Series 26 - Malcolm MacLeod

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Malcolm MacLeod

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  • Textual record

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CA NSHK MER-26

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Date(s)

  • 1918 - 1942 (Creation)
    Creator
    MacLeod, Malcolm
  • 1918 - 1942 (Creation)
    Creator
    Merkel, Andrew Doane

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Physical description

1.5 cm of textual records
Note: Includes 58 letters, 4 telegrams, 9 article drafts, and 1 newspaper clipping

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Name of creator

(1918 - 1943)

Biographical history

Malcolm MacLeod was born in Pictou, Nova Scotia in 1918. He began working for the Canadian Press in 1937, managing the office in Cape Breton. In 1939, he joined the Royal Canadian Air Force as a flight trainer in Ontario. He died in 1943 in Europe, at age 25, as a squadron leader.

Name of creator

(1884 - 1954)

Biographical history

Journalist and poet Andrew Doane Merkel was born in New York State in the mid 1880s. He came to Nova Scotia as a boy when his father, Anglican Minister Rev. A. Deb Merkel, took over a parish in Digby. From 1904 to 1905, he attended the University of King's College in Windsor, Nova Scotia, then moved to Sydney, Nova Scotia to attend the university's School of Engineering from 1905 to 1907. He did not complete this degree due to the closure of the engineering school, and represented his classmates to the King's Board of Governors while the school was closing. Merkel married Florence (Tully) E. Sutherland from Windsor and had three children: J. Arthur, Peggy, and Mary-Elizabeth. Merkel spent most of his adult life in Halifax and is known to have lived on South Park Street. He was a journalist for both the Philadelphia North American and the Sydney Record, in the 1900s, an editor for the Saint John Standard from 1908 to 1910 and of the Halifax Echo from 1910 to 1917, the Maritime News Editor for the Canadian Press from 1917 to 1919, and finally, the Superintendent of Canadian Press Atlantic Division from 1919 to 1946. He died in 1954.

Merkel was also a poet and avid historian. His first book length poem, The Order of Good Cheer, wasn’t published until 1944 although he completed it in the early 1920s. His second book length poem, Tallahassee, was published the following year. Both works illustrate his interest in Nova Scotian history; The Order of Good Cheer is about Nova Scotia’s first French settlers while Tallahassee is about Halifax during the American civil war. He published two works of non-fiction as well, Letters from the Front (1914), and Bluenose Schooner (1948). Merkel was also a member of the Halifax literary group called The Song Fishermen and often hosted meetings of the group, which included fellow writers such as Charles G.D. Roberts, Charles Bruce, Kenneth Leslie, and Robert Norwood.

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Scope and content

Series contains letters between Andrew Merkel and Malcolm MacLeod from the beginning of his career at the Canadian Press, some telegrams and news article drafts.

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