mowat
Partner Barbara Hutchinson
Children Farley Mowat, John Mowat, Mary Mowat
Relatives John Mowat, John Bower Mowat, Farley Mowat, Claire Mowat, John McDonald Mowat, Sir Oliver Mowat

Military career

Nickname(s) Squib
Allegiance  Canada
Service/branch  Canadian Army
Years of service 1914-1917 (wounded), 1940-1944
Rank Major
Unit The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment
Battles/wars World War I : Vimy Ridge, World War II
Awards
Relations John McDonald Mowat, Farley Mowat

Angus McGill Mowat, B.A., M.A., (November 19, 1892 - September 21, 1977) Angus Mowat was a Canadian librarian who initiated and contributed to the continuing improvement of the library systems in Saskatoon and Ontario, from the 1920s through to the 1960s.

During his post WWI career he held a number of positions as chief librarian at Trenton, Belleville, Windsor, and Saskatoon, before being appointed in 1937 as Inspector of Public Libraries for the province of Ontario.[1] He remained head of the provincial library office - a part of the Ministry of Education - until his retirement in 1960. He was a dynamic and positive force for library progress in Ontario, especially his advocacy for county and regional library service in rural and northern parts of the province.[2]

Throughout his career he encouraged better quality collections for adults and children,[3] professional staffing and library training, the necessity for improved finances, more efficient management by trustees and librarians, and upgraded or new buildings. He believed strongly that the 'personal touch' was essential for library service and that local effort, supplemented by provincial assistance, was the key ingredient in advancing local library development.[4] His personal efforts to establish a public library at Moose Factory stimulated improvements for aboriginal library service on reservations throughout Canada.[5]

Early life and education

The son of Robert McGill Mowat and Mary Jones, Angus was a member of the Trenton High School Cadet Corps, graduating and then attending Queen's University in Kingston, as part of the Canadian Officer Training Corps from 1912 until 1914. Post WWI, Angus finally graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1931 (after taking part-time courses from 1926 to 1931). In 1926, Angus received his Diploma from Library Training School from the Ontario Department of Education, Toronto. Angus received a Masters degree in English from the University of Saskatchewan in 1935.

Of significance, his grandfather was John Bower Mowat, a noted professor at Queen's University. His great grandfather, John Mowat was also one of the founders of Queen's. His uncle was Major John McDonald Mowat, whom also served in WWI. And the politician Sir Oliver Mowat was a his great uncle.

War Service

Angus joined No. 6 Company of the Canadian Military Engineers in August 1914 - part of the Canadian Expeditionary Force - attested for overseas service in November 1914 and was later commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant in the 4th Battalion in 1917. He served in France and Belgium, and was wounded badly in his right arm at the Battle of Vimy Ridge, returning to Canada late in 1917.

Angus joined the Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment in 1921 as a Cadet Corps Officer until July 1928. When he left Trenton, Angus joined the Reserve of Officers as a Major on 23 July 1928.

From 1940 until 1944 Angus Mowat was a Major in the Hasty P's and was in charge of the Trenton Armouries - which was also his father's hardware store. He was also a Liaison and Recruiting Officer for this Kingston Military District until 1944, and often rode dispatch between Toronto, Kingston and Ottawa on a Harley-Davidson motorcycle.

Post-war

Angus Mowat was appointed Chief Librarian of Trenton, Ontario on 16 July 1922 after the retirement of Mrs. Pattee. Next he became Chief Librarian of Belleville in 1928. Angus was then made Chief Librarian of Windsor in 1930, followed with the position of Chief Librarian of Saskatoon in 1932 until July 1937[6] when he and his family moved back to Ontario, settling in Richmond Hill.

In 1937 he took the position of the first Inspector of Public Libraries for the Province of Ontario[7] which he held until 1948 - interrupted by his service in the second war - when he was promoted to Director of Public Libraries for Ontario. He held that position until 1959 when his title was changed to Director of the Provincial Library Service. He retired to Port Hope, Ontario in 1960 where he became very active with the Port Hope Public Library and was a trustee for several years on the local library board.[8].

Positions:

Prior to WWII he wrote his first novel, Then I’ll Look Up (1938), and after the war his second, Carrying Place (1944) both published by Reginald-Saunders, Toronto.[9] After his second novel, he decided that writing was not his forte, and focused on his upgrading of the library system.[10]

His son is celebrated Canadian author Farley Mowat, who often fondly wrote about Angus in his books.[11][12][13][14][15]

He had a lifelong love of boats and sailing them. From 1968 to 1971 he painstakingly restored the wreck of a boat he had seen under construction in Trenton as a boy in 1908, originally called the Scott Hutcheson. The boat is now in the Marine Museum of the Great Lakes at Kingston's collection and is called The Black Angus in homage. Late in his life became a good friend of the poet, Al Purdy,[16] and was the subject of the National Film Board short documentary Angus in 1971.

Angus Mowat died at Northport, Ontario on 21 September 1977.[17]

Publications

Awards

The Angus Mowat Award of Excellence was established by the Province of Ontario in 1985 for public libraries in recognition of excellence in public library service. It is given annually to projects that demonstrate an innovative application or methodology which other libraries might use as a model and which has resulted in the achievement of improved library service.[18]

References

  1. G.F.R. [George F. Rogers] (1940). “Major Angus Mowat, Inspector of Public Libraries,” OLR 24, 3 (Aug. 1940), 259-60.
  2. Lorne Bruce (2011). Places to Grow: Public Libraries and Communities in Ontario, 1930-2000 (Guelph, privately printed, 2011), chapters 2-5.
  3. Barbara Rollock (1988). Public Library Services for Children. Library Professional Publications - Children - 228 pages
  4. Stephen F. Cummings (1986). “Angus McGill Mowat and the Development of Ontario Public Libraries, 1920-1960,” Ph.D. diss.,
  5. Stephen Cummings (1986). “On the Compass of Angus Mowat: Books, Boats, Soldiers and Indians,” in Peter F. McNally, ed., Readings in Canadian Library History, 245-58. Ottawa: Canadian Library Association, 1986.
  6. Millar, Ruth W. (2015-10-29). "Turning Back the Pages". Coteau Books. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  7. Lorne Bruce (2014). “An Inspector Calls: Angus Mowat and Ontario’s Rural Libraries, 1937-40,” Ontario History 106, 1 (Spring 2014), 77-99.
  8. http://www.phpl.ca/About/AngusMowat.aspx
  9. Beatrice Margaret Blackstock Corbett (1995). “Lord of the Inland Seas: The Regional Fiction of Angus Mowat,” M.A. thesis, Queen’s University, 1995.
  10. Roberta Wilson Weiner (1960). “Angus Mowat: Civil Servant,” OLR 44, 2 (May 1960), 65-66.
  11. Farley Mowat (1957). The Dog Who Wouldn't Be. New York: Little, Brown & Company, 1957.
  12. Farley Mowat (1979). And No Birds Sang. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1979
  13. Farley Mowat (1992). My Father's Son: Memories of War and Peace. Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1992.
  14. Farley Mowat (1993). Born Naked. Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1993.
  15. Farley Mowat (1995). Aftermath. Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1995.
  16. Al Purdy (1973). “Angus Unlimited,” Queen’s Quarterly 85 (Autumn 1973), 454-55.
  17. Deseronto Archives - Obituaries 1968-1978
  18. Ontario Public Library Service Awards

External links


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