Canada’s Storytellers: Dr. James H. Morrison
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About the Event
Join us for an intimate evening in conversation with Dr. James H. Morrison as he speaks of his book The Right to Read: Social Justice, Literacy, and the Creation of Frontier College / The Alfred Fitzpatrick Story.
The definitive biography of the unsung Canadian literacy hero who created Frontier College by teaching workers in railway and lumber camps how to read.
“The least they deserve is not charity but social justice.” — Alfred Fitzpatrick, 1905
So sums up the quest of Nova Scotian Alfred Fitzpatrick, the man behind campaigns for the betterment of Canada’s working class, and specifically the 1899 creation of the still-running literacy organization Frontier College. A tireless fighter for the rights of workers, immigrants, women, and Indigenous peoples, Fitzpatrick fiercely believed everyone in Canada — no matter their class or ability — has the right to dignity and the right to learn how to read.
Historian and author James Morrison situates Fitzpatrick in a time of burgeoning nation building and economic growth, where he crusaded for humane working conditions in railway, lumber, and mining camps, and held the government to account for its lack of support for adult and immigrant education. Dr. Morrison was a labourer and teacher with Frontier College in 1964 and 1965.
