Joyce Carman Barkhouse, CM ONS
Born
May 3, 1913, in Woodville, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Joyce died February
2, 2012, of heart disease in Bridgewater, Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia.
She was predeceased by her husband, Milton Joseph Barkhouse (1915-1968)
and all in her immediate Killam family: her father, Harold Edwin Killam,
a medical doctor, and her mother, Ora Louise (nee Webster); sisters, Margaret
Dorothy (Carl) Atwood and Kathleen Eleanor (Laverne) Cogswell: brothers,
Frederick William (Gardy) and Harold Edwin (Edna). She is survived by
her son, Murray Roy (Eileen): her daughter, Janet Louise (Greg Howard);
five grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. She will be profoundly
missed by them, and by many loved and loving nieces and nephews and their
families. After graduating from Kings County Academy at the age of 17,
Joyce attended the Provincial Normal College in Truro and became an elementary
school teacher. She worked in various places in the Maritimes, and later
in Montreal. While teaching she became aware of a lack of Canadian reading
material for children, and wrote short stories, poems and plays to fill
this gap. So began a passion that was to earn her national recognition
for her pioneer work in the field of Canadian Children’s Literature. When
her husband died after a serious illness, Joyce returned from Montreal
to Nova Scotia. Her first book “George Dawson; The Little Giant,” was
published in 1974. Later books for children include “Pit Pony,” which
was made into both a movie and a television series by Cochran Entertainments
and aired on CBC, and a children’s picture book, “Anna’s Pet,” which she
co-authored with her niece Margaret Atwood. Involved in the formation
of the Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia (WFNS) and in the early days
of The Writers’ Union of Canada (TWUC), and the Canadian Society of children’s
Authors, Illustrators and Performers (CANSCAIP), Joyce served on the executives
of all these groups. She was a founding member of the WFNS “Writers in
the Schools” program. Both TWUC and WFNS gave Joyce honorary life membership;
the Federations’ Atlantic Writing Competition prize for children’s writing
bears her name. Joyce cared deeply about the writing community in her
province and country, and will be sadly missed by many younger writers
which whom she sustained lasting friendships. Honoured by both her beloved
native Nova Scotia and her country, Joyce received the Order of Nova Scotia
in 2007, and was named a Member of the Order of Canada in 2009. Cremation
has taken place; a memorial service for family and friends will be held
at a later date. Donations may be made to the Writers’ Federation of Nova
Scotia for their Writers in the Schools program, their Atlantic Writing
competition or their fund to help support indigent writers.