Fred Cogswell
1917-2004

Frederick (Fred) William Cogswell BA, MA, PhD, OC, ONB (poet, professor, editor, publisher, literary critic) was born in East Centreville, New Brunswick on 08 November 1917 and died in Vancouver, BC on 20 June 2004. Until grade nine Cogswell attended a one-room schoolhouse across the street from the family farm.  After graduating from Normal School with a first-class Superior license in 1936 he worked in small rural New Brunswick schools for a couple of years then set off to Fredericton in February 1940 to enlist. He joined the forestry corps, shipping overseas to Scotland where he worked on the telephone switchboard to maintain inventory. Cogswell enrolled at UNB in 1945. With a veteran’s allowance, he was able to study full time for almost eight years, moving from a BA (1949, UNB) to an MA to a PhD (1952, Edinburgh) in that time.  By the start of the 1952 academic year, he had accepted a job at UNB and almost immediately took over editorial control of The Fiddlehead. A year after he began remaking the magazine, he and Al Tunis, a colleague in the UNB Sociology Department, founded Fiddlehead Poetry Books. The first book published was Cogswell’s The Stunted Strong (1954).  In the late 1960s Cogswell went to Montreal to study and translate French. Star-People appeared in 1967. One Hundred Poems of Modern Quebec was published in 1970. In subsequent years, he became a founding member of the Independent Publishers’ Association (IPA), then the Literary Press Group, then the Atlantic Publishers’ Association.  He received the Order of Canada (1981) and Professor Emeritus status was conferred by UNB in 1983. Honorary degrees for outstanding achievement in the arts followed: 1983, LLD, St. FX; 1985, DCL, King’s College, Halifax; and 1988, LLD, Mount Allison. The Best Notes Merge appeared in 1988. His translations in Unfinished Dreams: Contemporary Poetry of Acadie (1990, with Jo-Anne Elder) were the first Acadian verses that many English New Brunswickers read. From 1991 until he left New Brunswick in 2002 he published twelve collections. In early 2002, Cogswell left New Brunswick for the last time, going to Vancouver to live with his daughter Kathleen. Fred Cogswell died at the Royal Columbian Hospital on 20 June 2004.

Source

Tremblay, Tony. "Frederick William Cogswell." New Brunswick Literary Encyclopedia, Summer 2011. Accessed 4 May 2023.

Predominant New Brunswick Residences:

Centreville, Fredericton

Archival Material

  • Location
    University of New Brunswick Archives & Special Collections
    Retrieval Number
    UA RG 83
    Date Range of Material
    1945-1980
    Extent

    4.7 m textual records

    Scope and Content Note

    The correspondence deals mainly with the submission of poetry, but there is also a large section dealing with the business aspects of The Fiddlehead. Also included are drafts of poetry submissions, book reviews, and poetry manuscripts from Fiddlehead Poetry Books.

English professor Fred Cogswell standing in front of Bruno Bobak's painting, “Kent’s Punch”
Picture Caption

English professor Fred Cogswell standing in front of Bruno Bobak's painting, “Kent’s Punch”

Credit

Photo by Joy Cummings-Dickinson. Courtesy of Archives & Special Collections, UNB Libraries. UA PR, Series 2, Subseries 1, File 207, item 6, 1990. Accessed 3 May 2023.

See the New Brunswick Literary Encyclopedia entry.

Bibliography Items

Displaying 1 - 6 of 6
Brewster, Elizabeth W., Cogswell, Fred, Gibbs, Robert, Nowlan, Alden, and Smith, Kay. Five New Brunswick poets. Fredericton, N.B.: Fiddlehead Poetry Books, 1962, 62 pp. [ book ]
Collection(s): New Brunswick Imprints

Leblanc, Yvon. "Architecture in Eastern New Brunswick." Edited by Cogswell, Fred, MacNutt, W. Stewart, and Tweedie, R. A. Arts in New Brunswick. Fredericton: Brunswick Press, 1967, 219-28. [ book section ]
Collection(s): Architecture

Alward, W.W. "Architecture in New Brunswick." Edited by Cogswell, Fred, MacNutt, W. Stewart, and Tweedie, R. A. Arts in New Brunswick. Fredericton: Brunswick Press, 1967, 205-18. [ book section ]
Collection(s): Architecture

Cogswell, Fred. A long apprenticeship : the collected poems. Fredericton: Fiddlehead Poetry Books, 1980, 225 pp. [ book ]
Collection(s): New Brunswick Imprints

Cogswell, Fred. New Brunswick Authors = Écrivains du Nouveau-Brunswick. Ottawa: National Library of Canada, 1984, 72 pp. [ book ]
Collection(s):

Ross, Malcolm Mackenzie, Cogswell, Fred, Maillet, Marguerite, and Mount Allison University, Centre for Canadian Studies. The bicentennial lectures on New Brunswick literature. Sackville, N.B.: Centre for Canadian Studies, Mount Allison University, 1985, 62 pp. [ book ]
Collection(s): New Brunswick Imprints