Charles Hill-Tout
Charles Hill-Tout (1858–1944) was an amateur anthropologist, active in Canada.
Born in Buckland, Devon, England[1] on 28 September, 1858, he studied theology before emigrating to Canada after graduating from Oxford,[2] becoming acting principal of a private boys' school in Vancouver, Dr. Whetham's College, before starting his own school, Buckland College,[3] then taking land in Abbotsford, 70 miles east of Vancouver in the Fraser Valley.[4]
In 1892, he commenced extensive excavations of the Great Marpole Midden in Vancouver for the Art, Historical, and Scientific Association of Vancouver, stimulating study of other middens in the region.[5] The Great Midden, which dates from 2400-1600 years BP and was a living village until the first of the great smallpox epidemics in the late 17th Century, is today a National Heritage Site of Canada.
His published works include reports collected in Ralph Maud's four volume study on Salish peoples,[6] and his 1907 work The Native Races of British North America: The Far West. During the First World War he enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force with 242nd Battalion, CEF. He died June 30th 1944 at Vancouver.[7]
References
- ↑ bio on Charles Hill-Tout Fonds, MemoryBC website
- ↑ Charles Hill-Tout, Talonbooks biography page
- ↑ [http://www.memorybc.ca/charles-hill-tout-fonds;rad bio on Charles Hill-Tout Fonds, MemoryBC website
- ↑ Charles Hill-Tout, Talonbooks biography page
- ↑ Marpole Midden National Historic Site, CanadaHistory.ca website page
- ↑ The Salish People, 1978.
- ↑ Hill-Tout, Charles, The Canadian Encyclopedia
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Charles Hill-Tout |
|