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Dorothy Murray Sliter fonds
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Institución archivística
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Declaración de responsabilidad de edición
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Mención de la escala (cartográfica)
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Mención de la escala (arquitectónica)
Jurisdicción de emisión y denominación (filatélico)
Área de fechas de creación
Fecha(s)
-
1880-1997 (Creación)
- Creador
- Sliter, Dorothy Murray
Área de descripción física
Descripción física
2.2 m of textual records
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Historia biográfica
Dorothy Browning Murray Sliter (1905-1997) was born and raised in Kingston. She was the youngest child of David Murray and Lottie Maxwell and she claimed descent from the British poet Robert Browning. Part of her childhood was spent in the family home now know as the "Grey House" which is a part of the Queen's Campus. The house was designed by her father who trained as an architect but ended up managing his father's vinegar factory. A great Uncle, John Clark Murray, was the head of Queen's Philosophy Department in the early 1870's. Dorothy, herself, graduated from Kingston Collegiate Vocational Institute and attended Queen's for a short time.
When she was thirteen, Dorothy Murray first encountered Ernest Sliter a badly wounded First World War Veteran. They met officially when she was seventeen and married when she was twenty one.
Sliter suffered all his life from his war wounds and consequently was forced to live on a very inadequate pension. Since Dorothy was herself not strong and very nervous and thus unable to take employment they lived in some poverty throughout the rest of their lives. To save money, they moved to the country. For ten years the Sliter's lived at Abbey Dawn as tenants of the poet Wallace Havelock Robb. Later they moved to Verona where they could be nearer to a doctor.
Dorothy had been a writer all of her life. In her youth she wrote some twenty novels which she destroyed before she married as she considered them to be immature. In later years she consorted with poets, especially through Robb and his "Abbey Dawn Poet's Festivals" which attracted the likes of Sir Charles G.D. Roberts, Wilson MacDonald, Charles Andrew Tupper and Nathaniel Benson. Sliter brought her own poetry to these gatherings but she was far too nervous to read it herself so her husband Ernie did her readings for her.
Over the years Dorothy Sliter published a number of books of poetry including, "Meadow Long Day" (1939); "High Wind" (1944); "Father Lucas and Other Poems" (1971). As well as poetry she published " The Friendly Village" (1967), an anecdotal history of Verona and her "Memoirs" (1980).
Ernie Sliter died in 1976 and Dorothy lived on in Verona, battling failing eyesight and poor health until just before her death in 1997. She is survived by two nieces and three nephews: Murray Dell, Jeffrey Dell and Barbara Dell MacGowan of Niagara Falls area; Dr. John D. Murray of Toronto and Shirley Hodgins Brind of Geneva, New York.
Historial de custodia
The Dorothy M. Sliter fonds came to Queen's University in a number of accessions. Most of the material was brought to the Archives by Mrs. Sliter, herself. The last accession came from her estate.
Alcance y contenido
Correspondence, news clippings, photographs, and material relating to Canadian and American authors.
Área de notas
Condiciones físicas
Origen del ingreso
Donated by Mrs. Dorothy Sliter and her estate
Arreglo
The material was in no particular order when it came to the Archives and was arranged here.
Idioma del material
- inglés
Escritura del material
Ubicación de los originales
2064
3736.18
2287.4
Disponibilidad de otros formatos
Restricciones de acceso
Open
Condiciones de uso, reproducción, y publicación
Copyright provisions apply, please see archivist.