Arthur R. M. Lower

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Arthur_R._M._Lower an entity of type: Thing

Arthur Reginald Marsden Lower CC FRSC (12 August 1889 – 7 January 1988) was a Canadian historian and "liberal nationalist" interested in Canadian economic history, particularly the forest trade, and in Canada–US relations. He was the most nationalistic of Canadian historians, and highly distrustful of immigrants, Americans and any others outside of what he considered to be the Canadian family. The staple theory of Harold Innis influenced his research, much of which focused on the Canadian lumber industry. He was also strongly influenced by the ideas of American historian Frederick Jackson Turner regarding the influence of the frontier – The West – on distinctly American characteristics. Lower was an outdoorsman who not only loved nature, but emphasized the role of The North in shaping Cana rdf:langString
rdf:langString Arthur R. M. Lower
rdf:langString Arthur R. M. Lower
rdf:langString Arthur R. M. Lower
rdf:langString Kingston, Ontario, Canada
rdf:langString Barrie, Ontario, Canada
xsd:date 1889-08-12
xsd:integer 1454705
xsd:integer 1123581166
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xsd:date 1889-08-12
rdf:langString Arthur Reginald Marsden Lower
xsd:date 1988-01-07
rdf:langString History
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xsd:integer 1947 1961
rdf:langString Arthur Reginald Marsden Lower CC FRSC (12 August 1889 – 7 January 1988) was a Canadian historian and "liberal nationalist" interested in Canadian economic history, particularly the forest trade, and in Canada–US relations. He was the most nationalistic of Canadian historians, and highly distrustful of immigrants, Americans and any others outside of what he considered to be the Canadian family. The staple theory of Harold Innis influenced his research, much of which focused on the Canadian lumber industry. He was also strongly influenced by the ideas of American historian Frederick Jackson Turner regarding the influence of the frontier – The West – on distinctly American characteristics. Lower was an outdoorsman who not only loved nature, but emphasized the role of The North in shaping Canada.
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