Mary Macgregor (1876–1961)
Author of The Story of Greece
About the Author
Image credit: mcgregor-mills.ca
Series
Works by Mary Macgregor
Fair Isle Knitting Patterns: Reproducing the Known Work of Robert Williamson (2009) 32 copies, 1 review
Undine 2 copies
Little Miss Melody 2 copies
The History of Greece 1 copy
Lilacs in the Dooryard 1 copy
Under the grey olives 1 copy
In Your Eyes 1 copy
Associated Works
Buddhist Psalms translated from the Japanese of Shinran Shonin (2007) — Translator, some editions — 26 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Miller, Mary Esther
- Other names
- Mrs. Donald Campbell MacGregor
Marian Keith
Mary Esther Miller MacGregor - Birthdate
- 1876
- Date of death
- 1961
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Normal School
- Occupations
- teacher
- Short biography
- Marian Keith- taken from the name of her 2 children
- Nationality
- Canada
- Birthplace
- Rugby, Ontario, Canada
- Places of residence
- Orillia, Ontario, Canada
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada - Place of death
- Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada
- Associated Place (for map)
- Ontario, Canada
Members
Reviews
The battle over the Kitchener Toe:
"Then there was the knitting! Granny Minns, who could turn out her sock a day, and not omit a tittle of Mitty's scolding, said the Kitchener Toe was all humbug. She had knit for her son Tom all his life and her husband too, and was now knitting for Burke. And Burke said her socks were Just right, and what was good enough for Burke was good enough for the other soldiers!
She had an army of followers who were ready to second all she said. Mrs. Lindsay and the show more Grant Girls and Mrs. Brown and Tremendous K.'s mother were all superexcellent knitters, and Mrs. Brown who was no more afraid of Mrs. Sutherland than The Woman was, said right out in the meeting that the Kitchener Toe was jist some norms got up by the women in the town who hadn't enough to do, and had never learned to knit, anyhow! And Mrs. Brown and Tremendous K.'s wife took to walking home together after the meetings, just to discuss the foolish fashions of some women like Mrs. Sutherland!
Mrs. Sinclair asked for one of the leaders to come out from town and tell about the Kitchener Toe. The lady came and they had an extra meeting in the basement of the Methodist church, and passed around tea and cake and pie afterward. The lady spoke of the horrors of Trench Feet, and showed how the wrong sort of knitting would be sure to produce it. But as Granny Minns never went anywhere, and Mrs. Lindsay and the Grant Girls went only to church, and Mrs. Brown was too deaf to hear, and Mrs. Tremendous K. told her it was just all dishwater anyway, the talk had very little effect.
So a secret society was formed, of which Joanna and Mrs. Sutherland were the leaders. They met at night with drawn blinds and locked doors, and ripped out the uneven and condemned knitting and knit it up again. And before long Orchard Glen was mentioned in the Algonquin papers as the one place that always sent in perfect socks. And a photographer came out from town and took a picture of Granny Minns, as the oldest knitter of faultless socks, and it was put in the paper and Orchard Glen was held up as an example for the countryside and was the envy of the whole knitting public. "
The frame of this is a sweet and unsurprising romance; the good characters get rather less wordly success than one feels they deserve, because they sacrifice regularly for others, but they will be happy and useful. Also, the setting in a farming town in Canada is as sweet as apples.
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28235/28235-h/28235-h.htm show less
"Then there was the knitting! Granny Minns, who could turn out her sock a day, and not omit a tittle of Mitty's scolding, said the Kitchener Toe was all humbug. She had knit for her son Tom all his life and her husband too, and was now knitting for Burke. And Burke said her socks were Just right, and what was good enough for Burke was good enough for the other soldiers!
She had an army of followers who were ready to second all she said. Mrs. Lindsay and the show more Grant Girls and Mrs. Brown and Tremendous K.'s mother were all superexcellent knitters, and Mrs. Brown who was no more afraid of Mrs. Sutherland than The Woman was, said right out in the meeting that the Kitchener Toe was jist some norms got up by the women in the town who hadn't enough to do, and had never learned to knit, anyhow! And Mrs. Brown and Tremendous K.'s wife took to walking home together after the meetings, just to discuss the foolish fashions of some women like Mrs. Sutherland!
Mrs. Sinclair asked for one of the leaders to come out from town and tell about the Kitchener Toe. The lady came and they had an extra meeting in the basement of the Methodist church, and passed around tea and cake and pie afterward. The lady spoke of the horrors of Trench Feet, and showed how the wrong sort of knitting would be sure to produce it. But as Granny Minns never went anywhere, and Mrs. Lindsay and the Grant Girls went only to church, and Mrs. Brown was too deaf to hear, and Mrs. Tremendous K. told her it was just all dishwater anyway, the talk had very little effect.
So a secret society was formed, of which Joanna and Mrs. Sutherland were the leaders. They met at night with drawn blinds and locked doors, and ripped out the uneven and condemned knitting and knit it up again. And before long Orchard Glen was mentioned in the Algonquin papers as the one place that always sent in perfect socks. And a photographer came out from town and took a picture of Granny Minns, as the oldest knitter of faultless socks, and it was put in the paper and Orchard Glen was held up as an example for the countryside and was the envy of the whole knitting public. "
The frame of this is a sweet and unsurprising romance; the good characters get rather less wordly success than one feels they deserve, because they sacrifice regularly for others, but they will be happy and useful. Also, the setting in a farming town in Canada is as sweet as apples.
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28235/28235-h/28235-h.htm show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 34
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 427
- Popularity
- #57,178
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 91
- Languages
- 4












