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=                            John_Buchan                             =
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                            Introduction
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John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir  (; 26 August 1875 - 11 February
1940) was a Scottish novelist, historian, British Army officer, and
Unionist politician who served as Governor General of Canada, the 15th
since Canadian Confederation.

As a youth, Buchan began writing poetry and prose, fiction and
non-fiction, publishing his first novel in 1895 and ultimately writing
over a hundred books of which the best known is 'The Thirty-Nine
Steps'. After attending Glasgow and Oxford universities, he practised
as a barrister. In 1901, he served as a private secretary to Lord
Milner in southern Africa towards the end of the Boer War. He returned
to England in 1903, continued as a barrister and journalist. He left
the Bar when he joined Thomas Nelson and Sons publishers in 1907.
During the First World War, he was, among other activities, Director
of Information in 1917 and later Head of Intelligence at the newly
formed Ministry of Information. He was elected Member of Parliament
for the Combined Scottish Universities in 1927.

In 1935, King George V, on the advice of Canadian Prime Minister R. B.
Bennett, appointed Buchan to succeed the Earl of Bessborough as
Governor General of Canada and two months later raised him to the
peerage as Baron Tweedsmuir. He occupied the post until his death in
1940. Buchan promoted Canadian unity and helped strengthen the
sovereignty of Canada constitutionally and culturally. He received a
state funeral in Canada before his ashes were returned to the United
Kingdom.


                      Early life and education
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Buchan was born at today's 18-20 York Place, a double villa now named
after him, in Perth, Scotland. He was the first child of John Buchan -
a Free Church of Scotland minister - and Helen Jane Buchan (née
Masterton). He was brought up in Kirkcaldy, Fife, and spent many
summer holidays with his maternal grandparents in Broughton in the
Scottish Borders. There he developed a love for walking and for the
local scenery and wildlife, both of which are often featured in his
novels. The protagonist in several of his books is Sir Edward Leithen,
whose name is borrowed from Leithen Water, a tributary of the River
Tweed.

After the family moved to Glasgow, Buchan attended Hutchesons' Boys'
Grammar School. He was awarded a scholarship to the University of
Glasgow at age 17, where he studied classics as a student of Gilbert
Murray, wrote poetry, and became a published author. He moved on to
study 'Literae Humaniores' ('the Classics') at Brasenose College,
Oxford, with a Junior Hulme scholarship in 1895 and in his third year
achieved a Senior Hulme scholarship, adding to his financial security.
At Oxford, he made many friends including Raymond Asquith, Aubrey
Herbert and Tommy Nelson. Buchan won the Stanhope essay prize in 1897
and the Newdigate Prize for poetry the following year; he was also
elected as the president of the Oxford Union and had six of his works
published, including a book of short stories ('Grey Weather', 1899)
and three of his first adventure novels ('John Burnet of Barns', 1898;
'A Lost Lady of Old Years', 1899; 'The Half-Hearted', 1900)

Buchan had his first portrait painted in 1900 by a young Sholto
Johnstone Douglas at around the time of his graduation from Oxford.


               Author, journalist, war, and politics
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After graduating from Oxford, Buchan read for and was called to the
Bar in June 1901. In September 1901 he travelled to South Africa to
become a private secretary to Alfred Milner, who was then the High
Commissioner for Southern Africa, Governor of Cape Colony, and
colonial administrator of Transvaal and the Orange River Colony,
making Buchan an early member of Milner's Kindergarten. He also gained
an acquaintance with a country that would feature prominently in his
writing, which he resumed, along with his career as a barrister, upon
his return to London in 1903. In 1905, he published a legal book, 'The
Law Relating to the Taxation of Foreign Income.' In December 1906, he
joined the Thomas Nelson & Sons' publishing company and was also a
deputy editor of 'The Spectator'. On 15 July 1907, Buchan married
Susan Charlotte Grosvenor--daughter of the Hon. Norman Grosvenor, a
son of the 1st Lord Ebury, and a cousin of the Duke of Westminster.
Together, Buchan and his wife had four children, Alice, John, William,
and Alastair.

In 1910, Buchan wrote 'Prester John', set in South Africa, another of
his adventure novels. He began to suffer from duodenal ulcers, a
condition that later afflicted one of his fictional characters, about
the same time that he ventured into politics and was adopted as
Unionist candidate in March 1911 for the Scottish Borders seat of
Peebles and Selkirk. He supported some Liberal causes, such as free
trade, women's suffrage, national insurance, and curtailing the powers
of the House of Lords. But he did not support Home Rule in Ireland and
what he considered the class hatred fostered by Liberal politicians
such as David Lloyd George.

With the outbreak of the First World War, Buchan began writing a
history of the war for Nelson's, the publishers, which was to extend
to 24 volumes by the end of the war. He worked in the Foreign Office,
and for a time was a war correspondent in France for 'The Times' in
1915. In that same year, his most famous novel, 'The Thirty-Nine
Steps', a spy-thriller set just prior to the First World War, was
published. The novel featured Buchan's oft-used hero, Richard Hannay,
whose character was partly based on Edmund Ironside, a friend of
Buchan from his days in South Africa. A sequel, 'Greenmantle', came
the following year. In June 1916 Buchan was sent out to the Western
Front to be attached to the British Army's General Headquarters
Intelligence Section, to assist with drafting official communiques for
the press. On arrival he received a field-commission as a second
lieutenant in the Intelligence Corps.

Recognised for his abilities, the War Cabinet, under David Lloyd
George, appointed him Director of Information in 1917, essentially
leading Britain's propaganda effort. In early 1918, Buchan was made
head of a Department of Intelligence within a new Ministry of
Information under Lord Beaverbrook. Throughout the war, he continued
writing volumes of the 'History of  the War'. It was difficult for
him, given his close connections to many of Britain's military
leaders, not to mention the government, to be critical of the British
Army's conduct during the conflict but nonetheless did so in certain
instances, being critical of government, politics or statements, or
disagreeing with statistics. Buchan could enter comment on political
events. He complimented Winston Churchill's "services to the nation at
the outbreak of war for which his countrymen can never be sufficiently
grateful ... but he was usually selected to be blamed for decisions
for which his colleagues were not less responsible."

At one point, Beaverbrook had requested that Buchan meet with
journalist and neo-Jacobite Herbert Vivian and admitted to Vivian that
he had been a Jacobite sympathiser. Buchan was in fact ambivalent
about the Jacobite cause but he did write romances about that
adventurous period, for example, 'A Lost Lady of Old Years' (1899), 'A
Book of Escapes and Hurried Journeys' (1922) and 'Midwinter' (1923).

Following the close of the war, Buchan turned his attention to writing
on historical subjects, along with his usual thrillers and novels. He
moved to Elsfield, Oxfordshire in 1920 and had become president of the
Scottish Historical Society and a trustee of the National Library of
Scotland, and he also maintained ties with various universities.
Robert Graves, who lived in nearby Islip, mentioned his being
recommended by Buchan for a lecturing position at the newly founded
Cairo University. In a 1927 by-election, Buchan was elected as the
Unionist Party Member of Parliament for the Combined Scottish
Universities. Politically, he was of the Unionist-Nationalist
tradition, believing in Scotland's promotion as a nation within the
British Empire but also as a constituent of the United Kingdom." The
effects of the Great Depression in Scotland, and the subsequent high
emigration from that country, also led him to reflect in the same
speech: "We do not want to be like the Greeks, powerful and prosperous
wherever we settle, but with a dead Greece behind us". He found
himself profoundly affected by John Morley's 'Life of Gladstone',
which Buchan read in the early months of the Second World War. He
believed that Gladstone had taught people to combat materialism,
complacency, and authoritarianism; Buchan later wrote to Herbert
Fisher, Stair Gillon, and Gilbert Murray that he was "becoming a
Gladstonian Liberal."

After the United Free Church of Scotland joined in 1929 with the
Church of Scotland, Buchan remained an active elder of St Columba's
Church, London. In 1933 and 1934, Buchan was further appointed as King
George V's Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the
Church of Scotland.

Beginning in 1930, Buchan aligned himself with Zionism. He was active
and vocal in Parliament in condemning the treatment of Jews in
Germany. To a mass demonstration organized by the Jewish National Fund
in 1934, Buchan described Zionism as "a great act of justice ... a
reparation for the centuries of cruelty and wrong which have stained
the record of nearly every Gentile people." He was a friend of Chaim
Weizmann and assisted him to keep alive Britain's commitment to a
Jewish state.

Despite Buchan's support of Zionism, particularly after he became a
Member of Parliament and after the rise of the Nazis in Germany, there
are conflicting views as to whether his personal views were overtly
anti-semitic, imperialistic and/or racist, at least in the period when
he wrote his early novels. The 'Penguin Companion to English
Literature' characterized him as a "convinced imperialist" and
commented: "He tells a yarn with economy. The implications of his
social and political ideas, conscious and unconscious, are less
admirable." A 1996 article in the Scottish newspaper The Herald
(Glasgow) opined that Buchan's poem 'The Semitic Spirit Speaks' "is
poisoned by prejudice". It is significant that this satirical poem
was, however, never published by Buchan, who didn’t like some of the
very rich Jews he met in South Africa, nor did he like Rhodes. There
were other Jews in South Africa he obviously did like and became
friends with, for example, Hermann Eckstein who hosted the couple’s
engagement party in London in January 1907 and Lionel Philips who had
a home in Hampshire and where the newlywed John and Susan Buchan spent
the first week of their honeymoon (July 1907). Even in earlier
writing, there are favourable depictions of individual Jews, for
example, 'A Lodge in the Wilderness' (1906) and the 1912 short story
"The Grove of Ashtaroth" which shows an understanding and appreciation
of the thoughtfulness and spirituality of Jews.

Buchan was described as being "overtly antisemitic" by author Anthony
Starr. The critic Roger Kimball maintained that "some of [Buchan's]
attitude and language" could be interpreted as those of "a colonialist
... a racist ... an anti-Semite." Kimball acknowledged that the
attitudes and language about Jews and blacks in Buchan's novels are
voices of fictional characters but also opines that it is "likely"
that Buchan was "anti-Semitic (and anti-foreigner) in the way nearly
everyone in his society was," at least until the 1930s. American
academic Jordan M. Poss states such accusations warrant looking into.
One passage from 'The Thirty-Nine Steps' in particular "seems damning,
unless you remember that Scudder [an American who makes disparaging
remarks about Jews] is a fictional character -- and unless you keep
reading" which provides context to these fictional characters who
reflect the prejudices of society then.

Buchan's granddaughter Ursula claimed that the charge of anti-Semitism
is almost entirely the result of some unfavourable comments made by
his fictional characters, and are not necessarily the views of the
author. She points out that in 'The Thirty-Nine Steps,' the
anti-semitic comments of the murdered freelance spy Scudder are called
'eyewash' by the narrator and proved to be totally wrong by later
events. She cautions "it is important to avoid anachronism". "Racial
and national stereotyping, favourable and unfavourable, was
commonplace throughout all society" so "it is hardly surprising that
characters in JB's novels should engage in it." Kimball writes "In
fact, I believe that Buchan probably 'is' good for you, especially
considering the alternatives on offer." If anything, Buchan was
philo-Semite. As Kimball wrote, referring to Gertrude Himmelfarb's
point that men in 1930s society in England "were normally
anti-Semitic, unless by some quirk of temperament or ideology they
happened to be philo-Semitic." "[B]y the time the Nazis came along,
Buchan had abandoned any aspersions against Jews in his novels",
Kimball continued "It was precisely that unreasoning attachment to
ideology -- to the grim nursery of human passions -- that Buchan
resisted."

As a supporter of the Jewish people and a homeland, Buchan's name was
inscribed in the Golden Book of the Jewish National Fund of Israel.
His name was also in a Nazi publication, "Who's Who in Britain"
(Frankfurt, 1938), reading "Tweedsmuir, Lord: Pro-Jewish activity. In
one history of the Jewish experience in Canada, Buchan, as
Governor-General Lord Tweedsmuir, is described as the "most visible
supporter" of the Jews. Both Tweedsmuir and his wife Susan "spoke
publicly in favour of Zionism, lending the cachet of the Crown" to the
cause of a Jewish homeland. Susan Tweedsmuir's name was also entered
into  the Golden Book.

In recognition of his contributions to literature and education, on 1
January 1932, Buchan was granted the personal gift of the sovereign of
induction into the Order of the Companions of Honour.

Having previously advocated in the House of Commons for the
establishment of a public body for film in the mould of the BBC,
Buchan was appointed among the first nine Governors of the British
Film Institute after its formation in 1933. Buchan remained in the
role until his appointment as Governor General of Canada in 1935.

In 1935, Buchan's literary work was adapted for the cinema with the
release of Alfred Hitchcock's 'The 39 Steps', starring Robert Donat as
Richard Hannay, although Buchan's story was much altered. This came in
the same year that Buchan was honoured with appointment to the Order
of St Michael and St George on 23 May, as well as being elevated to
the peerage, when he was ennobled by King George V as Baron
Tweedsmuir, of Elsfield in the County of Oxford on 1 June. This had
been done in preparation for Buchan's appointment as Canada's governor
general; when consulted by Canadian prime minister R. B. Bennett about
the appointment, the Leader of His Majesty's Loyal Opposition, William
Lyon Mackenzie King, recommended that the King allow Buchan to serve
as a commoner, but George V insisted that he be represented by a peer.

Buchan's name had been earlier put forward by Mackenzie King to George
V as a candidate for the governor generalcy: Buchan and his wife had
been guests of Mackenzie King's at his estate, Kingsmere, in 1924 and
Mackenzie King, who at that time was prime minister, was impressed
with Buchan, stating, "I know no man I would rather have as a friend,
a beautiful, noble soul, kindly & generous in thought & word
& act, informed as few men in this world have ever been, modest,
humble, true, man after God's own heart." One evening in the following
year, the Prime Minister mentioned to Governor General the Lord Byng
of Vimy that Buchan would be a suitable successor to Byng, with which
the Governor General agreed, the two being friends. Word of this
reached the British Cabinet, and Buchan was approached, but he was
reluctant to take the posting; Byng had been writing to Buchan about
the constitutional dispute that took place in June 1926 and spoke
disparagingly of Mackenzie King.


                     Governor General of Canada
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On 27 March 1935, Sir George Halsey Perley announced in the Canadian
Parliament (in place of ailing Conservative Prime Minister Richard
Bedford Bennett) that the King had appointed Mr. John Buchan as the
viceregal representative. The King approved the appointment, made by
commission under the royal sign-manual and signet. Buchan, by this
time elevated to the peerage as the first Baron Tweedsmuir, then
departed for Canada and was sworn in as the country's Governor General
in a ceremony on 2 November 1935 in the Legislative Council of Quebec
(salon rouge) of the parliament buildings of Quebec.

By the time Lord Tweedsmuir arrived in Canada, William Lyon Mackenzie
King had been sworn in as Prime Minister after the Liberal Party won
the federal election held the previous month. Tweedsmuir was the first
Governor General of Canada appointed since the enactment of the
Statute of Westminster on 11 December 1931, and was thus the first to
have been decided on solely by the monarch of Canada in his Canadian
council.

Tweedsmuir brought to the post a longstanding knowledge of Canada. He
had written many appreciative words about the country as a journalist
on 'The Spectator' and had followed the actions of the Canadian forces
in the First World War when writing 'Nelson's History of the War', and
was helped by talks with Julian Byng, during a visit Canada in 1924.
He had also written a memoir of a previous Governor General, Lord
Minto (1898-1904), published in 1924. His knowledge and interest in
increasing public awareness and accessibility to Canada's past
resulted in Tweedsmuir being made the Champlain Society's second
honorary president between 1938 and 1939. He continued writing during
his time in Canada, but he also took his position as Governor General
seriously, and from the outset made it his goal to travel the length
and breadth of Canada, including to the Arctic regions, and promoting
Canadian unity in the process. He said of his job: "a Governor General
is in a unique position for it is his duty to know the whole of Canada
and all the various types of her people."

Tweedsmuir encouraged a distinct Canadian identity as well as national
unity, despite the ongoing Great Depression and the difficulty it
caused for the population. He strengthened the sovereignty of Canada,
constitutionally and culturally. However, not all Canadians shared
Buchan's views. He aroused the ire of imperialists when he said in
Montreal in 1937: "a Canadian's first loyalty is not to the British
Commonwealth of Nations, but to Canada, and to Canada's King," a
statement that the 'Montreal Gazette' dubbed as "disloyal" but that
was largely because the news release did not include "and to Canada's
King" which Tweedsmuir had added by hand to his typed draft after it
had been distributed to the media. Tweedsmuir stated that ethnic
groups "should retain their individuality and each make its
contribution to the national character" and "the strongest nations are
those that are made up of different racial elements."

George V died in late January 1936, and his eldest son, the popular
Prince of Wales, succeeded to the throne as Edward VIII. Rideau
Hall--the royal and viceroyal residence in Ottawa--was decked in black
crepe and all formal entertaining was cancelled during the official
period of mourning. As the year unfolded, it became evident that the
new king planned to marry the American divorcée Wallis Simpson, which
caused much discontent throughout the Dominions and created a
constitutional crisis. Tweedsmuir conveyed to Buckingham Palace and
the British Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin Canadians' deep affection
for the King, but also the outrage to Canadian religious feelings,
both Catholic and Protestant, that would occur if Edward married
Simpson. By 11 December, King Edward had abdicated in favour of his
younger brother, Prince Albert, Duke of York, who was thereafter known
as George VI. In order for the line of succession for Canada to remain
parallel to those of the other Dominions, Tweedsmuir, as
Governor-in-Council, gave the government's consent to the British
legislation formalising the abdication, and ratified this with
finality when he granted Royal Assent to the Canadian Succession to
the Throne Act in 1937. Upon receiving news from Mackenzie King of
Edward's decision to abdicate, Tweedsmuir quipped that, in his year in
Canada as governor general, he had represented three kings.

Tweedsmuir's desire to strengthen the culture of Canada is reflected
in his approval of the establishment of the Governor General's
Literary Awards in 1936. This was done after discussion with the
Canadian Authors Association, under the chairmanship of Dr. Pelham
Edgar. The "GGs", as they are nicknamed in Canada, remain Canada's
premier literary awards, announced annually, now with seven categories
in English and in French. Tweedsmuir also inspired and encouraged
individual writers. In January 1940, despite the war, Tweedsmuir
invited influential Canadians to Rideau Hall, including Sam
McLaughlin, President of General Motors of Canada, to support, as he
wrote to his sister in Scotland, the development of "a Hollywood in
British Columbia". This proved prescient; by the 21st century,
Vancouver had popularly become known as "Hollywood North".

In May and June 1939, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth toured Canada
from coast to coast and paid a state visit to the United States.
Tweedsmuir had conceived the royal tour before the coronation in 1937;
according to the official event historian, Gustave Lanctot, the idea
"probably grew out of the knowledge that at his coming Coronation,
George VI was to assume the additional title of King of Canada," and
he wished to demonstrate vividly Canada's status as an independent
kingdom by allowing Canadians to see "their King performing royal
functions, supported by his Canadian ministers." Mackenzie King,
however, was not convinced, thinking it wrong to spend money on
royalty while the poor were starving. To overcome King's reticence,
Tweedsmuir argued that the royal visit "would have a 'unifying' effect
on Canada while the visit to the U.S. would be "helpful to relations
of democracies. Mackenzie King agreed. Tweedsmuir put great effort
into securing a positive response from Buckingham Palace to the
invitation; after more than a year without a reply, in June 1938 he
used a trip to the United Kingdom for a rest cure at Ruthin Castle in
Wales to procure a positive decision on the royal tour. After a period
of convalescence at Ruthin Castle and his home near Oxford, Tweedsmuir
sailed back to Canada in October with a secured commitment that the
royal couple would tour the country and visit the United States.
Though he had been a significant contributor to the organisation of
the trip, Tweedsmuir remained largely out of sight for the duration of
the royal tour; he expressed the view that while the King of Canada
was present, "I cease to exist as Viceroy, and retain only a shadowy
legal existence as Governor-General in Council." In Canada, the royal
couple took part in public events such as the opening of the Lions
Gate Bridge in Vancouver in May 1939, and King George sat in
Parliament and personally granted Royal Assent to bills passed there.
The King appointed Tweedsmuir a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal
Victorian Order while on the royal train, between Truro and Bedford,
Nova Scotia. The King and Queen began their visit to the United States
on 8 June.

The royal visit to the United States was the high point of
Tweedsmuir's efforts to develop a strong relationship with President
Roosevelt, which he began soon after his arrival in Canada. The
objective was to demonstrate, especially to the dictators in Europe,
the friendship of America with Canada, as a member of the British
Empire and Commonwealth.  Roosevelt had to be circumspect and not be
seen to have direct relations with Britain because of the strong
isolationist opinion in the U.S. concerned about being dragged into
another European war. Tweedsmuir and Roosevelt met twice, at the end
of July 1936 in Quebec City, summer residence of the Governor General,
and the second in the spring of 1937 with an official visit by the
Tweedsmuirs to Washington, D.C. Both visits were significant
successes.

Buchan's experiences during the First World War made him averse to
war, and he tried to help prevent another one in co-ordination with
Mackenzie King and the U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt by the
calling of a conference, to be chaired by the U.S. and to include the
European dictators. Those efforts to try to secure future peace and
stability proved fruitless because the British Prime Minister, Neville
Chamberlain, refused to countenance the idea.

Tweedsmuir signed Canada's declaration of war against Germany on 10
September, a week after the British declaration of war. The week
difference allowed war-related materiel, such as aeroplanes and
munitions, to move to Canada from the neutral United States, which was
prohibited under the Neutrality Act from exporting such materiel to
belligerents. During the fall of 1939, negotiations were held to
establish an air training plan in Canada for Commonwealth air crew.
The negotiations were long and difficult, in particular with Canadian
Prime Minister Mackenzie King who was adamant that the facilities
would be under the control of the Canadian government. Tweedsmuir had
known from previous experience with a British mission, which had
examined the possibility of aircraft production in Canada in the
spring of 1938, that officials in Britain "do not seem to understand
the real delicacy of the position of the self-governing Dominions,
especially Canada. King had been difficult, as Chamberlain admitted to
Tweedsmuir. Tweedsmuir played a key role in securing British agreement
to the final negotiations in mid-December 1939 and King acknowledged
this in a letter, thank the Governor General "warmly for the help ...
What a mischief there would have been had there been another moment's
delay!"

On 6 February 1940, he suffered a slight stroke and struck his head on
the edge of a bath at Rideau Hall. Two surgeries by Doctor Wilder
Penfield of the Montreal Neurological Institute were insufficient to
save him, and his death on 11 February saw an outpouring of grief,
gratitude and admiration, not only in Canada but throughout the
English-speaking world. In a radio eulogy, Mackenzie King stated: "In
the passing of His Excellency, the people of Canada have lost one of
the greatest and most revered of their Governors General, and a friend
who, from the day of his arrival in this country, dedicated his life
to their service."  The editor of the 'Ottawa Journal' wrote: "He
would have prepared us by deeper concern for things spiritual and
intellectual, and by allegiance, above all, to the tradition of human
dignity and liberty." The Governor General had formed a strong bond
with his prime minister, even if it may have been built more on
political admiration than friendship: Mackenzie King appreciated
Buchan's "sterling rectitude and disinterested purpose."

After lying in state in the Senate chamber on Parliament Hill, Buchan
was given a state funeral at St Andrew's Presbyterian Church in
Ottawa. His ashes were returned to the UK aboard the cruiser HMS
'Orion' for final burial at Elsfield, the village where he lived in
Oxfordshire. In the United Kingdom, a memorial service was held in
medieval Elsfield church on the Saturday after his death and services
were held later that month at Westminster Abbey and at St. Giles
Cathedral in Edinburgh.


                               Legacy
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When Buchan died in Canada in February 1940 as Governor General Lord
Tweedsmuir, he was widely and deeply mourned throughout the
English-speaking world and beyond, both as writer and statesman. His
last role gave emphasis to him as statesman but it is as a writer of
popular thrillers for which he is mostly remembered now. Novelist
Graham Greene wrote, eleven years after Tweedsmuir's death, that the
settings, pace and pursuits in 'The Thirty-Nine Steps' "were to be a
pattern for adventure-writers ever since." He and his brother Hugh
co-authored 'The Spy's Bedside Book' and dedicated it "To the Immortal
Memory of Wm Le Queux and John Buchan." Fifty years after Buchan's
death, historian David Stafford wrote that "his impact on the genre
was profound, and he has left a mark that has remained strong to this
day." J.R.R. Tolkien admired and was influenced by Buchan's adventure
stories. And it continues. Distinguished military historian Sir John
Keegan in 2004 wrote that Buchan "was a writer touched by genius." In
a list of "The 100 best novels written in English, 'The Guardian
newspaper' in 2015 placed 'The Thirty-Nine Steps' at 42nd.

Buchan's 100 works and more include nearly 30 novels, seven
collections of short stories, and biographies of Sir Walter Scott,
Caesar Augustus, and Oliver Cromwell. He was awarded the 1928 James
Tait Black Memorial Prize for his biography of the Marquess of
Montrose. The "last Buchan" (as Graham Greene entitled his
appreciative review) was the 1941 novel 'Sick Heart River' (American
title: 'Mountain Meadow'), in which a dying protagonist confronts the
questions of the meaning of life in the Canadian wilderness.

In Canada as Governor General, he founded the Governor General's
Literary Awards, which remain Canada's premier awards for literature.
He and Lady Tweedsmuir established the first proper library at Rideau
Hall. His grandchildren Ursula, David, James and Perdita Buchan also
became journalists and/or writers. His granddaughter Ursula wrote a
biography of him, 'Beyond the Thirty-Nine Steps: A Life of John
Buchan'  (2019).

As Governor General and statesman, he helped strengthen relations
between Britain and America, via his position in Canada as a prominent
member of the British Commonwealth, at a critical period in world
history. His breadth of experience, interests, knowledge and vision
allowed him to be an interpreter of Britain, Canada, and the United
States to each other. His contribution to Canada, reflecting his
accomplishments and character, were recognized when the Historic Sites
and Monuments Board of Canada designated John Buchan, Lord Tweedsmuir,
as a "person of national historic significance" in 2010. He left a
living legacy in that at least four of his Canadian successors admired
or took inspiration from his approach to the role of Governor General:
Vincent Massey (1952-1959); General Georges Vanier (1959-1967);
Adrienne Clarkson (1999-2005); and David Johnston (2010-2017).

Tweedsmuir Provincial Park in British Columbia is now divided into
Tweedsmuir South Provincial Park and Tweedsmuir North Provincial Park
and Protected Area. It was created in 1938 to commemorate Buchan's
1937 visit to the Rainbow Range and other nearby areas by horseback
and floatplane. He wrote in the foreword to a booklet published to
commemorate his visit: "I have now travelled over most of Canada and
have seen many wonderful things, but I have seen nothing more
beautiful and more wonderful than the great park which British
Columbia has done me the honour to call by my name".

Canadian history professor Roger Hall noted in a book review that "a
great deal of [Buchan's] success resulted from the extraordinary
person he was, adding that "[n]ot many of our contemporary [Governor
General] candidates come with those credentials" and "[I]n the end it
is Buchan's role as a moral compass that seems most worthy." Buchan's
moral certainty was, as historian Sir John Keegan wrote, "one of his
strengths as a writer [giving] him the power to achieve something
particularly elusive: moral atmosphere."

John Buchan was and is an “inspiring example of a life lived for
others”, as Ursula Buchan has written, from humble origins “without
money or family influence, he nevertheless carved out a hugely
successful writing and public career … His strengths, underpinned by a
sincere and unwavering Christian faith, were his intelligence,
humanity, clarity of thought, wit, moral and physical courage, a
capacity to get on with everybody, from monarchs to miners, and an
elegant prose style that appealed to a very wide readership.”


                              Honours
======================================================================
;Appointments
*  1 January 1932: Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour
(CH)
*  23 May 1935: Knight Grand Cross of the Most Distinguished Order of
Saint Michael and Saint George (GCMG)
*  2 November 1935: Chief Scout for Canada
*  2 November 1935: Honorary Member of the Royal Military College of
Canada Club
*  28 May 1937: Member of His Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council
(PC)
*  15 June 1939: Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order
(GCVO)
* : Honorary Fellow of Oxford University

;Medals
*  1900: Queen's South Africa Medal with three clasps: 'South Africa
1902, South Africa 1901 and Transvaal'
*  1918: British War Medal
*  1918: Victory Medal
*  1935: King George V Silver Jubilee Medal
*  1937: King George VI Coronation Medal

;Awards
*  1897: Stanhope essay prize
*  1898: Newdigate Prize
*  1928: James Tait Black Memorial Prize
*  4 December 1940: Silver Wolf Award (posthumous)

;Foreign honours
* : Knight of the Order of the Crown of Belgium
*  15 December 1918: Knight of the Order of the Crown of Italy
* : Croix de Guerre of Belgium

;Non-national honours
*  1937: Master of the Order of Good Cheer


Honorary military appointments
================================
*  2 November 1935: Colonel of the Governor General's Horse Guards
*  2 November 1935: Colonel of the Governor General's Foot Guards
*  2 November 1935: Colonel of the Canadian Grenadier Guards


Honorary degrees
==================
*  20 June 1934: University of Oxford, Doctor of Civil Law (DCL)
*  1936: University of Toronto, Doctor of Laws (LLD)
*  1936: University of Toronto, Doctor of Divinity (DD)
*  1937: Harvard University, Doctor of Laws (LLD)
*  1937: Yale University, Doctor of Laws (LLD)
* : McGill University, Doctor of Laws (LLD)
* : Université de Montréal, Doctor of Laws (LLD)
* : University of Glasgow, Doctor of Laws (LLD)
* : University of St Andrews, Doctor of Laws (LLD)


Honorific eponyms
===================
;Geographic locations
* : Tweedsmuir South Provincial Park
* : Tweedsmuir North Provincial Park and Protected Area
* : Tweedsmuir Peak
* : Tweedsmuir Avenue, Ottawa
* : Tweedsmuir Avenue, Toronto
* : Tweedsmuir Avenue, London
* : Tweedsmuir Place, Deep River
* : Tweedsmuir Place, Pinawa
* : Tweedsmuir Road, Winnipeg
* : Buchan Street, Montreal
* : [http://wikimapia.org/2025665/Tweedsmuir-Saskatchewan Tweedsmuir]
* : John Buchan Way, Broughton

;Schools
* : Strathcona-Tweedsmuir School, Okotoks
* : Lord Tweedsmuir Elementary School, New Westminster
* : Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary School, Surrey
* : Tweedsmuir Hall (student residence), University of British
Columbia
* : John Buchan Senior Public School, Toronto
* : Tweedsmuir Public School, North Bay
* : Tweedsmuir Public School, London

;Organisations
* : John Buchan Story Museum, Peebles, Scottish Borders


                              See also
======================================================================
* List of works by John Buchan
* List of Scottish novelists
* List of European mystery writers


                          Further reading
======================================================================
* Bell, John. "John Buchan: Adventurer on the Borderland".
(Introduction to) John Buchan, 'The Far Islands and Other Tales of
Fantasy'. West Kingston, RI: Donald M. Grant, 1984, pp7-18
* Brinckman, John, 'Down North: John Buchan and Margaret-Bourke on the
Mackenzie'
* Buchan, Ursula. 'Beyond the Thirty-Nine Steps: A Life of John
Buchan' (Bloomsbury, 2019)
* Daniell, David, 'The Interpreter's House: A Critical Assessment of
John Buchan' (Nelson, 1975)
* Galbraith, J. William, "John Buchan: Model Governor General"
(Dundurn, Toronto, 2013)
* Lownie, Andrew, 'John Buchan: The Presbyterian Cavalier' (David R.
Godine Publisher, 2003)
* Macdonald, Kate, 'John Buchan: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction'
(McFarland & Company, 2009)
* Macdonald, Kate (ed.), 'Reassessing John Buchan: Beyond 'The
Thirty-Nine Steps (Pickering & Chatto, 2009)
* Pick, J.B., "A Cotswold Calvinist: John Buchan (1875-1940)", in 'The
Great Shadow House: Essays on the Metaphysical Tradition in Scottish
Fiction', pp. 66-72 (Polygon, 1993)
* Smith, Janet Adam, 'John Buchan: A Biography' (1965) (Oxford
University Press, reissue 1985)
* Waddell, Nathan, 'Modern John Buchan: A Critical Introduction'
(Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009)


                           External links
======================================================================
;Digital collections
*
*
*
* [http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty-a-m.html#buchan Project Gutenberg
Australia: Works by John Buchan]
*
** 'A History of the Great War' Volumes
[https://archive.org/details/historyofgreatwa01buch_0/page/n3/mode/2up
I],
[https://archive.org/details/historyofgreatwa02buch_0/page/n9/mode/2up
II],
[https://archive.org/details/historyofgreatwa03buch_0/page/n9/mode/2up
III], and
[https://archive.org/details/historyofgreatwa04buch_0/page/n9/mode/2up
IV]
*
*

;Physical collections
*
[https://web.archive.org/web/20090726130304/http://www.biggarmuseumtrust.co.uk/cms/index.php?page=buchan
John Buchan Museum]

;Biographical information
* [http://gg.ca/document.aspx?id=15420&lan=eng Governor General of
Canada: Lord Tweedsmuir]
*
[http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/john-buchan-1st-baron-tweedsmuir-1/
The Canadian Encyclopedia: John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir]
*
[https://archives-manuscripts.dartmouth.edu/repositories/2/resources/1434
John Buchan Letters] at Dartmouth College Library

;Other links
* Queen's University Library, Ottawa, Canada,
[https://archive.org/details/checklistofworks0000unse/page/n9/mode/2up
'Checklist of Works by and About John Buchan'], Boston: G. K. Hall,
1961
*
* [http://www.johnbuchansociety.co.uk/ The John Buchan Society]
*
*
*
* A Time Magazine book review, 1940:
[https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,764588,00.html
'Link']

|years=April 1927 - June 1935 |with = George Berry to 1931
|with2=Dugald Cowan to 1934
|with3=Noel Skelton from 1931
|with4=George Morrison from 1934}}


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