According to unsubstantiated internet sources: Constance Woodrow (1899-1937), nee Davies, was born in England but lived in Canada most of her life. She worked in Toronto in its most respected bookstore, Britnell’s, formerly just north of Bloor on Yonge Street. Woodrow brought out two volumes of verse, The Captive Gypsy (1928) and The Celtic Heart (1929), and translated Georges Bugnet’s novel Nipsya (1929). She lived from 1929 to 1937 in Apartment 5, 142 Carleton St., and died in 1937.

She is only significant to B.C. because she wrote a poem about Cathedral Mountain, located in Yoho National Park, that is cited on a Literary Map of Canada poster complied by William Arthur Deacon in 1936--a year before her death.

[BCBW 2017]