Nila Reynolds | |
Birth Date: | 1928 |
Occupation: | Historian, author, columnist |
Subject: | Haliburton County history |
Notable Works: | In Quest of Yesterday |
Education: | Haliburton School of Fine Arts |
Years Active: | 1968-1980 |
Birth Place: | West Guilford, Ontario, Canada |
Nila Reynolds (born 1928) was a Canadian author, Haliburton Echo columnist, and historian of Haliburton County.
She is the author of In Quest of Yesterday, a history book of the County, published three times.
Nila was born as Nila Morrison in West Guilford in 1928. Her father was a local politician[1] and she grew up on a farm.[2]
Reynolds received writing training from Sylvia Fraser, Scott Young and Austin Chesterfield Clarke at the Haliburton School of Fine Arts.
She married Leslie Bronte Reynolds (of the Brontë family) of Minden Hills.
The Leslie and Nila Reynolds Memorial Bursary is a $200 award given to post-secondary-education students of Haliburton Highlands Secondary School.[3] [4]
Her book Dream of Excellence documents the 1967 events that led to the founding of the Haliburton School of Fine Arts. The school was formed by a non-profit organization established by Ronald McCaw, Elizabeth Hobden, Carole Finn, Harold O'Neill, Dixie and Jan Augusteijn, and Rea Stinson.[5]
Her 1979 book Bancroft: A Bonanza of Memories (published by the Bancroft Centennial Committee) documentary the history of Bancroft, noting that the name of the town is a result of the influence of senator Billa Flint.[6] The book was recommended to history fans by journalist and publisher Barry Penhale. Penhale also described Reynold's book In Quest of Yesterday as "critically acclaimed."[7] The book was originally published as series of columns in the Haliburton Echo newspaper before being developed into a manuscript. Reynolds undertook 170 extensive interviews as research for the publication. Kate Butler, director of the Haliburton Highlands Museum, described Reynold's approach to writing as unusual for her time due to the inclusion of human details in her historical archiving. The book was partly funded by the Haliburton Chamber of Commerce and the County of Haliburton. Leslie Frost (the former Premier of Ontario) wrote the foreword to the book, which was reprinted three times. The book's contents included details the West Guilford racehorse Guilford Boy, trained by Jimmy Powell,[8] and the ruins of Gull Lake and Newnham.[9]