
Lucy Maud Montgomery (1874-1942)
was born in Clifton (now called New London), Prince Edward Island,
daughter of Hugh John Montgomery and Clara Woolner Macneill.
Her twenty-three-year-old mother died of tuberculosis when Maud
was just twenty-one months old, and her maternal grandparents,
Alexander and Lucy Macneill, took over her care at the Macneill
homestead in Cavendish. She grew up in the seaside fishing and
farming community, and knew intimately all of its beaches, woods,
fields, and homes.
In 1890 she was invited to visit--perhaps to
live with--her father and his new wife in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan.
She enjoyed the train trip itself and made some wonderful friends
while out west--even saw her name in print for the first time--but
she and her stepmother did not get along. She was homesick for
the Island, too, and returned in 1891. Her awe over the size and
beauty of Canada never left her.
Maud graduated from Prince of Wales College in
Charlottetown in 1894 and received a first-class teacher's licence.
At the convocation exercises, she read her essay on Shakespeare's "Portia" to
an appreciative audience. She taught school first in Bideford,
Prince Edward Island, where she was reasonably happy though she
had a large class. She was courted by several young men and recorded
many jolly times in her journal. The Bideford Parsonage, where
she boarded that winter, has now become a museum in her honor.
Maud Montgomery had saved just enough money in
her first year of teaching to pay for one year at Dalhousie University
in Halifax. She thought that a course in English literature might
aid her writing career. She received her first payment for a poem
while in Halifax, and won a newspaper contest for writing. She
returned to the Island to take up a second teaching post, in Belmont,
Lot 16. Here she was not happy with the pupils nor with her living
arrangement. She became secretly engaged to Edwin Simpson, her
cousin, and almost immediately began to regret her decision. The
next year, through Edwin Simpson's connections, she filled in as
a teacher in Lower Bedeque, PEI. Her journal records her passionate
attachment to the son of the family with whom she boarded--Herman
Leard. Leard may already have been engaged, and she was herself.
Her grandfather's death in 1898 took her back to Cavendish and
away from Leard (who died the next year) and teaching. She broke
her engagement with Edwin Simpson and assisted her grandmother
in the post office for the next thirteen years.
Apart from a ten-month stint as a newspaper reporter
on the Halifax Daily Echo (1901-1902), she stayed with her grandmother
until Lucy Woolner Macneill died in 1911. She had many activities
to keep her busy in Cavendish apart from the post office work:
she photographed, she worked on the Cavendish Literary Magazine,
she kept scrapbooks and a journal, and she wrote and published
poetry and short stories. She was ambitious to earn a living by
her pen. She made some far-flung friendships through her writing,
three of which lasted for many years: with an elderly Massachusetts
writer, Lucy Lincoln Montgomery (whose similar initials had brought
them in contact); with an aspiring writer and teacher in Alberta,
Ephraim Weber, with whom she began corresponding in 1902; and with
George Boyd MacMillan, a young Scottish journalist and aspiring
writer, with whom she began a correspondence in 1903. By the time
she began writing to MacMillan, she was earning a comfortable living
through her writing.
In 1902 Maud developed two important friendships:
one was with the Cavendish school teacher, Nora Lefurgey, who boarded
at the Macneills in the winter of 1903 and with whom she kept a
riotously funny private journal. Nora moved away from the Island
in 1904 but reappeared in Montgomery's life in the late 1920's
when she moved to Toronto. They renewed their old friendship. The
other friendship was with Maud's cousin Frederica Campbell of Park
Corner, whom she had known for years as a little girl, but suddenly "discovered" as
an adult. They became best friends, and Frede's death in 1919 was
a permanent grief.
In 1903 Ewan Macdonald was ordained as a Presbyterian
minister in Cavendish. When he left Canada to study for a year
in Edinburgh in 1906, he and Maud were secretly engaged. Maud was
determined to stay with her grandmother so that she could remain
in her old home, and so the two could not wed for another five
years. Meanwhile, Montgomery decided to take the time away from
her lucrative short-story writing to write a novel. Anne of
Green Gables was rejected several times before it was finally
accepted by the L.C. Page Company in Boston. It was published in
1908 and became an immediate success. The Page Company contract
tied Maud in for years, and she renewed the contract, though she
hated doing so, on a visit to Page in 1910.
Anne of Green Gables changed
her life. Suddenly she was a celebrity and began receiving fan
mail. She earned what for the times was an enormous amount, despite
the small royalty of the Page contract. She earned enough to
pay for Frede Campbell's two-year course at Macdonald College
in Montreal and for her own honeymoon in 1911. For the rest of
her life, she was to be famous and sought after. |
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