John Richardson
- Born: 1936 in England
- Occupation: Actor
- Active: '50s-'80s
- Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
- Career Highlights: Black Sunday, One Million Years B.C., A Nun at the Crossroads
- First Major Screen Credit: Black Sunday (1960)
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Richardson, John (1664-1747), translator and clergyman. Born in Armagh and educated at TCD, where he took holy orders. His commitment to proselytizing Catholics led to Seanmora ar na Priom Phoncibh na Chreideamh (1711), a collection of sermons by himself and others. In preparing Leabhar na nOrnaighteadh cComhchoitchionn (1712), a translation of The Book of Common Prayer, he had the assistance of Cathal Ó Luinín, a member of the Ó Neachtain circle of Gaelic scholars in Dublin.
John Richardson (4 October 1796 – 12 May 1852) was a British Army officer was the first Canadian-born novelist to achieve international recognition.
He was born at Queenston, Ontario on the Niagara River in 1796. His mother Madelaine was the daughter of the fur - trader John Askin and an Ottawa woman. His father Dr Robert Richardson was a surgeon with the Queen’s Rangers. As a young boy he lived for a time with his grandparents in Detroit and later with his parents at Fort Malden, Amhertsburg.
At the age of 16 he enlisted as a gentleman volunteer with the British 41st Regiment. This is when he met Tecumseh and General Isaac Brock, whose personalities marked his imagination and whom he will later on immortalize in his novel "The Canadian Brothers," as well as in other writings. During the War of 1812, he was imprisoned for a year in the United States. His later military service took him to England and, for two years, to the West Indies. His biographers pointed out that during his stay in the West Indies he was appalled by inhuman treatment to which were subjected the slaves, and argued that his own racial background made him both uneasy in his relations with his fellow officers, but also may have contributed to the very compassionate treatment of the Native Others in his novels. Unlike the stereotypical Indians of Fenimore Cooper's frontier tales, Richardson's Indians are portrayed in a more complex manner. His most savage characters, Wacousta, in the novel Wacousta (1832) and Desborough, in The Canadian Brothers (1840) are in fact whites turned savage.
Richardson began his fiction-writing career with novels about the British and French societies of his time. In his third and most successful novel, Wacousta, he turned to the North American frontier for his setting and to its recent history for its historical framework. He followed the same practice in the Canadian brothers, the sequel to Wacousta.
In 1838, Richardson returned home from England to Canada, now promoted to the rank of major. He tried to earn his livelihood by writing fiction and by setting up a series of weekly newspapers. He was appointed superintendent of the police on the Welland Canal in 1845, but was relieved of these duties the following year. In 1849 he moved to the United States and settled in New York City, where he continued to write fiction. His attempts to build a literary career in the US failed and John Richardson died (supposedly of starvation) in New York City in 1852. He was buried in the paupers' cemetery in New York and his grave is still unknown.
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