Roscoe Fillmore
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Roscoe_Fillmore an entity of type: Thing
Roscoe Alfred Fillmore (10 July 1887 – 20 November 1968) was a Canadian radical political activist, horticulturalist, and author from the Maritimes. Born in the tiny farming community of Lumsden, Albert County, New Brunswick, Fillmore's mother died in 1894 from tuberculosis at the age of 29. The village was abandoned not long thereafter due to declining soil quality and the family moved around Albert County for several years before settling in the village of Albert. Like his father and many working-class people from the region, Fillmore traveled to the United States for work. While in Portland, Maine, he heard a soapbox speaker for the Socialist Party and he started his path to socialism. Upon returning home, he eventually became the "region's most active socialist agitator" for the Social
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Roscoe Fillmore
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Roscoe Alfred Fillmore
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Roscoe Alfred Fillmore
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1968-11-20
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Lumsden, New Brunswick, Canada
xsd:date
1887-07-10
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66403522
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1029291198
xsd:date
1887-07-10
xsd:date
1968-11-20
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Canadian
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Political activist, horticulturalist, author
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Roscoe Alfred Fillmore (10 July 1887 – 20 November 1968) was a Canadian radical political activist, horticulturalist, and author from the Maritimes. Born in the tiny farming community of Lumsden, Albert County, New Brunswick, Fillmore's mother died in 1894 from tuberculosis at the age of 29. The village was abandoned not long thereafter due to declining soil quality and the family moved around Albert County for several years before settling in the village of Albert. Like his father and many working-class people from the region, Fillmore traveled to the United States for work. While in Portland, Maine, he heard a soapbox speaker for the Socialist Party and he started his path to socialism. Upon returning home, he eventually became the "region's most active socialist agitator" for the Socialist Party of Canada in the Maritimes before World War I. In 1909, he was arrested in St. John for attempting to give a speech. The case attracted the attention of "Big Bill" Haywood, one of the leading figures of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) who attempted to pay for his bail, which was declined by Fillmore who wanted to fight the case in court. In the early 1920s, he joined the Communist Party of Canada and visited the Soviet Union, including spending time in 1923 on an experimental farm in Siberia. In 1924, he moved to Centreville, Kings, Nova Scotia. In 1940, the Communist Party was banned but Fillmore and others re-established the organization as the Labour-Progressive Party of Canada. In 1945, he was the LPP nominee for the Digby—Annapolis—Kings riding and received 362 votes (1.4%). He left the Communist Party in the 1950s but continued to be politically active until his death in 1968. Despite the fact he left the party, he was still followed and tracked by the RCMP for several years, including at the nursery he owned and funerals he attended. He was an active writer for the Steelworker and Miner, a weekly newspaper for union workers in Nova Scotia. It was published in Sydney, Nova Scotia between 1933 and 1954 to around 30,000 subscribers. He also published four books on gardening and was nicknamed "Mr. Green Thumbs" for his abilities. His papers are held by Dalhousie University in Halifax. The acquisition was considered, at the time, the "single most important acquisition" in the understanding of radical politics in Nova Scotia.
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6296
xsd:gYear
1887
xsd:gYear
1968