Waterloo Region Generations
A record of the people of Waterloo Region, Ontario.
William Wilfred Campbell

William Wilfred Campbell

Male 1861 - 1918  (57 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  William Wilfred CampbellWilliam Wilfred Campbell was born 1861, Kitchener, Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada (son of Rev. Thomas S. Campbell and Matilda Francis Wright); died 1 Jan 1918, Ottawa, Carleton Co., Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • Residence: 123 King St. E., Kitchener, Waterloo Region
    • Eby ID Number: Waterloo-136538
    • Hall of Fame - Waterloo Region: Bef 2012, , Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada

    Notes:

    William Wilfred Campbell, whose father was the rector of the Anglican Church at Berlin, where William was born, became one of Canada's most famous poets, and was recognized as the leader of the Ontario poets of his generation.

    He attended the University of Toronto and the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and was ordained as a minister in the Church of England in 1886. He had a parish in New Hampshire and in 1988 became rector at St. Stephen, New Brunswick. He left the ministry in 1891 and entered the civil service.

    His first volume of verse, Lake Lyrics, was published in 1889. He published five other books of poetry; four verse-plays; three novels and a descriptive work, The Canadian Lake Region, and edited the Oxford Book of Canadian Verse. Campbell was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1893. One of his best-known poems was Indian Summer.

    Waterloo Region Hall of Fame

    Residence:
    Miss Dunham, chief librarian of the local public library, gives a biography of the poet Wilfred Campbell, who was born here while his father, Rev. Thomas S. Campbell was incumbent of the Episcopal Church of the village, in 1861. This Church was then in a building on lower King St. which had formerly been the printing office of Henry Eby, publisher of the "Deutsche Canadier" newspaper, and of various Mennonite devotional books, etc. Many of you will remember the building, which stood until comparatively recently when it was replaced by the brick dwelling known as No. 123 King Street East.. Where was the parsonage, rented, as was also the church'97the first Episcopal church on Water Street, on the site of the present one, was built in 1862'97and consequently where the probable birth place of the poet, remains for the present a fact lost to history.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Rev. Thomas S. Campbell was born 1831, Belleville, Hastings Co., Ontario, Canada; died 22 Feb 1917, Wiarton, Amabel Twp., Bruce Co., Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: Church of St. John the Evangelist, Kitchener, Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; minister
    • Residence: 123 King St. E., Kitchener, Waterloo Region
    • Eby ID Number: Waterloo-145659

    Notes:

    St. John the Evangelist Anglican Church

    Begun: 1856 Early Anglican services were held in the Berlin area in the 1840s by the Rev. Michael Boomer of the Galt Mission. In 1856 William Jaffray moved from Galt to Berlin and established an English-language newspaper, the Berlin Chronicle. An Anglican, who had attended Trinity Church in Galt, Mr. Jaffray led in the formation of a congregation in Berlin, where he acted as Lay Reader. Two other gentlemen influential in establishing the Anglican presence in Berlin were Henry Joseph Fletcher Jackson and Dr. David S. Bowlby. Land was purchased on April 5, 1861 on the southeast corner of Water St. N. and Short (now Duke) Streets, and the first church, of red brick with white brick trim, was built in 1861.

    The church was demolished in April 1894 to make room for the present church which was built on the same site and dedicated on October 7, 1894. A Parish Hall was built in 1927 and the church was enlarged in 1955. Early rectors who followed the missionary, Thomas S. Campbell, were the first rector Rev. E.R. Stimson (1859-1864), Rev. Dr. John Schulte (1864-1867), Rev. Henry Jessop (1868) and Rev. Alexander Sydney Falls (1869-1876).

    Waterloo County Churches A Research Guide To Churches Established Before 1900 By Rosemary Ambrose




    Residence:
    Miss Dunham, chief librarian of the local public library, gives a biography of the poet Wilfred Campbell, who was born here while his father, Rev. Thomas S. Campbell was incumbent of the Episcopal Church of the village, in 1861. This Church was then in a building on lower King St. which had formerly been the printing office of Henry Eby, publisher of the "Deutsche Canadier" newspaper, and of various Mennonite devotional books, etc. Many of you will remember the building, which stood until comparatively recently when it was replaced by the brick dwelling known as No. 123 King Street East.. Where was the parsonage, rented, as was also the church'97the first Episcopal church on Water Street, on the site of the present one, was built in 1862'97and consequently where the probable birth place of the poet, remains for the present a fact lost to history.

    Thomas — Matilda Francis Wright. Matilda was born 10 Sep 1837, , England; died 3 Jun 1923, Hepworth, Bruce Co., Ontario; was buried , Wiarton, Amabel Twp., Bruce Co., Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Matilda Francis Wright was born 10 Sep 1837, , England; died 3 Jun 1923, Hepworth, Bruce Co., Ontario; was buried , Wiarton, Amabel Twp., Bruce Co., Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • Name: Matilda Francis Campbell
    • Eby ID Number: Waterloo-145660

    Children:
    1. 1. William Wilfred Campbell was born 1861, Kitchener, Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; died 1 Jan 1918, Ottawa, Carleton Co., Ontario, Canada.