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Patricia Koretchuk. Chasing the Comet: A
Scottish-Canadian Life. Waterloo, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University
Press, 2002. Pp. 192, illustrated.
The experience of the Scots in Canada has
a history dating back nearly four centuries. That history has received
considerable attention, largely because the community has maintained a separate
identity and because it has included so many figures of national significance.
Emigration studies, academic analyses of settlements and businesses, the
observations of Lady Aberdeen, and the memoirs of John Kenneth Galbraith are
all part of a considerable literature that reflects the Scottish experience in
Canada. The most recent addition to this body of work is Chasing the Comet:
A Scottish-Canadian Life, published by Wilfrid Laurier University Press as
part of its Life Writing Series. The life is that of David Caldow, a
post-World War I emigrant from the agricultural county of Kirkcudbrightshire in
southeast Scotland. The writer/biographer is Patricia Koretchuk, who, with a
general interest in immigration and as a friend of the Caldow family, was asked
by Caldow=s son to record his father=s experiences for family purposes. A
lengthy series of productive interviews with the elderly and articulate David
Caldow resulted in a memoir that begins with recollections of his youth in
Scotland, sketches his impressions of people and employment in Quebec, Ontario,
and Alberta, and focuses upon his forty years of working experience in British
Columbia.
Raised in a politically conservative
agricultural region in Scotland, Caldow learned respect for social superiors
from both his father and his teachers before leaving school at age thirteen.
In Canada, he did not abandon traditional perspectives, nor did he leave behind
the concomitant willingness to criticize sharply those who fail to deserve
respect. His loyalty to his employers is as constant a theme of the memoir as
his willingness to tell them bluntly when he felt a policy or action was
wrong. Caldow=s delight in the moments of comeuppance
that eventually awaited those who ignored his advice is as palpable in the
re-telling as it must have been when the incidents occurred. At McGill
University=s Macdonald College, where he was first
employed in Canada in the mid-1920s, he told an agricultural instructor he
would be thrown off any real farm due to incompetence. He must have had a
talent for delivering such messages, however bluntly, for he was never thrown
out of any of his own jobs for such statements. A man of remarkable candour,
he remained so as he reminisced through the course of interviews that resulted
in this book. In particular, his surprising explanations of why he decided to
join the Canadian Armed Forces and why he decided to marry reveal an uncommon
intellectual honesty. When Caldow found himself in supervisory
positions (as he did at the provincially run Colony Farm and Tranquille Farm),
he took justifiable pride in the achievements of the agricultural operations
under his management. Equally clear is his low opinion of the unionized
workers he had to deal with after World War II. Unhappy at his loss of control
of the hiring process and at the restrictions union contracts placed upon the
right of management to manage, Caldow=s
relationship with his workers, by his own account, seems rarely to have been a
happy one. In contrast, there is considerable evidence of the pleasure he
derived from contact with others of Scottish origins. Wherever Caldow found
himself, he also found the support of Scottish organizations and individuals.
The importance of such networks for immigrants in the early twentieth century
has long been acknowledged, and this memoir indicates strongly that, for Scots
at least, their significance continues.
Patricia Koretchuk has taken great care
to allow Caldow his voice and succeeds admirably in her intention to avoid Aauthor intrusion.@ For example, she allows him to locate the
Belleville region in northern Ontario, where in memory it has undoubtedly been
since his working days at Deloro in the early 1920s. Generally, she also has avoided
the temptation to indulge in Aauthor exclusion.@ She certainly does not shy away from his
recollections of prostitutes and sexual mores. However, her decision to depart
from this policy by not questioning Caldow about his knowledge of prostitution
in New Westminster during the 1930s stands in contrast to the principles that
otherwise guided the writing of the memoir.
Both writer and publisher deserve
congratulations for creating such a worthwhile addition to the Life Writing
Series. Improvements to future volumes, however, could be achieved through
minor changes. As a metaphor for the life under consideration, the title here
seems to promise rather more than it delivers, and while the Burns= poetry and photographs that preface each
chapter are appropriately chosen and located, the quality of the photographic
reproduction is often surprisingly poor. The utility of the footnotes especially
deserves some attention. Though sometimes helpful, generally they are used
spasmodically and randomly, making many seem unnecessary while a couple are
simply confusing. At several points in the narrative, readers would appreciate
either informational footnotes or more detail within the text. Chapters
dealing with Caldow=s work for Gordon Walker (United Farmers
MLA for Claresholm in the late 1920s), Vancouver businessman Andrew Houstoun,
the Tranquille Sanatorium Farm, and Colony Farm leave us wanting more
information about the people who worked there and about the institutions
themselves. Consideration of the range of material that is available, both
published and unpublished, would have enriched the text and given the life of
David Caldow greater resonance. The early chapter about his time working for
the Deloro Smelting and Refining Company makes effective use of such material
and provides welcome additional context for the general reader.
David Caldow retired from Colony Farm in
1968. However, as the memoir indicates, retirement was not a natural condition
for Caldow. He was soon asked to supervise the livestock at the Pacific
National Exhibition, leaving that annual job only when he was invited to apply
for an overseas position teaching agriculture through the Canadian
International Development Agency. His experience with incompetent civil
servants in Ottawa B the tale of the official who could not find
her office would be chilling if it were not so funny B and in Africa would easily have discouraged most
hopeful (and younger) overseas volunteers. Caldow persevered, refused
last-minute changes to his assignment, enjoyed two months in Dar Es Salaam at
taxpayers= expense while Canadian officials sorted
things out, and then spent two of the most satisfying years of his life as
advisor to the manager of a large farm at Arusha in Tanzania.
The mandate of the Life Writing Series is
to publish memoirs of people for whom Aphilosophical
purposes are central to their lives.@
Wilfrid Laurier University Press and Patricia Koretchuk have combined
successfully to show how David Caldow=s
hard work, blunt honesty, and ironic sense of humour served him well through
all the twists and turns of his life.
Wayne Norton
Kamloops, B.C.
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