Sir Wilfrid Laurier:
The weakling who stood his ground

Written by Heather Grace Stewart
Illustrated by Anna Payne-Krzyzanowski

He was thin, weak, crummy at sports … and so often sick with a bad cough that he thought he was dying for most of his 78 years. His friends had to convince him to run as prime minister. Even then, he still often wondered if he was good enough to do the job.

Yet Sir Wilfrid changed Canada in many big ways. He helped to attract thousands of immigrants to the west, created Alberta and Saskatchewan, established Yukon as a territory, created a second transcontinental railway, and started the Canadian navy. He even changed the way toast looks today! (His government banned the mixing of margarine with butter in 1903.)

Most of all, Sir Wilfrid used his excellent skills as an orator and a conciliator to help settle arguments between the English and the French and establish Canada as the racially tolerant and culturally diverse country that it is today.


ISBN-13: 978-0-9736406-3-2
ISBN-10: 0-9736406-1-8
48 pages, 8 1/2” X 11”
Glossary, Index, Web support, Full colour art throughout
Paper: $19.95