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'''Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman''' (born '''Catherine Ferguson''', 20 February 1856 – 16 May 1915) was an Irish-Canadian newspaper columnist.<ref name=Freeman>{{cite DCB |last1=Freeman|first1=Barbara M.|title=Ferguson, Catherine, Kit Coleman |volume=14 |url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/ferguson_catherine_14E.html}}</ref> Coleman was the world's first accredited female war correspondent, covering the [[Spanish–American War]] for the [[The Globe and Mail|''Toronto Mail'']] in 1898. Coleman also served as the first president of the [[Canadian Women's Press Club]], an organization of women journalists.
'''Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman''' (born '''Catherine Ferguson''', 20 February 1856 – 16 May 1915) was an Irish-Canadian newspaper columnist.<ref name=Freeman>{{cite DCB |last1=Freeman|first1=Barbara M.|title=Ferguson, Catherine, Kit Coleman |volume=14 |url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/ferguson_catherine_14E.html}}</ref> Coleman was one of the earliest accredited female [[war correspondent]]s, covering the [[Spanish–American War]] for the [[The Globe and Mail|''Toronto Mail'']] in 1898. She served, also, as the first president of the [[Canadian Women's Press Club]], an organization of women journalists.


==Early life==
==Early life==
Kit Coleman was born Catherine Ferguson to Patrick and Mary Ferguson (née Burke) in May 1856 at Castleblakeney, [[County Galway]], her birth is often listed incorrectly as 1864 presuming her maiden name is Blake.<ref name=Freeman /> Her father was a middle-class farmer. Catherine was educated at Loretto Abbey in [[Rathfarnham]] and a finishing school in [[Belgium]].<ref name=Hassett>{{cite web|last1=Hassett|first1=Ella|title=Kit Coleman (1864 – 1915) Journalist, war correspondent|url=http://www.nwci.ie/?/learn/blog-article/ella_hassett_kit_coleman_1864_1915_journalist_war_correspondent|website=National Women's Council of Ireland|access-date=17 April 2015}}</ref> As an adult, she recalled her parents influencing her love of creative activities; her father had given her his love of books, and her mother, who was blind, taught her an appreciation of music and to also how to play several instruments. The strongest influence on her intellectual life came from her uncle Thomas Nicholas Burke, a Dominican priest and a renowned liberal and orator, who taught her religious and social tolerance, an attitude that was reflected in her journalism as an adult.{{original research inline|date=June 2020}}
Kit Coleman was born Catherine Ferguson to Patrick and Mary Ferguson (née Burke) in May 1856 at Castleblakeney, [[County Galway]], her birth is often listed incorrectly as 1864 presuming her maiden name is Blake.<ref name=Freeman /> Her father was a middle-class farmer. Catherine was educated at Loretto Abbey in [[Rathfarnham]] and a finishing school in [[Belgium]].<ref name=Hassett>{{cite web|last1=Hassett|first1=Ella|title=Kit Coleman (1864 – 1915) Journalist, war correspondent|url=http://www.nwci.ie/?/learn/blog-article/ella_hassett_kit_coleman_1864_1915_journalist_war_correspondent|website=National Women's Council of Ireland|access-date=17 April 2015}}</ref> As an adult, she recalled her parents influencing her love of creative activities; her father had given her his love of books, and her mother, who was blind, taught her an appreciation of music and to also how to play several instruments. The strongest influence on her intellectual life came from her uncle Thomas Nicholas Burke, a Dominican priest and a renowned liberal and orator, who taught her religious and social tolerance, an attitude that was reflected in her journalism as an adult.{{original research inline|date=June 2020}}


Coleman married young to an elderly man and wealthy landowner Thomas Willis,<ref name=Hassett /> the sources conflict stating either at age 16 or 20,<ref name=Freeman /><ref name=Marshall /> a man 40 years her senior,<ref>{{cite web|title=Kit Coleman: The Canadian journalist who fought for the idea that women care about more than fashion|url=https://www.cbc.ca/2017/canadathestoryofus/kit-coleman-the-canadian-journalist-who-fought-for-the-idea-that-that-women-care-about-more-than-fashion-1.4068130|date=Apr 12, 2017|last-updated=April 13, 2017|publisher=CBC}}</ref> under her adopted name Kathleen Blake. The couple had one child who died in early childhood, and Willis died soon after.<ref name=Freeman /> The marriage had not been a happy one, resulting in her disinheritance by her husband's family.<ref name=Freeman /> She emigrated to Canada as a young widow in 1884. In Canada, she worked as a secretary until she married her boss, Edward Watkins. She lived in Toronto and Winnipeg, where she bore two children (Thady and Patricia) by her second husband.<ref name="Library and Archives Canada">{{cite web|last1=Library and Archives Canada|title=Kathleen Blake Coleman|url=http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/public_mikan/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=98315&back_url=%28%29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140421050842/http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/public_mikan/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=98315&back_url=()|url-status=dead|archive-date=21 April 2014|website=Library and Archives Canada|publisher=Government of Canada|access-date=17 April 2015}}</ref>
Coleman married young to an elderly man and wealthy landowner Thomas Willis,<ref name=Hassett /> the sources conflict stating either at age 16 or 20,<ref name=Freeman /><ref name=Marshall /> a man 40 years her senior,<ref>{{cite web|title=Kit Coleman: The Canadian journalist who fought for the idea that women care about more than fashion|url=https://www.cbc.ca/2017/canadathestoryofus/kit-coleman-the-canadian-journalist-who-fought-for-the-idea-that-that-women-care-about-more-than-fashion-1.4068130|date=Apr 12, 2017|access-date=April 13, 2017|publisher=CBC}}</ref> under her adopted name Kathleen Blake. The couple had one child who died in early childhood, and Willis died soon after.<ref name=Freeman /> The marriage had not been a happy one, resulting in her disinheritance by her husband's family.<ref name=Freeman /> She emigrated to Canada as a young widow in 1884. In Canada, she worked as a secretary until she married her boss, Edward Watkins. She lived in Toronto and Winnipeg, where she bore two children (Thady and Patricia) by her second husband.<ref name="Library and Archives Canada">{{cite web|last1=Library and Archives Canada|title=Kathleen Blake Coleman|url=http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/public_mikan/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=98315&back_url=%28%29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140421050842/http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/public_mikan/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=98315&back_url=()|url-status=dead|archive-date=21 April 2014|website=Library and Archives Canada|publisher=Government of Canada|access-date=17 April 2015}}</ref>


In 1889, following the death of Watkins, or more probably, their divorce,<ref name=Marshall /> Coleman first turned to cleaning houses to support herself and her two children, then began writing articles for local magazines, mainly Toronto's ''[[Saturday Night (magazine)|Saturday Night]]''.<ref name="Library and Archives Canada" />
In 1889, following the death of Watkins, or more probably, their divorce,<ref name=Marshall /> Coleman first turned to cleaning houses to support herself and her two children, then began writing articles for local magazines, mainly Toronto's ''[[Saturday Night (magazine)|Saturday Night]]''.<ref name="Library and Archives Canada" />
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==Covering the Spanish–American War in Cuba==
==Covering the Spanish–American War in Cuba==
[[File:Kathleen Blake Watkins, 1896 - crop.jpg|left|thumb|Coleman, circa 1896]]
[[File:Kathleen Blake Watkins, 1896 - crop.jpg|left|thumb|Coleman, circa 1896]]
During the [[Spanish–American War]] of 1898, Kathleen Blake volunteered to go to Cuba to cover the battle activity at the front. The [[The Globe and Mail|Toronto Mail]] sent her to Cuba, exploiting the opportunity to garner sensationalist publicity. However, she was told by her supervisors to write features and "guff," as she called it, not the news from the front, apparently believing that this would not be appropriate for a woman.<ref name=Freeman /> She received her war correspondent accreditation from the United States government, thus becoming the first accredited woman war correspondent in the world.{{citation needed|date=June 2020}}
During the [[Spanish–American War]] of 1898, Kathleen Blake volunteered to go to Cuba to cover the battle activity at the front. The [[The Globe and Mail|Toronto Mail]] sent her to Cuba, exploiting the opportunity to garner sensationalist publicity. However, she was told by her supervisors to write features and "guff," as she called it, not the news from the front, apparently believing that this would not be appropriate for a woman.<ref name=Freeman /> She received her war correspondent accreditation from the United States government,<ref>{{cite web |last1=Pruden |first1=Jana G. |title=Queens of the Gilded Age |url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article-meet-the-queens-of-the-gilded-age-who-pioneered-womens-journalism-in/ |website=The Globe and Mail |access-date=26 August 2024 |date=5 March 2024 |quote=she had official papers from the U.S. War Department.}}</ref> becoming North America's first fully accredited woman war correspondent.{{citation needed|date=June 2020}}


She was authorized to accompany American troops, but was vehemently opposed by other correspondents and the military authorities, who nearly succeeded in keeping her stranded in Florida. Blake persevered and arrived in Cuba in July 1898, just before the end of the war. Her accounts of the aftermath of the war and of its human casualties were the peak of her journalism career and made her famous. On her way back to Canada, Kathleen stopped in Washington where she addressed the [[International Press Union of Women Journalists]].<ref name=Freeman />
She was authorized to accompany American troops, but was vehemently opposed by other correspondents and the military authorities, who nearly succeeded in keeping her stranded in Florida. Blake persevered and arrived in Cuba in July 1898, just before the end of the war. Her accounts of the aftermath of the war and of its human casualties were the peak of her journalism career and made her famous. On her way back to Canada, Kathleen stopped in Washington where she addressed the [[International Press Union of Women Journalists]].<ref name=Freeman />
Line 57: Line 55:
Upon her return from Cuba, Watkins married Theobald Coleman and moved to Copper Cliff, Ontario, where her husband was company doctor for the Canadian Copper Company. In 1901 the Colemans moved to Hamilton, Ontario.<ref name="Library and Archives Canada" />
Upon her return from Cuba, Watkins married Theobald Coleman and moved to Copper Cliff, Ontario, where her husband was company doctor for the Canadian Copper Company. In 1901 the Colemans moved to Hamilton, Ontario.<ref name="Library and Archives Canada" />


In 1904, in order to fight discrimination against women in the journalism profession, she helped establish the [[Canadian Women's Press Club]], and was named its first President. Notwithstanding her own pioneering work as a journalist in an overwhelmingly male profession, as well as her activist writing on many women's rights topics, Coleman did not publicly endorse feminism and women's suffrage until 1910.<ref name="Library and Archives Canada" /> Many other woman journalists, including her ''Mail and Empire'' colleague [[Katherine Hale (author)|Katherine Hale]] ([[Amelia Beers Warnock]]), viewed Coleman as a pioneer and a role model, and the suffragists among them hoped that she would become an activist for the women's suffrage cause. Coleman's political ambivalence came partly because of the editorial position of the ''[[The Globe and Mail|Toronto Mail]]'' and ''Mail and Empire''; both newspapers were adamantly opposed to it. Coleman also felt unsure about the extent to which women – and "objective" journalists – should become involved in politics.<ref name=Freeman />
In 1904, in order to fight discrimination against women in the journalism profession, she helped establish the [[Canadian Women's Press Club]], and was named its first President.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Pruden |first1=Jana G. |title=Queens of the Gilded Age |url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article-meet-the-queens-of-the-gilded-age-who-pioneered-womens-journalism-in/ |website=The Globe and Mail |access-date=26 August 2024 |date=5 March 2024 |quote=Coleman was the founding president of the Canadian Women's Press Club, formed in 1904.}}</ref> Notwithstanding her own pioneering work as a journalist in an overwhelmingly male profession, as well as her activist writing on many women's rights topics, Coleman did not publicly endorse feminism and women's suffrage until 1910.<ref name="Library and Archives Canada" /> Many other woman journalists, including her ''Mail and Empire'' colleague [[Katherine Hale (author)|Katherine Hale]] ([[Amelia Beers Warnock]]), viewed Coleman as a pioneer and a role model, and the suffragists among them hoped that she would become an activist for the women's suffrage cause. Coleman's political ambivalence came partly because of the editorial position of the ''[[The Globe and Mail|Toronto Mail]]'' and ''Mail and Empire''; both newspapers were adamantly opposed to it. She also felt unsure about the extent to which women – and "objective" journalists – should entangle themselves in political and social issues.<ref name=Freeman />


Coleman was also a poet and published books of poetry.<ref>{{cite book |editor-last=Morgan |editor-first=Henry James |editor-link=Henry James Morgan |title=Types of Canadian Women and of Women who are or have been Connected with Canada |location=Toronto |publisher=Williams Briggs |date=1903 |url=https://archive.org/details/typesofcanadianw01morguoft |page=[https://archive.org/details/typesofcanadianw01morguoft/page/60 60]}}</ref>
Coleman was also a poet and published books of poetry.<ref>{{cite book |editor-last=Morgan |editor-first=Henry James |editor-link=Henry James Morgan |title=Types of Canadian Women and of Women who are or have been Connected with Canada |location=Toronto |publisher=Williams Briggs |date=1903 |url=https://archive.org/details/typesofcanadianw01morguoft |page=[https://archive.org/details/typesofcanadianw01morguoft/page/60 60]}}</ref>
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Coleman contracted pneumonia and died on 16 May 1915, in [[Hamilton, Ontario|Hamilton]], Ontario.
Coleman contracted pneumonia and died on 16 May 1915, in [[Hamilton, Ontario|Hamilton]], Ontario.


There is a Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman fonds at [[Library and Archives Canada]]. The archival reference number is R2590, former archival reference number MG30-C152.<ref>{{Cite web|last=|first=|date=|title=Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman fonds description at Library and Archives Canada|url=https://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&rec_nbr=101647&lang=eng&rec_nbr_list=101647,184998,181031,106680|access-date=July 31, 2020|website=}}</ref> The fonds covers the date range 1925 to 1981. It consists of 60 centimeters of textual records, 91 photographs and 2 medals.
There is a Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman fonds at [[Library and Archives Canada]]. The archival reference number is R2590, former archival reference number MG30-C152.<ref>{{Cite web|last=|first=|date=|title=Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman fonds description at Library and Archives Canada|url=https://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&rec_nbr=101647&lang=eng&rec_nbr_list=101647,184998,181031,106680|access-date=July 31, 2020|website=}}{{Dead link|date=April 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> The fonds covers the date range 1925 to 1981. It consists of 60 centimeters of textual records, 91 photographs and 2 medals.

In 2023, the [[Royal Canadian Mint]] released both a silver dollar<ref>{{cite web |website=Royal Canadian Mint |url=https://www.mint.ca/en/shop/coins/2023/fine-silver-proof-dollar-kathleen-kit-coleman-pioneer-journalist |access-date=14 January 2023 |title=Fine Silver Proof Dollar– Kathleen "Kit" Coleman: Pioneer Journalist}}</ref> and a 99.99% pure gold coin<ref>{{cite web |website=Royal Canadian Mint |url=https://www.mint.ca/en/shop/coins/2023/pure-gold-coin-kathleen-kit-coleman-pioneer-journalist |access-date=14 January 2023 |title=Pure Gold Coin – Kathleen "Kit" Coleman: Pioneer Journalist}}</ref> to commemorate the 125th anniversary of her status as North America's first accredited female war correspondent.


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|History|Canada|Journalism|Biography}}
{{Portal|History|Canada|Journalism|Biography}}
* [[Lady Florence Dixie]] - first woman war correspondent
* [[Women journalists]]
* [[Women journalists]]
* [[War correspondent]]
* [[War correspondent]]
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[[Category:1856 births]]
[[Category:1856 births]]
[[Category:1915 deaths]]
[[Category:1915 deaths]]
[[Category:19th-century Irish people]]
[[Category:19th-century Irish writers]]
[[Category:19th-century Canadian journalists]]
[[Category:19th-century Canadian journalists]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian journalists]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian journalists]]
[[Category:20th-century Irish people]]
[[Category:20th-century Irish writers]]
[[Category:19th-century Canadian women writers]]
[[Category:19th-century Canadian women writers]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian women writers]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian women writers]]
[[Category:People from County Galway]]
[[Category:Writers from County Galway]]
[[Category:Canadian columnists]]
[[Category:Canadian columnists]]
[[Category:Canadian women non-fiction writers]]
[[Category:Canadian women non-fiction writers]]
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[[Category:People of the Spanish–American War]]
[[Category:People of the Spanish–American War]]
[[Category:Women in war in Canada]]
[[Category:Women in war in Canada]]
[[Category:Canadian women journalists]]
[[Category:Irish women columnists]]
[[Category:Women columnists]]
[[Category:Canadian women columnists]]
[[Category:Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada)]]
[[Category:Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada)]]
[[Category:Expatriates in Canada]]
[[Category:Canadian expatriates in Cuba]]
[[Category:Irish columnists]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian women journalists]]

Latest revision as of 02:54, 9 November 2024

Kit Coleman
Born
Kathleen Blake Coleman

20 February 1856
Died16 May 1915(1915-05-16) (aged 59)
NationalityIrish
CitizenshipCanadian
OccupationWar correspondent
Known forWorld's first accredited female war correspondent

Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman (born Catherine Ferguson, 20 February 1856 – 16 May 1915) was an Irish-Canadian newspaper columnist.[1] Coleman was one of the earliest accredited female war correspondents, covering the Spanish–American War for the Toronto Mail in 1898. She served, also, as the first president of the Canadian Women's Press Club, an organization of women journalists.

Early life

[edit]

Kit Coleman was born Catherine Ferguson to Patrick and Mary Ferguson (née Burke) in May 1856 at Castleblakeney, County Galway, her birth is often listed incorrectly as 1864 presuming her maiden name is Blake.[1] Her father was a middle-class farmer. Catherine was educated at Loretto Abbey in Rathfarnham and a finishing school in Belgium.[2] As an adult, she recalled her parents influencing her love of creative activities; her father had given her his love of books, and her mother, who was blind, taught her an appreciation of music and to also how to play several instruments. The strongest influence on her intellectual life came from her uncle Thomas Nicholas Burke, a Dominican priest and a renowned liberal and orator, who taught her religious and social tolerance, an attitude that was reflected in her journalism as an adult.[original research?]

Coleman married young to an elderly man and wealthy landowner Thomas Willis,[2] the sources conflict stating either at age 16 or 20,[1][3] a man 40 years her senior,[4] under her adopted name Kathleen Blake. The couple had one child who died in early childhood, and Willis died soon after.[1] The marriage had not been a happy one, resulting in her disinheritance by her husband's family.[1] She emigrated to Canada as a young widow in 1884. In Canada, she worked as a secretary until she married her boss, Edward Watkins. She lived in Toronto and Winnipeg, where she bore two children (Thady and Patricia) by her second husband.[5]

In 1889, following the death of Watkins, or more probably, their divorce,[3] Coleman first turned to cleaning houses to support herself and her two children, then began writing articles for local magazines, mainly Toronto's Saturday Night.[5]

Journalist

[edit]

Kathleen Blake Watkins then moved to Toronto to pursue journalism in 1890. As "Kit of the Mail", she was the first female journalist to be in charge of her own section of a Canadian newspaper.[3] She was hired by the Toronto Mail (later the Mail and Empire).[5] In the 1890s and early 1900s, she ran a seven-column page in the Toronto Mail. Called "Woman's Kingdom," it came out once a week. She began by writing articles on lighter topics typical of the women's columns that had begun to appear in newspapers at that time, topics such as theatre criticism, as well as fashion notes and recipes. In one of her most popular features she gave the first advice to the lovelorn.[3] She rebelled against her editors’ assumptions that women were interested only in housekeeping, fashion, and her advice column, and insisted on writing about other things she believed would interest them: politics, business, religion, and science.[1] Her column was so outspoken that it attracted a wide following, including Canadian Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier. Her columns also covered topics such as social reform and women's issues, examining controversies like domestic violence and the poor working conditions women endured. Kit Coleman's columns were syndicated to newspapers across Canada. She worked for the Mail until 1911.[3]

Kathleen Blake Watkins increasingly began to write columns covering areas in the mainstream news, and soon became one of the Mail's star reporters. In 1891 she interviewed the celebrated French actress Sarah Bernhardt, who was performing in Canada.[5] She was a special correspondent for Toronto Mail during the World's Fair, Chicago, 1893; the Mid-winter Fair, San Francisco, 1894; British West Indies, 1894; and Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, London, 1897. Her reputation grew internationally, and in 1894 an American reference work called her writing "brilliant" and noted that no woman journalist, and possibly no male below the rank of editor-in-chief, had a more direct influence on the prestige and circulation of any North American newspaper.[1]

Covering the Spanish–American War in Cuba

[edit]
Coleman, circa 1896

During the Spanish–American War of 1898, Kathleen Blake volunteered to go to Cuba to cover the battle activity at the front. The Toronto Mail sent her to Cuba, exploiting the opportunity to garner sensationalist publicity. However, she was told by her supervisors to write features and "guff," as she called it, not the news from the front, apparently believing that this would not be appropriate for a woman.[1] She received her war correspondent accreditation from the United States government,[6] becoming North America's first fully accredited woman war correspondent.[citation needed]

She was authorized to accompany American troops, but was vehemently opposed by other correspondents and the military authorities, who nearly succeeded in keeping her stranded in Florida. Blake persevered and arrived in Cuba in July 1898, just before the end of the war. Her accounts of the aftermath of the war and of its human casualties were the peak of her journalism career and made her famous. On her way back to Canada, Kathleen stopped in Washington where she addressed the International Press Union of Women Journalists.[1]

Later career

[edit]

Upon her return from Cuba, Watkins married Theobald Coleman and moved to Copper Cliff, Ontario, where her husband was company doctor for the Canadian Copper Company. In 1901 the Colemans moved to Hamilton, Ontario.[5]

In 1904, in order to fight discrimination against women in the journalism profession, she helped establish the Canadian Women's Press Club, and was named its first President.[7] Notwithstanding her own pioneering work as a journalist in an overwhelmingly male profession, as well as her activist writing on many women's rights topics, Coleman did not publicly endorse feminism and women's suffrage until 1910.[5] Many other woman journalists, including her Mail and Empire colleague Katherine Hale (Amelia Beers Warnock), viewed Coleman as a pioneer and a role model, and the suffragists among them hoped that she would become an activist for the women's suffrage cause. Coleman's political ambivalence came partly because of the editorial position of the Toronto Mail and Mail and Empire; both newspapers were adamantly opposed to it. She also felt unsure about the extent to which women – and "objective" journalists – should entangle themselves in political and social issues.[1]

Coleman was also a poet and published books of poetry.[8]

Death and legacy

[edit]

Coleman contracted pneumonia and died on 16 May 1915, in Hamilton, Ontario.

There is a Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman fonds at Library and Archives Canada. The archival reference number is R2590, former archival reference number MG30-C152.[9] The fonds covers the date range 1925 to 1981. It consists of 60 centimeters of textual records, 91 photographs and 2 medals.

In 2023, the Royal Canadian Mint released both a silver dollar[10] and a 99.99% pure gold coin[11] to commemorate the 125th anniversary of her status as North America's first accredited female war correspondent.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Freeman, Barbara M. (1998). "Ferguson, Catherine, Kit Coleman". In Cook, Ramsay; Hamelin, Jean (eds.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XIV (1911–1920) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  2. ^ a b Hassett, Ella. "Kit Coleman (1864 – 1915) Journalist, war correspondent". National Women's Council of Ireland. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d e Marshall, Tabitha (24 March 2015) [23 January 2008]. "Kathleen Coleman". The Canadian Encyclopedia (online ed.). Historica Canada.
  4. ^ "Kit Coleman: The Canadian journalist who fought for the idea that women care about more than fashion". CBC. 12 April 2017. Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Library and Archives Canada. "Kathleen Blake Coleman". Library and Archives Canada. Government of Canada. Archived from the original on 21 April 2014. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
  6. ^ Pruden, Jana G. (5 March 2024). "Queens of the Gilded Age". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 26 August 2024. she had official papers from the U.S. War Department.
  7. ^ Pruden, Jana G. (5 March 2024). "Queens of the Gilded Age". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 26 August 2024. Coleman was the founding president of the Canadian Women's Press Club, formed in 1904.
  8. ^ Morgan, Henry James, ed. (1903). Types of Canadian Women and of Women who are or have been Connected with Canada. Toronto: Williams Briggs. p. 60.
  9. ^ "Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman fonds description at Library and Archives Canada". Retrieved 31 July 2020.[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ "Fine Silver Proof Dollar– Kathleen "Kit" Coleman: Pioneer Journalist". Royal Canadian Mint. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  11. ^ "Pure Gold Coin – Kathleen "Kit" Coleman: Pioneer Journalist". Royal Canadian Mint. Retrieved 14 January 2023.