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Authorship
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The earliest published work located to date is an article that Winthrop Bell wrote at age fourteen. It is entitled "Mountaineering in Nova Scotia" and it discussed a trip that he had made to the top of Mount Aspotogan in Lunenburg County. (Bell, Winthrop P. "Mountaineering in Nova Scotia." The Academy Annual. Halifax, N.S. : N.S. Printing Co., Christmas 1898 : 11). It demonstrates his considerable literary ability at a very early age and expresses his love of this part of Nova Scotia. His photographic prints and negatives demonstrate that he returned there on many occasions to try and recapture the beauty that he described in this early essay. Bell also tried his hand at poetry in 1900 writing "A Farmer's Elegy". (Bell, Winthrop P. "A Farmer's Elegy". Methodist Magazine and Review. (44:2) July 1900 : 82). Sixty years later he reminisced about the poem as follows: "I had completely forgotten about the verses printed in 1900. They were an example of youthful pretentiousness, as I recall it; and were at any rate the product of imagination and not of experience." (Mount Allison University Archives, Winthrop Pickard Bell fonds, Letter to Prof. F.W.W. Desbarres from Dr. Winthrop Bell dated August 30, 1960, 8550/1/17 Item no. 5). Upon his arrival at the University of Mount Allison College he became a regular contributor to the student publication, The Argosy. His articles covered such subjects as commercial enterprises, railways, as well as reason and meanings. He continued to prepare articles for the publication after he went overseas to Europe to continue his education. One of his most lasting gifts to Mount Allison University are the lyrics to the "Alma Mater Song". (Mount Allison Songs. The Eurhetorian Society of the University of Mount Allison College, 1908 : 20-22). After his return from Europe his literary efforts tended to focus on his work experiences or research interests. During his years working for his brother at the Lockeport Company he gave an address and published an article in Maclean's Magazine about the transition from schooner to trawler fishing. He presented a very balanced approach to the issue which was quite contentious at the time. Two of his moist poignant articles appeared in Saturday Night Magazine in November and December of 1939 (Bell, Winthrop. "Exterminate non-Germans, dogma of "Mein Kampf"". Saturday Night. November 25, 1939 : 2 ; Bell, Winthrop. "Hitler's extermination policy is world-wide." Saturday Night. December 2, 1939 : 2). His articles plainly laid out Hitler's plans for mass extermination and warned the world about what was to come. He based his interpretations on the original German texts which were in his personal library. Bell's later works mainly related to his interests in history and genealogy. He combined these two interests in two of his privately published works. The first article provided information about his ancestor, the Hon. Hugh Bell, who founded the Nova Scotia Hospital and was a member of the Nova Scotia Assembly. (Bell, Winthrop. "Hon. Hugh Bell, founder of the Nova Scotia Hospital." The Nova Scotia Medical Bulletin. (31:3) March 1952: 61-71). The other work was a published biography of another ancestor, Brigadier-General Jedidiah Preble (1707-1784), who fought at Louisbourg and had a distinguished military career. (Bell, Winthrop. Brigadier-General Jedidiah Preble (1707-1784) and his participation in Nova Scotia history. Halifax: Halcraft Printing Ltd., 1954). Dr. Bell's final work focused on his compilation
of a register of the "Foreign Protestants" and it consumed
much of the last fifteen years of his life. The work was not completed
to the point of publication due to his failing health. In 2003 with the permission of Mount Allison University, copyright holder of Dr. Bell's works, and Nova Scotia Archives and Records Management, repository of the original documents, along with the efforts of a dedicated group of individuals including some Bell family descendants the publication of Dr. Bell's Register became a reality. This rediscovery of something old is now available to a whole new generation of researchers with ties and interest in these original Lunenburg County settlers. (Bell, Winthrop P. Register of the Foreign Protestants of Nova Scotia (ca. 1749-1770). Ed. Dr. J. Christopher Young. Guelph : JC Young, 2003, 2 volumes). Winthrop Bell's literary legacy continues through these very significant works.
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