Awards & Winners

Charles Ritchie

Date of Birth 23-September-1906
Place of Birth Halifax
(Nova Scotia, Halifax Regional Municipality, Canada)
Nationality Canada
Also know as Charles Stewart Almon Ritchie
Profession Diarist, Diplomat
Charles Stewart Almon Ritchie, CC was a Canadian diplomat and diarist. Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Ritchie was educated at University of King's College, Pembroke College, Oxford, Harvard University, and École Libre des Sciences Politiques. He joined the Department of External Affairs in 1934 eventually becoming Canada’s ambassador to West Germany, Permanent Representative to the United Nations, ambassador to the United States during the presidencies of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, ambassador to the North Atlantic Council and from 1967 to 1971 was Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom in London. While Ritchie's career as a diplomat marked him as an important person in the history of Canadian foreign relations, he became famous through the publication of his diaries, first The Siren Years, and then three follow-ups. The diaries document both his diplomatic career and his private life, including the beginning of his long love affair with the Anglo-Irish writer Elizabeth Bowen, which began in 1941 when he was still single and she married, survived through his marriage in 1948 and long periods of separation, lasting until Bowen's death in 1973.

Awards by Charles Ritchie

Check all the awards nominated and won by Charles Ritchie.

1974


Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction
Honored for : The Siren Years

Nominations 1974 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction The Siren Years