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Hendriks, Robert
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William Bleasdell (W.B.) Cameron was born in Trenton, Ontario on July 26, 1862 to John Cameron and Agnes Emma Cameron (nee Bleasdell), and had four siblings, Isabelle, Agnes, Maude, and Charles. Cameron was especially close to his maternal grandfather, Reverend Canon Bleasdell, who preached at St. George's Anglican Church in Trenton, Ontario after emigrating from England in 1848. Cameron first attended school at Crown Street Common in Trenton, Ontario, from 1869-1877 and then attended high school at Union School from 1877-1879. After graduating, he began training as a druggist in Trenton under A.W. Hawley and most likely attended the Ontario College of Pharmacy as he later qualified for an Alberta pharmaceutical license. In late 1880 or early 1881, Cameron moved out west to live in the Northwest Territories as a trader, first starting out in Winnipeg, Manitoba and then in Battleford, Saskatchewan where he became a skilled trader speaking rough Cree and Saulteaux and using trade sign language. Prior to becoming a trader under the service of the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) in Frog Lake, Alberta in 1884, Cameron experimented with a number of different jobs including brief forays into teaching, railroad construction, and working as a ranch hand. It was at Frog Lake that W.B. Cameron became known as the sole white survivor of the April 2, 1885 Frog Lake Massacre. Cameron returned to Frog Lake in 1925 for the unveiling of the Frog Lake Massacre Memorial Cairn and also during 1947 to conduct tours of the Frog Lake Massacre site. W.B. Cameron married Mary Maude Wilson Atkins on July 8, 1902, and together they had two children, Owen and Douglas. After they married, the family did not settle in one place for very long, living in various towns throughout Alberta, Saskatchewan, and British Columbia until 1926 when Mary and Cameron separated. In addition to working as a trader, Cameron wrote hundreds of stories, most of which were written only a decade after his leaving school, and had many of them published. His published literary works appeared in magazines such as The Beaver or Scarlet and Gold, and in numerous newspapers. Cameron also worked as editor of Field and Stream magazine for about two years starting in circa (ca.) 1878. In the 1920s Cameron published a novel, The War Trail of Big Bear, which told the story of his captivity at the hands of Big Bear's Renegades in the spring of 1885 after the Frog Lake Massacre. He also co-wrote a novel, When Fur Was King, with Henry John Moberly about life in north-west Canada during the last half of the nineteenth century. In the mid-1940s, Cameron revised The War Trail of Big Bear and had it republished under a new name, Blood Red the Sun, his family later attempting to have a further edition published in the 1970s. Throughout the late 1920s and 1930s, Cameron also owned several drugstores in Derwent, Lac La Biche, Heinsburg, and Athabasca, Alberta. In the 1940s he worked as a curator for the Regina RCMP museum in Manitoba. W.B. Cameron died in Meadow Lake Hospital in Meadow Lake, Saskatchewan, in the late winter of 1951.
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Thomas A. Edge Archives & Special Collections (Athabasca University)