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Belcher's Almanac was a nearly indispensable guide in Nova Scotian homes for
100 years. It was a business directory, almanac, and farmer's reference book
combined.
First published as "The Farmer's almanack, for the year of our Lord 1824", the
title was changed to "Belcher's Farmer's Almanack" in 1832.
The founder of the Almanac was Clement Horton Belcher. He published the Almanac
from 1824 until his death in 1869. After Belcher's death, the firm of McAlpine
and Barnes continued the publication under the founder's name until 1930.
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Copies of Belcher's Almanac for the years 1877, 1879, 1908, 1911, 1926, 1927, 1929
and 1930 are in the H.R. Banks Collection of Novascotiana, Western Counties
Regional Library. These are available on InterLibrary Loan for library use only.
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Shirley B. Elliott's essay on Clement Horton Belcher, from the Dictionary of
Canadian Biography, Vol. IX, 1861 - 1870 (University of Toronto Press, 1976),
gives a good biographical sketch on C.H. Belcher and a short history of the
publication itself.
BELCHER, CLEMENT HORTON, publisher and bookseller: b. 5 March 1801 at Cornwallis,
N.S., only child of Benjamin Belcher Jr. and Sarah Starr; m. 6 June 1826 at Halifax
his first cousin, Mary Jane Starr, and they had six daughters and three sons;
d. 23 May 1869 at Halifax.
Clement Horton Belcher's grandfather, Benjamin Belcher Sr., one of the earliest
settlers of Cornwallis, was a prosperous landowner, trader, and member of the
assembly. Belcher's father died in 1802 and his mother married Walter Carroll
Manning of Halifax three years later. Thus Clement was probably brought to the
city as a small child and received all his education there.
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Belcher first served as apprentice to James Hamilton, the proprietor of one of the
province's largest dry goods establishments. His stepsister's husband, George Eaton,
operated Halifax's only bookstore and on Eaton's death in October 1822 Belcher, at
the age of 21, took over the stock and established himself in the thriving business,
which he ran for the next three decades. Late in 1823, he extended his interests to
the publication of The farmer's almanac, for the year of our Lord 1824 ... and continued
to issue it annually. In 1832 the name was changed to Belcher's farmer's almanack.
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Belcher's Farmers' Almanac, 1926
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Belcher began his almanac only a year after the appearance of The Letters of
Agricola ... in which John Young urged the farmers of the province to abandon their
traditional methods for a more scientific approach to agriculture, and it is likely
that Belcher was influenced by Young's common sense theories. After extensive reading
in agricultural literature he began to intersperse the pages of the Alamanck each year
with valuable suggestions and hints on the management and maintenance of a farm.
Meticulous and methodical, Belcher made every effort to ensure that his information
was reliable. Consequently it was only reluctantly that he permitted the inclusion
of weather prognostications, always a popular feature. The Almanack eventually
became an almost indispensable tool - a business directory, almanac, and book
of reference combined - and Belcher's name a household word throughout the
province. After his death the publication's goodwill passed to the firm of
McAlpine and Barnes, but the Almanack continued under the originator's name
until publication ceased in 1930.
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Belcher also appears to have been the compiler of the short-lived Nova Scotia
temperance almanack, issued annually from 1835 to 1837. His interest in
publishing extended to a wide variety of titles, including the second edition
of Thomas Chandler Haliburton's A general description of Nova Scotia ...
(Halifax, 1825) and the first two years of Maria Frances Ann Morris' Wild flower
of Nova Scotia (Halifax and London, 1839-40).
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Belcher was a man of broad interests, both in business and in private life.
When the Western Stage Coach Company was organized in 1828 he was one of the
promoters, serving as agent until its disbandment with the coming of the railroad
in the 1850s. An ardent flyfisherman, he delighted in casting the streams of the
countryside for salmon and trout, deploring the use of live bait as a form of murder.
He was a devout Anglican, worshiping at St. George's Church, where he served as
senior warden during the incumbency of the Reverend Robert Fitzgerald Uniacke.
In later years he devoted much of his time to the militia and at death held the
rank of colonel of the 6th Halifax Regiment. An unabashed tory, "a politician
of the old school", he openly opposed the views of Joseph Howe, not always to
his material advantage. In 1857, through Howe's influence, the £10 in pay due
him at adjutant of the 3rd Halifax Regiment was deliberately withheld, though
his brother officers were paid without question.
From all accounts, Belcher was an amiable man noted for his integrity and concern
for the community. At his death, the Morning Chronicle wrote that "throughout
his life he preserved an equanimity of disposition that endeared him to all" and
in later years the Halifax Herald described him as "in truth an exemplary gentleman,
one of the old stock and style".
Shirley B. Elliott
PANS, MG 4. no. 18, record of marriages and death for Cornwallis Township,
1760-1825; MG 5, Camp Hill Cemetery (Halifax), August 1844-July 1869 (mfm. Copy);
RG 5, R. letter to J.J. Marshall, 21 March 1859. Halifax Herald. 14 Oct. 1892.
Morning Chronicle (Halifax), 24 May 1869. Novascotiana, 31 May 1869. The army
list of local forces of Nova Scotia ... (Halifax, 1866). Belcher's farmer's
almanack, 1824-1930. Directory of N.S. MLAs. A.W.H. Eaton, The history of Kings
County, Nova Scotia ... (Salem, MASS., 1910).
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