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Produktdetails
- Verlag: FriesenPress
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. August 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 280mm x 216mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 809g
- ISBN-13: 9781038346872
- ISBN-10: 1038346878
- Artikelnr.: 75322010
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
John Sliter was born in Cornwall, Ontario and spent much of his childhood time at his grandparents' farm in Pleasant Valley, north of Osnabruck Centre in Ingleside, Ontario. The Beaudette farm benefited from the proximity of Hoople Creek which was a significant draw for a young boy searching for fish, turtles or frogs and nearby wildlife. After John completed his high school education at CCVS in Cornwall, he went on to Saint Lawrence College to study Business Finance. After college, John joined the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and enjoyed a 36-year career that began in a small town in the interior of British Columbia. John was commended in each community he served for his work ranging from initiatives dealing with First Nations Peoples to chairing a local Crisis and Counselling Centre Board of Directors. John also adhered to a strong mantra of continuous learning and kept up his academic studies throughout his career eventually culminating in a Masters Degree in Business Administration degree from Simon Fraser University. John spent most of his working career conducting, and later leading, financial crime investigations and his unwavering dedication to this field led to him being promoted to senior management positions within the RCMP. He retired in 2014 and enjoyed an international reputation as a strong leader and visionary with respect to complex financial crime investigations. Upon his transfer to RCMP Headquarters in 1996, John moved back to the Ingleside area. He brought his young family to a new home close to his beloved Hoople Creek so they might develop a similar appreciation of the history of Ontario. An avid angler, John developed an interest in the environmental protection of this small creek. He went on to form a not-for-profit corporation - "The Friends of Hoople Creek Society" with a mission to develop programs to help protect the environment around the creek. This in turn led to some tenacious research of the history of the creek and the people who lived along its route over the past two hundred years. The role of several women began to immediately stand out, and the idea blossomed to write about some key women who struggled to help develop, settle, and colonize Upper Canada.