Eleanor Millard
Eleanor Millard | |
---|---|
Born | North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada | March 4, 1942
Nationality | Canadian |
Alma mater | University of British Columbia |
Occupation(s) | writer and former politician |
Eleanor Millard (born March 4, 1942) is a Canadian writer and former politician.[1] Born in North Vancouver, British Columbia, Millard graduated from the University of British Columbia in 1965. After graduation, Millard moved to the Yukon, where she worked as a barmaid at a hotel in Dawson City before finding a permanent job as a social worker.[1]
She was elected to the Yukon Territorial Council in the 1974 election, representing the district of Ogilvie, and served as Minister responsible for Education, Recreation, Manpower and Housing.[1]
In the 1978 election, which was the first partisan election to the new Yukon Legislative Assembly, she ran for reelection as an independent candidate in the district of Klondike, losing to Meg McCall of the Yukon Progressive Conservative Party.[2]
She has since published three books as a writer, the short story collection River Child, the memoir Journeys Outside and In and the novel Summer Snow.[3] She also leads the Grandparents’ Rights Association of the Yukon, an organization which advocates for kinship care rights in the territory, where for various demographic reasons the number of children being raised by their grandparents instead of their biological parents is fully three times higher than the norm elsewhere in Canada.[4]
References
- ^ a b c Eleanor Millard fonds at Library and Archives Canada.
- ^ Report on the 1978 General Election. Elections Yukon.
- ^ "Carcross author opens up about FASD". Yukon News, December 13, 2013.
- ^ "Grandparents need help raising kids". Yukon News, December 21, 2012.
External links
- 1942 births
- Members of the Yukon Territorial Council
- Women MLAs in Yukon
- 21st-century Canadian novelists
- Canadian social workers
- Canadian women novelists
- Canadian women short story writers
- Canadian memoirists
- Writers from Yukon
- Living people
- University of British Columbia alumni
- 21st-century Canadian short story writers
- 21st-century Canadian women writers
- Canadian women non-fiction writers
- Women memoirists
- Yukon politician stubs