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HOW FX SAVED THE MARITIMES
The unorthodox professors of Saint Francis Xavier left the classroom to teach their people how to beat depression, built the biggest “campus” in the world and started a co-operative revolution that’s spread from Antigonish to Colombo June 1 1953 DAVID MacDONALD
HOW FX SAVED THE MARITIMES
The unorthodox professors of Saint Francis Xavier left the classroom to teach their people how to beat depression, built the biggest “campus” in the world and started a co-operative revolution that’s spread from Antigonish to Colombo
DAVID MacDONALD
IN THE unwieldy-sounding town of Antigonish, N.S., there is a small Roman Catholic college with the equally unwieldy name of Saint Francis Xavier University. It has fourteen buildings, a spirited student body, a distinguished faculty, excellent academic rating and a showcase full of athletic trophies. It can also lay good claim to the most unusual campus in the world
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Editor’s Note: This article is part of our ‘Coulees to Muskeg – A Saskatchewan Environmental History’ series. This series is a partnership between NiCHE and the Saskatchewan History & Folklore Society (SHFS). All articles in the series appear on the NiCHE website and are published in SHFS’s Folklore
magazine. You can become a member of SHFS and subscribe to Folklore
HERE. To contribute to this series, see the CFP HERE.
In 2017, at the Saskatchewan Archives in Regina, I stumbled across a tape cassette from the Saskatchewan Indian History Film Project.
1 I was researching environmental policy in the province and found an interview with A.H. MacDonald conducted by Canadian author and journalist Murray Dobbin. The archivist found some headphones and a tape player. In an instant, I heard my grandfather’s voice – it was one I hadn’t heard in thirty years.