Barker, Harry

Identity area

Type of entity

Person

Authorized form of name

Barker, Harry

Parallel form(s) of name

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

Other form(s) of name

Identifiers for corporate bodies

Description area

Dates of existence

ca 1872-

History

Harry Barker was born about 1872 in Dudley, England.

He moved to Canada in 1907. He served at McGill University for thirty years as a janitor in the Arts Building and at the Faculty of Law. Known as McGill's "poet laureate," much of his verse, written between 1908 and 1945, was published in the McGill Daily and the Literary Supplement. Barker was a student of Shakespeare who knew more about the Bard of Avon than most of the Honour English students who took rigorous courses in Elizabethan drama. He would stand for an hour leaning on his broom and reciting some of the more flown passages from Hamlet or The Merchant of Venice, while open-mouthed undergraduates stood and stared wondering that one head could hold all he knew. He was a kind of McGillian Homer who wrote poems with enthusiasm and love. In the 1930s, he published “Simple Rhymes for Simple Folk: Second Series.”

McGill University Department of English awards the Harry Barker Memorial Prize in English to the student with the highest standing in English in the initial year.

Places

Legal status

Functions, occupations and activities

Mandates/sources of authority

Internal structures/genealogy

General context

Relationships area

Access points area

Subject access points

Place access points

Occupations

Control area

Authority record identifier

Institution identifier

Rules and/or conventions used

Status

Level of detail

Dates of creation, revision and deletion

Language(s)

Script(s)

Sources

Maintenance notes

  • Clipboard

  • Export

  • EAC

Related subjects

Related places