Showing posts with label Laura Secord. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laura Secord. Show all posts

June 06, 2012

Acts of Courage: Laura Secord and the War of 1812

by Connie Brummel Crook
Pajama Press
978-0-9869495-7-9
261 pp.
Ages 10-14
2012

With the bicentennial of the War of 1812 starting this year, new volumes of historical fiction and non-fiction related to the war's significant events and personalities will be jumping off the presses for the next two years (after all, the War of 1812 lasted from 1812 to 1814).  An early contribution to this list includes Pajama Press' Acts of Courage: Laura Secord and the War of 1812 by Connie Brummel Crook, author of an impressive list of award-winning historical fiction.

Though most readers will know the basics of Laura Secord's fame (no, not chocolate) from the Heritage Minutes that occasionally pepper Canadian television, many will know little besides Laura's struggle through treacherous conditions to warn of an American attack.  By staying true to Laura's undertaking while adding an interesting twist (fictional, of course), Connie Brummel Crook has taken this book from biography to historical fiction with an "Aha!" moment or two.

This story of Laura begins in 1787 when she is only twelve-years-old and living with her father, first step-mother, Mercy, and little sister, Mira, in Great Barrington, on the boundary between Massachusetts and New York.  Laura's father, Thomas Ingersoll, is the judge and captain of the local militia, and often away dealing with the rebels and farmers forced from their lands by exorbitant taxes put in place after the American Revolutionary War.  Laura evades the notice of one such rebel group with the help of a young boy of twelve, who Laura names Red.  Red had come from Ireland to help his uncle farm but, with unpaid taxes, his uncle lost the farm and they have joined the rebels. In return, when the rebels get taken by the militia, Laura takes Red to a neighbour's to hide him, trying to keep him warm and safe and fed.  Though Red leaves promptly the next day, he reappears months later, again trying to keep Laura safe, as well as rescuing her little sister from a fall in the river.

Eight years later, Thomas Ingersoll decides to move the family, now with third wife, Sally, to Upper Canada, tired of the unfairness of America's taxes and courts.  Settling the family in Queenston, with the assistance of a helpful general-store keeper, James Secord, from St. David's, he takes Laura with him to select and prepare the land they've been granted for farming.  Captain Brant, the Mohawk chief, and his people, generously help them clear the land and build their first cabin, though Laura learns about the inequities levelled against the Mohawks, who'd helped the British, and the resulting hardships.

By 1812, Laura is living in Queenston with her husband, James Secord, and their three children, while across the ocean the British are fighting Napoleon and the French.  With the relentless seizure of American trade ships and seamen by the British, America declares war on Britain and Upper Canada readies itself for attack.  After a failed invasion by General William Hull and the Americans from across the Detroit River, an attack on Queenston has Laura heroically rescuing an injured James from behind enemy lines.  But, it isn't until the spring of 1813 that Laura becomes a fixture on the battle stage.  While tending to James, still recovering from his injuries, and her children, Laura begrudgingly feeds soldiers who request or demand food.  It is while one particular group of nasty soldiers stuff themselves on her food that Laura overhears them talking of a surprise attack on Fitzgibbon and his men.  After James tells her that an attack on Fitzgibbon could lead to the taking of the Niagara Peninsula and all of Upper Canada, Laura sets out on her famous trek to warn Fitzgibbon.

Because Connie Brummel Crook has chosen to introduce a fictional character, Red, from Laura's childhood to her story, the plot-line may leave the reader jerked from one time to another.  First we share in the events of a single time in Laura's childhood, until we read of her family's move to Upper Canada when she is a twenty-year-old single woman, and finally moving through her life as a wife, mother, and heroine.  Though I wish the transitions had seemed flawless, Connie Brummel Crook appropriately streams from one to the other as best as possible while telling a life story, with fictional enhancements, in a mere 261 pages.  As such, no subplot or component of the story is gratuitous, each important in explaining and moving the plot to Laura's climactic walk, probably best described as a combination trudge, plod, wade, slog and creep.  Luckily Connie Brummel Crook's telling of Laura Secord's story lacks the toil and anguish of our heroine's defining moment and instead takes the reader through Laura's life's journey to better understand the choices and connections she has made throughout.

The War of 1812 in CanLit

For the next two years, many organizations on both sides of the border will be commemorating the bicentennial of the War of 1812, which lasted from 1812 to 1814.  A variety of events on both sides of the border will keep any student of history intrigued for months to come.  A small sampling of activities include:
Great sites for events include:
To provide some context for these activities and background information about events and individuals involved in the War of 1812, this book list should provide enough resources to introduce young readers to the "Forgotten War."

PICTURE BOOKS

Laura: A Childhood Tale of Laura Secord
by Maxine Trottier
Illustrated by Karen Reczuch
North Winds Press
28 pp.
Ages 4-8
2000



Laura Secord: A Story of Courage
by Janet Lunn
Illustrated by Maxwell Newhouse
Tundra
32 pages
Ages 7-10
2001



Laura Secord’s Brave Walk
by Connie Brummel Crook
Illustrated by June Lawson
Second Story Press
24 pp.
Ages 8-10
2000





FICTION

Acts of Courage: Laura Secord and the War of 1812
by Connie Brummel Crook
Pajama Press
261 pp.
Ages 10-14
2012
Based on the true story of Laura Ingersoll Secord who undertook a dangerous journey to warn the British of an attack by the Americans.

Billy Green Saves the Day
by Ben Guyatt
Dundurn
157 pp.
Ages10-15
2009
When the War of 1812 breaks out, eighteen-year-old Billy Green takes it upon himself to warn the British of the massive American forces camped at Stoney Creek, the last stronghold of the British in Upper Canada.

The Bully Boys
by Eric Walters
Puffin
978-0143168621
227 pp.
Ages 9-13
2001
Tom Roberts looks after the family farm while his father fights for the British army during the War of 1812.

A Call to Battle: War of 1812, Alexander MacKay, Upper Canada, 1812 (I Am Canada series)
by Gillian Chan
Scholastic Canada
200 pp.
Ages 10-14
Release date: September 01, 2012
Jealous when his father and older brother go off to fight the Americans attacking Niagara, thirteen-year-old Sandy sneaks away to Lundy's Lane to join the militia.  But, Sandy could not have imagined the brutality of war from which his father had tried to protect him.  And now, Sandy must find the means to survive.

Fire Ship
by Marianne Brandis
Porcupine's Quill
119 pp.
Ages 9-12
1992
Describes the 1813 devastation of York by the Americans, from the point of view of Dan, a boy who has recently emigrated from the United States.


Jeremy's War 1812
by John Ibbotson
Kids Can Press
208 pp.
Ages 9-13
2000
(Originally published in 1991 as 1812: Jeremy and the General)
Fifteen-year-old Jeremy joins the British army in 1812 and becomes the batsman (personal servant) to General Isaac Brock, fighting for his life and country through the War of 1812.

Legend of the Paymaster's Gold
by Jo Shawyer
Dundurn
136 pp.
Ages 10-14
2012
Two hundred years after the War of 1812, twins Sam and Eadie learn that an army paymaster had mislaid a chest of gold during a skirmish near their new home in London, Ontario.  With a little help from a neighbour and other locals, the two's sleuthing educates them about the War of 1812.


The Loxleys and the War of 1812: Graphic Novel
by Alan Grant
Illustrated by Claude St. Aubin, Lovern Kindzierski and Todd Klein
Renegade Arts Entertainment
978-0-9868200-0-7
175 pp.
Ages 10+
2012
The Loxley family is living on the Niagara Peninsula when the War of 1812 is declared, tearing the family apart. See the book trailer here.

The Other Elizabeth
by Karleen Bradford
Gage Publishing
160 pp.
Ages 10-13
1982
After slipping into the past during a school visit to a historical site, Elizabeth wishes she'd paid better attention in class, particularly to the details regarding the Battle at Crysler's Farm during the War of 1812. 

A River Apart
by Robert Sutherland
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
184 pp.
Ages 10-13
2000
When the War of 1812 separates friends, Jamie Shaw in Canada and siblings Jared and Leah Jackson across the St. Lawrence River in America, they fear that their choices to defend their homes and families could lead to even more tragedies.

Son of the Hounds
by Robert Sutherland
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
128 pp.
Ages 10-15
1988/2004
After Jimmy and his father are taken from their Niagara Peninsula farm by the Americans in 1813, he escapes, determined to fight them whatever way he can, including acting as a spy and a messenger for the famous Band of Bloody Boys.

Under a Shooting Star (Circle of Silver Chronicles)
by Maxine Trottier
Stoddart Kids/Fitzhenry & Whiteside
212 pp.
Ages 12-14
2001
En route to delivering Kate and Anne Kimmerling to their home in America via Lake Erie, British-Oneidan Edward MacNeil's simple task becomes more complicated when a storm shipwrecks them on an island in the midst of conflict during the War of 1812. 

Whispers of War: The 1812 Diary of Susanna Merritt (Dear Canada series)
by Kit Pearson
Scholastic Canada
220 pp.
Ages 10-12
2002
The story of the Merritt family's experiences on the Niagara Peninsula during the War of 1812.




NON-FICTION

Laura Secord (Remarkable Canadians series)
by Jennifer House
Weigl
24 pp.

Ages 9-11
2009



Laura Secord, Heroine of the War of 1812 (A Quest Biography Book)
by Peggy Dymond Leavey
Dundurn
224 pp.
Ages
May 2012

To Stand and Fight Together: Richard Pierpoint and the Coloured Corps of Upper Canada (A Canadians at War Book)
by Steve Pitt
Dundurn
144 pp.
2008

Tecumseh: Shooting Star, Crouching Panther
by Jim Poling Sr.
Dundurn
192 pp.
2009

Canada Under Attack (A Canadians at War Book)
by Jennifer Crump
Dundurn
216 pp.
2010

Captain Fitz: FitzGibbon, Green Tiger of the War of 1812 (A Canadians at War Book)
by Enid Mallory
Dundurn
208 pp.
2011

The Battles of the War of 1812: An Omnibus
by Pierre Berton
Fifth House/Fitzhenry & Whiteside
317 pp.
Ages 11-15
2006
Originally published by McClelland & Stewart as separate titles in Pierre Berton's History for Young Canadians: The Battles of the War of 1812 including The Capture of Detroit, 1991; The Death of Isaac Brock, 1991; Revenge of the Tribes, 1991; Canada Under Siege, 1991; The Battle of Lake Erie, 1994; The Death of Tecumseh, 1994; and Attack on Montreal, 1995.

Canada on Fire: The War of 1812 (A Canadians at War Book) 
by Jennifer Crump
Dundurn
208 pp.
Ages 14+
2011




OUT-OF-PRINT
(occasionally available at libraries or at used book stores)
General Brock and Niagara Falls
by Samuel Hopkins Adams
Random House
1960







The Good Soldier: The Story of Isaac Brock
by D. J. Goodspeed
Illustrated by Jack Ferguson
Macmillan
156 pp.
1967





Laura's Choice: The Story of Laura Secord
by Connie Brummel Crook
Windflower Communications
1993
Redcoat
by Gregory Sass
Porcupine's Quill
95 pp.
Ages 11-13
1985






The Rowboat War, On the Great Lakes 1812-1814
by Fred Swayze
Illustrated by Paul Liberovsky
Macmillan
128 pp.
1965




The Soldier's Son
by Terry Leeder
Dundurn
64 pp.
1979






The Story of the War of 1812
by Colonel Red Reeder
Illustrated by Frederick T. Chapman
Duell, Sloan & Pearce
1960







Treason at York
by John F. Hayes
Illustrated by Fred J. Finley
Copp Clark
314 pp.
1949






Read and learn why author and great Canadian Pierre Berton wrote, in Flames Across the Border: 1813-1814 (Anchor Canada, 2001), that. . .
History gave the conflict short shrift; and yet for all its bunglings and idiocies, it helped determine the shape and nature of Canada.


• The War of 1812 •

n.b. Teachers and anyone who would like a pdf of this posting can download one here at scribd.