Grey Owl

Archibald Stansfeld Belaney (September 18, 1888  April 13, 1938), commonly known as Grey Owl, was a popular writer, public speaker and conservationist. Born an Englishman, in the latter years of his life he passed as half-Indian, claiming he was the son of a Scottish man and an Apache woman. With books, articles and public appearances promoting wilderness conservation, he achieved fame in the 1930s. Shortly after his death in 1938, his real identity as the Englishman Archie Belaney was exposed.:210ff He has been identified as one of the first pretendians (person with no indigenous ancestry, claiming to be indigenous) in Canada.

Grey Owl
Portrait by Yousuf Karsh, 1936
Born
Archibald Stansfeld Belaney

(1888-09-18)September 18, 1888
DiedApril 13, 1938(1938-04-13) (aged 49)
Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, Canada
EducationHastings Grammar School
Occupation(s)Writer, Lecturer, Conservationist
EmployersDominion Parks Service
Known forEnvironmental conservation
Spouses
Angele Egwuna
(m. 1910)
    Ivy Holmes
    (m. 19171922)
      Yvonne Perrier
      (m. 1936)
      PartnerGertrude Bernard
      Children4

      Moving to Canada as a young man, Belaney established himself as a woodsman and trapper, before rising to prominence as an author and lecturer. While working for the Dominion Parks Branch of Canada in the 1930s, Belaney was named the "caretaker of park animals", first at Riding Mountain National Park in Manitoba and then at Prince Albert National Park in Saskatchewan.:92,108 His views on wilderness conservation, expressed in numerous articles, books, lectures and films, reached audiences beyond the borders of Canada, bringing attention to the negative impact of exploiting nature and the urgent need to develop respect for the natural world. He was particularly concerned about the plight of the beaver (Canada's national animal), which by the 1920s had been hunted almost to extinction.:113

      Recognition of Belaney includes biographies, academic studies, historic plaques in England, Ontario and Quebec, and a film based on his life, directed by Richard Attenborough.

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