Julia Catherine Beckwith
Julia Catherine Beckwith Hart is credited for being Canada's first Canadian-born fiction novelist and romance author.
Early life
Born in Fredericton, New Brunswick, she spent much of her early life in Nova Scotia and Quebec. Her mother Julie-Louise Le Brun, daughter of Jean Baptiste Le Brun de Duplessis, came from a wealthy French family who immigrated to Canada during the 17th and 18th century. Hart's father Nehemiah Beckwith, was from New England and settled in New Brunswick in 1780, where he owned a successful ship building company. It was through her travels to Quebec and Nova Scotia that she incorporated her experiences through her novels. Two years after Hart wrote her novel, her father died in a drowning accident and in 1820 and she was sent to live in Upper Canada with family where she would establish a boarding school for girls and meet and then marry George Henry Hart.Career
Hart's mother had renounced her Roman Catholic faith and shared her husbands Methodist views, yet it was her mother's religious background that would provide the subject matter of Canada's first novel St Ursula's Convent at the age of seventeen.It took over ten years for Hart to find someone who would publish her work. In 1824, Hugh C. Thomson agreed to publish St. Ursula's Convent or, The Nun of Canada; Containing Scenes from Real Life, and as Hart wished, as an anonymous author. However, only 165 copies were made. After Hart's romantic novel was criticized as "too complicated", almost all copies were lost.
Later, Hart and her husband moved to the United States where she would write her second novel Tonnawanda ; or, The Adopted Son of America ; an Indian Story and was published in Rochester, N.Y., as "By an American." In 1831 Hart, along with her husband and six children, moved back to Fredericton, where she would write her third novel in manuscript Edith that was never published.