Life is a highway for this ‘singing mortician’ and he’s seen many twists and turns along the way.
I was born in 1941 in the small town of Timmins in northeastern Ontario. We were a poor family of 15, including Mom and Dad, and I was the eldest child. My father was a roving “packsack miner” and prospector, hoping to strike it rich. There was a lot of booze around while I was growing up; the kitchen always had a batch of dandelion wine fermenting in a corner with a towel covering it, and there was a moonshine still set up downstairs. Dad was away a lot, working the mines, but hardly ever sent money back to the family.
When Dad was home though, there was always music around the house. My mom sang and my dad had a band called The Porcupine Troubadours, and they’d all practice together at our house when I was very little. I remember hearing my mother’s voice on the radio one time, and Dad showing me my first guitar chord and teaching me about E major. You know, there’s something about music that somehow runs in your soul—it certainly runs through my life and my best memories as a kid are rooted in it.Growing up in our circumstances was no picnic. At school, I was treated the same as most poor people, which ranged from being ignored to being insulted. Some people started calling us half-breeds, and I didn’t know what it meant at first—I thought it had to do with being hard up for cash all the time. I only found out later that my great-grandmother Marguerite Levert (Raymond) was a Cherokee Indian, apparently from a North Dakota tribe, and that people born with “some Indian in their blood” were called “halfbreeds,” or the more socially acceptable term, I guess, Métis. Seems other people knew more about our family being partly Indian back then than I did.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 2019-Ausgabe von More of Our Canada.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 2019-Ausgabe von More of Our Canada.
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Welcome to St. Martins
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Flower Power
Discovering a hobby you’re passionate about keeps you young!
HIKING THE HALIBURTON HIGHLANDS
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Distanced But Not Alone
Last summer’s ‘Fun Day’ at Otter Lake became a message of hope
CAJUN COUNTRY
Exploring the complex history and amazing culture of Acadians in Louisiana
Nature's Wonder
Having the opportunity to photograph local wildlife is a gift
A Pinch of Slowness
Taking the time to enjoy the process is a great recipe for bread—and life
CREATIVITY DURING COVID
How I ‘brought a young girl to life’ during quarantine
A Pivotal Point
From early settlement and quaint village to prosperous town and city, Pointe Claire is rich in Canadian history
A Dream Car Finds Its Dreamer
Imagine finding the car you loved as a teen parked in your driveway 25 years later