Awards & Winners

John Murray Gibbon

Date of Birth 12-April-1875
Place of Birth Sri Lanka
(Asia, South Asia, Eurasia, Indian subcontinent)
Nationality Canada
Profession Writer
John Murray Gibbon was a Scottish Canadian writer and cultural promoter. He was born in Ceylon and educated at Aberdeen, Oxford and Göttingen universities. Gibbon emigrated to Canada in 1913 to work for the Canadian Pacific Railway. In 1921, he became founding president of the Canadian Authors Association. A long-time enthusiast of folk culture, Gibbon organized a series of folk and crafts festivals over the years. With Sir Ernest MacMillan, he published the four-volume French Canadian Folk Songs. Histories he wrote included Scots in Canada, Steel of Empire: The Romantic History of the Canadian Pacific, Canadian Mosaic and two histories of nursing. He also wrote several novels. Gibbon's work was to have a major impact on the creation of a bilingual, multicultural, national culture. Canadian Mosaic influenced the adoption of the concept of a "cultural mosaic" in the Canadian government's multiculturalism policies. He died at Montreal.

Awards by John Murray Gibbon

Check all the awards nominated and won by John Murray Gibbon.

1938


Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction
Honored for : Canadian Mosaic

Nominations 1938 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction Canadian Mosaic