Born in London, Ontario in 1888, Walter Noble Sage attended University of Toronto and Oxford. As a professor of history at the University of British Columbia from 1918 onwards, who was also history department head from 1933 to 1953, Sage wrote on B.C. and Canadian history, including a brief portrait of James Douglas for young readers entitled Sir James Douglas (Toronto: Ryerson Press, 1930), plus a 398-page history entitled Sir James Douglas and British Columbia (University of Toronto Press, 1930). In 1940 he published a brief biographical portrait for the Royal Society of Canada about John Foster McCreight, the little-known first premier of British Columbia. He co-edited a culminating work with his fellow UBC scholars F.A. Howay and H.F. Angus called British Columbia and the United States: The North Pacific Slope From Fur Trade to Aviation (Toronto: New Haven: London: Ryerson Press, Yale and Oxford University Presses, 1942), an important history of the province. Sage was president of the BC Historical Federation in 1938, and again for 1957-58. He died in 1963.

BOOKS:

Sage, W.N. Sir James Douglas (Toronto: Ryerson Press, 1930)

Sir James Douglas and British Columbia (University of Toronto Press, 1930)

British Columbia and the United States: The North Pacific Slope From Fur Trade to Aviation (Toronto: New Haven: London: Ryerson Press, Yale and Oxford University Presses, 1942). Co-editor.

[BCBW 2003] "History of B.C." "Biography" "1900-1950" "Forts and Fur"