Joseph Howe, Volume I

Volume I, Conservative Reformer, 1804-1848

By Murray Beck
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Paperback : 9780773504455, December 1984

Description

For almost fifty years Joseph Howe was at or near the centre of public affairs, first in Nova Scotia and later in imperial relations and in the earliest years of the new Dominion. He was his province's most articulate spokesman as well as its leading politician and publicist and was pre-eminent in the struggle for responsible government, the introduction of railroads, opposition to Confederation, and in a quixotic advocacy of imperial federation. Drawing on a variety of records including Howe's private papers and the vigourous provincial press of his day, Beck places Howe firmly in the political, social, and intellectual life of colonial Nova Scotia, assessing his contributions to that society and revealing the breadth of both his vision and his influence.

Reviews

"This book is more than a life and times ... a palpable sense of Nova Scotia permeates the text and acts as both crucible and carapace for the author's full-dimensional protrait of Howe ... from his birth at the Northwest Arm in Halifax in 1804 to 1848, the year of his triumph in steering Nova Scotia to responsible government. If the second half of Howe's life is half the measure of this fine book, it will be a great success." The Globe and Mail.