Bill Freeman (author)

William Bradford Freeman[1] (born October 21, 1938) is a Canadian writer of historical fiction for young adults, film scripts, documentaries, theatrical plays, educational videos and non-fiction books. He specializes in writing about Canada and the Canadian experience.[2]

Biography

After high school, Freeman worked in western Canada for a year and then traveled extensively in Europe. He returned to Canada to attend Acadia University in Nova Scotia. After graduating he worked as a Probation Officer and then did graduate work in sociology at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.

Freeman began to write the Bains Series of books for young adults while living in Hamilton. There are now nine books in the Bains Series. Each focuses on a different industrial setting in Canada during the 1870s. The first book in the series, Shantymen of Cache Lake, received the Canada Council Children's Literature Prize for 1975 and several of the other books have received awards.

Freeman's books for adults follow political and social themes. Local 1005 is a political study of a Steelworkers' local in Hamilton. Their Town, co-authored with Marsha Hewitt, is an analysis of Hamilton city politics and Hamilton: a People's History, traces the development of the political and social life of the city. Freeman also authored a social and pictorial history of Toronto Island, where he now lives, called A Magical Place and another pictorial history, Casa Loma, Toronto's Fairy-Tale Castle and its Owner, Sir Henry Pellatt.

While working in the film industry Freeman and Richard Nielsen wrote Far From Home, Canadians in the First World War. This book emerged from a three-hour documentary film of the same name, produced by Nielsen. That experience led to other film projects. Freeman was the researcher and writer of a series of science educational videos for the high school market called the Elements of Biology, Physics, Chemistry and Earth Sciences.

Freeman's partner on these educational videos was the well-known Canadian children's film producer Wendy Loten. The two went on to work together on Loten's Mighty Machines 2 and 3. These films have been broadcast on TVO and Tree House Television.

Freeman also wrote two plays. Ghosts of the Madawaska is a children's play commissioned and performed by the Great Canadian Theatre Company in Ottawa, and Glory Days, a play about the 1946 Stelco strike in Hamilton, has been performed by Theatre Aquarius in 1989 and remounted in 2006.

In recent years Bill Freeman has been writing about urban and political issues. The New Urban Agenda published in 2015 and Democracy Rising in 2017 were both published by Dundurn Press.

Freeman has completed a series of 8 books called Mariner's Story. They will be published on Amazon beginning in 2021.

Awards and prizes

In 1975 Freeman won the Canada Council Award for Juvenile Literature for his book Shantymen of Cache Lake (retrospectively considered one of the 1975 Governor General's Awards).

A Magical Place: Toronto Island and Its People, Certificate of Commendation, Heritage Toronto, October 2000

Casa Loma: Toronto's Fairy-tale Castle and its Owner, Sir Henry Pellatt, Award of Merit, Heritage Toronto, October 1999[3]

Prairie Fire selected for the Canadian Children's Book Centre "Our Choice" list and nominated for the Geoffrey Bilson Award for Historical Fiction for Young People, 1998

Several books in the Bains Series were selected for "Our Choice" list. Vicky Metcalf Award for Children's Literature, 1984 (for a body of work, Bains Series)

Works

Adult non-fiction

Democracy Rising; Dundurn Press, 2017

The New Urban Agenda; Dundurn Press, 2015

Glory Days, Playwrights Canada Press, 2007[4]

Hamilton: A People’s History, James Lorimer and Co., Publishers, 2001[5]

Far From Home: Canadians in the First World War, with Richard Nielsen, McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1999

A Magical Place: Toronto Island and its People, James Lorimer & Company Ltd., Publishers, 1999

Casa Loma: Toronto’s Fairy-tale Castle and its Owner, Sir Henry Pellatt, James Lorimer & Company Ltd., Publishers, 1998[6]

1005 Political Life of a Union Local, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1982

Their Town: The Mafia, The Media and the Party Machine, (with Marsha Hewitt); James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1979

The New Urban Agenda; Dundurn Press, 2015[7]

Bains Series of young adult fiction

Ambush in the Foothills, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 2000

Sioux Winter, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1999

Prairie Fire!, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1998

Danger on the Tracks, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1987

Harbour Thieves, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1984

Trouble at Lachine Mill, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1983[8]

The Last Voyage of the Scotian, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1976

First Spring on the Grand Banks, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1978

Shantymen of Cache Lake, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1975

Other young adult books

Cedric and the North End Kids, James Lorimer & Company Ltd. Publishers, 1978

Theatrical Play

"Glory Days", a play with music, produced by Theatre Aquarius, Hamilton 1989

"Glory Days", re-mounted by Theatre Aquarius in September/October Hamilton 2006

Play for Young Adults'

"Ghosts of the Madawaska", Great Canadian Theatre Company, Ottawa, 1985

Children's Television Series

Script Writer, "Mighty Machines 2", a fourteen-part half-hour program for pre-school children produced for TVO, TFO and Treehouse by Loten Media.

Script Writer, "Mighty Machines 3", a fourteen-part half-hour program for pre-school children produced for TVO, TFO and Treehouse by Loten Media.

Educational and Documentary Videos

Script Writer, "Canada for Children", A three-part series of videos for elementary school children. Producer: Redcanoe Productions.

Script Writer/Educational Consultant: "Elements of Earth Sciences", six educational videos for high school students. Producer: Algonquin Educational Productions.

Script Writer/Educational Consultant: "Elements of Chemistry", six educational videos for high school students. Producer: Algonquin Educational Productions.

Script Writer/Educational Consultant: "Elements of Physics", six educational videos for high school students. Producer: Algonquin Educational Productions.

Script Writer/Educational Consultant and Narrator: "Elements of Biology" A series of six educational films for the high school students. Producer: Loten Media.

TV and Video Programs

Historical consultant/Scriptwriter "Hamilton: Where the Rubber Meets the Road", Producer: Red Canoe Productions

Script Writer/Narrator, "Kiev Pecherska Lavra", Producer, 3rd Street Videos, 1995

Narrator/Researcher "Remembering Toronto", Producer: PBS Buffalo

References

  1. "Freeman, Bill, 1938–". Library of Congress Name Authority File. Retrieved 2015-08-04. Cites McMaster University website, 2005-04-26.
  2. "PLCN Authors: Bill Freeman", PLCN Authors. Archived March 9, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Previous Heritage Toronto Award Recipients | Heritage Toronto - Telling Toronto's Stories". 2011-12-08. Archived from the original on 2011-12-08. Retrieved 2022-01-23.
  4. Freeman, Bill (2007). Glory Days. ISBN 9780887546686.
  5. Freeman, Bill (14 October 2006). Hamilton. ISBN 9781550289367.
  6. Freeman, Bill (1999). Casa Loma. ISBN 9781550286458.
  7. "The New Urban Agenda". Dundurn Press.
  8. Freeman, Bill (1983). Trouble at Lachine Mill. ISBN 9780888626721.
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