Zona de identificação
tipo de entidade
Pessoa singular
Forma autorizada do nome
Pierce, Lorne Albert
Forma(s) paralela(s) de nome
- Lorne Pierce
Forma normalizada do nome de acordo com outras regras
Outra(s) forma(s) do nome
identificadores para entidades coletivas
área de descrição
datas de existência
1890-1961
história
Lorne Albert Pierce was born August 3, 1890 in Delta Ontario. He attended Queen's; Victoria College, Toronto; Union Theological Seminary, NY; New York University; and United Theological College, Montréal. He was ordained a Methodist minister in 1916. Pastoral work, in Ottawa and elsewhere, and wartime army service preceded his association with Ryerson Press in 1920. He worked as a literary adviser, then as editor.He became Editor in chief of RYERSON PRESS in 1922, a position he held until 1960. Pierce championed Canadian writers and writing for over 40 years. Pierce typified the enthusiastic nationalism of English Canada in the 1920s: he launched the important Ryerson Chapbook poetry series, the pioneering Makers of Canadian Literature volumes of criticism, and the textbook series, The Ryerson Books of Prose and Verse.
Pierce's own writings include studies of William KIRBY and Marjorie Pickthall, a critique and an anthology of Canadian literature, and editions of the poetry of Pickthall and Bliss CARMAN. In 1926 he established the Lorne Pierce Medal of the RSC for literary achievement and in 1927 the Edith and Lorne Pierce Collection of Canadian Literature at Queen's. He was prominent in the Canadian Authors' Association, the Canadian Bibliographical Society, the Canadian Writers' Foundation, the ROYAL ONTARIO MUSEUM and the Art Gallery of Toronto (ART GALLERY OF ONTARIO). In 1940 Pierce was a founder of what became the Canadian Hearing Society, a by-product of his own deafness.
Lorne Pierce died in Toronto, Ontario on November 27, 1961.