- Paul Saint Pierre
Paul Saint Pierre (born
October 14 1923 ) is a well-known journalist and author inBritish Columbia ,Canada . He was theMember of Parliament for the riding ofCoast Chilcotin from 1968-1972. He was defeated in the 1972 election byNew Democratic Party candidateHarry Olaussen in a tight three-way race (see results below). He is especially known for his popular fiction recounting adventures and quirks of life in the Chilcotin-Cariboo , and for a regular column that appeared for many years in the "Vancouver Sun ".One of his novellas set in the Chilcotin, "The Breaking of Smith's Quarter Horse", was adapted into a feature film starring
Glenn Ford . Also starring in that film wasChief Dan George , who played the character Old Antoine in theCBC-TV adaptation of his novel "Cariboo Cowboy". Saint Pierre continues to write and maintains residences in the Chilcotin, theFraser Valley andSinaloa ,Mexico .In politics, he was a member of the Liberal Party. His riding spanned the Central Coast, then including the large pulp mill town of
Ocean Falls and the western part of the Cariboo and the Squamish-Lillooet in a time when the largest town was Bralorne, and both were isolated as well as separated by each other by vast mountains. Other voters were in the Chilcotin Plateau and Cariboo, over yet another set of mountains and/or huge plateaus from the other towns on the coast and in the southern part of the riding. In those days Squamish was still only accessible by ferry from downtown Vancouver, and the rail line came no farther south. Most of the remaining major towns in the riding, Squamish, Lillooet, Powell River, Sechelt, Ocean Falls and Bella Coola, were all separated from each other and all those mentioned by either water or rail - or, in the case of Lillooet to Bella Coola, an arduously long and difficult drive via100 Mile House and Williams Lake; the latter was among the three or four largest towns in the riding and is today central to the Cariboo riding.Because it was easier St. Pierre was one of the "flying MPs" whose ridings spanned whole European countries in size, and where many voters were distant from the capital and living in areas difficult to get around in, never mind to. As with George Murray,
Member of the Legislative Assembly in the provincial riding ofLillooet , which is in the southeastern part of the federal riding, once he became the area's representative, he moved there and fell in love with it. His books are classics of the cowboy genre and also constitute documents of individuals and notes on local natural history and myth, and serve as portraits of the cultures of the Chilcotin, Cariboo and Nechako districts of British Columbia.Books
*"Breaking Smith's Quarter Horse"
*"Smith and Other Events"
*"Boss of the Namko Drive"
*"Cariboo Cowboy"
*"Chilcotin Holiday"
*"British Columbia, Our Land"
*"Old Enough to Know Better"
*"Tell Me A Good Lie"Awards
*
Western Writers of America Spur Award (first Canadian honoured)
*Terasen (BC Gas) Lifetime Achievement Award 2000
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