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From the archives

Football Fables

The beautiful game bestrides the world like a colossus

But Blind They Were

The fallacy of an empty continent

Alberta and Me

From a land of oil, true enough

The Infernals

If they want to have a war, let it begin here

Kyle Wyatt

Congress’s Own: A Canadian Regiment, the Continental Army, and American Union

Holly A. Mayer

University of Oklahoma Press

408 pages, hardcover and ebook

As a 2,000-pound cracked copper bell, hung high in the tower of the Pennsylvania State House, announced the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence on a summer’s day in 1776, a battered army, “driven to the sad necessity of abandoning Canada,” trudged south toward Lake Champlain. Its retreat did not bode well for a nation a mere four days old.

Just over a year earlier, alarmed by the prospect of an invading force, Sir Guy Carleton, the governor of Quebec, had declared martial law. His counterpart in Nova Scotia, Francis Legge, soon did the same. Expeditions led by the likes of Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold were coming to seize “the door of Canada,” with hopes of inviting both English and French Canadians to join a nascent revolution. The plan was not unlike breaking into a house only to ask its owner to join in the next caper. However brazen, it worked for a time, at least among habitants who were disenchanted with British rule and the seigneuries...

Kyle Wyatt is the editor of the Literary Review of Canada.

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