Alma Frances McCollum (7 December 1879, near Chatham, Ontario – 21 March 1906, Toronto)[1] was a Canadian poet and composer. She is best known for her collection of poems Flower Legends and Other Poems (1902).[2]
Alma Frances McCollum | |
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Born | Alma Frances McCollum (1879-12-07)7 December 1879 Chatham, Ontario, Canada |
Died | 21 March 1906(1906-03-21) (aged 26) Toronto, Canada |
Occupation | Poet, composer |
Alma Frances McCollum was born on 7 December 1879 in a village near Chatham, Ontario.[1] She was the youngest child in the family. Her parents both were born and brought up in Ireland. Her father, Edward Lee Collum, died when McCollum was still a child, and the family moved to Peterborough, Ontario, where they lived till 1905 before moving to Toronto.[3]
McCollum graduated from the Collegiate Institute at Peterborough and studied at the Toronto Presbyterian Ladies College, as well as in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[1]
McCollum early started making rhymes and wrote most of the poems in her teen years.[4] A collection of her poems named Flower Legends and Other Poems was published in 1902.[2] The cover design of the book was sketched by McCollum herself.[4] The book was positively accepted by the Toronto literary community, namely Ethelwyn Wetherald, Jean Blewett, and J. W. Galvin.[1]
Having moved to Toronto she received musical training at the School of Expression in the Toronto Conservatory of Music and wrote plays for children.[1] She also took lectures in English Literature at University College, but after brief attendance she had to discontinue her studies due to health problems.[4]
McCollum was diagnosed with incipient appendicitis, and during the operation on 21 March 1906 she died at the age of 26.[4]
Her book Flower Legends and Other Stories (1902) and its reprints can be found in libraries throughout the world, including The British Library,[5] McGrill University Library,[6] Plymouth State University Library[7] and others.
Her poems are also anthologized in following collections: Campbell, Oxford Book of Canadian Verse (1913); Caswell, Canadian Singers and Their Songs (1925); Garvin, Canadian Poets (1916); Garvin, Canadian Verse for Boys and Girls (1930); Whyte-Edgar, Wreath of Canadian Song (1910).[1]