Lawrence Johnstone Burpee

Lawrence Johnstone Burpee FRSC (March 5, 1873 October 13, 1946) was a Canadian librarian, historian and author.[1]

Lawrence Johnstone Burpee
Born5 March 1873 
Halifax 
Died13 October 1946  (aged 73)
Oxford 
OccupationLibrarian 
Employer

Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, he moved to Ottawa at an early age, where from 1890 to 1905 he worked as private secretary to three federal ministers of justice. The following seven years he was librarian at the Ottawa Public Library, before becoming Canadian Secretary of the International Joint Commission in 1912, a post he occupied until his death.

Burpee helped found the Canadian Historical Association in 1922 and was its first president until 1925. He also was president of the Royal Society of Canada in 1936/37. He published many books and articles mainly related to Canadian history and geography and was the founding editor of the Canadian Geographical Journal.

Burpee was a supporter of many causes, from the need for a national library to the independence of Poland. On the latter he published a 1939 wartime article "Poland’s fight for freedom" in the Canadian Geographical Journal. On his way to Warsaw in 1946, Burpee died at Oxford, England. He is buried there, although he is also memorialized on a stone in Beechwood Cemetery.

Selected publications

  • Burpee, Lawrence J. The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Canadian History; London and Toronto, Oxford University Press 1926.
  • Burpee, Lawrence J. ed with introduction, notes and chronological tables: An Historical Atlas of Canada; Toronto, Thomas Nelson and Sons, Ltd 1927
  • Burpee, Lawrence J. trans. Journals and Letters of Pierre Gaultier de Varennes de la Verendrye and His Sons. Toronto: Champlain Society, 1927.
  • Burpee, Lawrence J. The Discovery of Canada; Toronto, The Macmillan Company of Canada Ltd, 1948
  • Burpee, Lawrence J. The Discovery of Canada; Ottawa, The Graphics Publishers Ltd., 1929

References

  1. "BURPEE, Lawrence Johnstone". The Canadian Who's Who. Vol. 1. 1910. pp. 31–32. Note: this Who's Who entry actually has the misspelling JOHNSTON — this and similar sources have created fairly common misspelling of Burpee's middle name.
Professional and academic associations
Preceded by
Reginald W. Brock and George A. Young
President of the Royal Society of Canada
1936–1937
Succeeded by
Archibald G. Huntsman


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