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The Many Deaths of Tom Thomson: Separating Fact from Fiction
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Gregory Klages | 5 comments The Many Deaths of Tom Thomson Separating Fact from Fiction by Gregory Klages

**National Post (Canada) Bestseller - Nonfiction**

The renowned Canadian landscape painter Tom Thomson likely died on July 8, 1917. We don’t know for sure. Just like we don’t exactly know how he died.

Most believe that he disappeared on a calm, overcast Sunday afternoon, canoeing on a lake he knew well. A week later, his decomposing remains surfaced within a kilometre of where his trip had begun.

Thomson’s death was pronounced as accidental drowning. It did not take long, however, before other explanations were being suggested. Some claimed Thomson was too skilled an outdoorsman to meet such a tragic end. He must have committed suicide or been murdered they offered.

Speculation about how Tom Thomson died hasn’t stopped since 1917. The jumbling of facts, errors, and outright guesses regarding Thomson’s death has left us with provocative, entertaining, but untrustworthy stories. There have been claims that he was clubbed to death with a paddle, that he was shot, that he fell and hit his head during a fistfight. Some have speculated Thomson committed suicide because his lover became pregnant, that he fell overboard while urinating, or was thrown overboard by a waterspout.

Of course, changing evidence has made it difficult to arrive at a consistent version of events. Key witnesses in the case altered their testimony repeatedly. For instance, over four decades, the park ranger who led the search for Thomson’s body, and who examined Thomson’s remains, left three quite different accounts of what he saw. New ‘eyewitness’ testimony was still being offered in the 1970s, more than fifty years after Thomson’s death.

Given the changing evidence from which to draw inspiration, it is not surprising that writing about Thomson’s death has moved further and further away from what was recorded in 1917. It is unfortunate, though, that the wild stories of murder and suicide — often involving suggestions of conspiracies and cover-ups — have distracted us from the evidence recorded at the time of Thomson’s death.

After a century, it’s time to clear away the fuzzy conspiracies and ill-founded speculation from talk about Thomson’s death.


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Shelley | 1225 comments Gregory wrote: "The Many Deaths of Tom Thomson Separating Fact from Fiction by Gregory Klages

**National Post (Canada) Bestseller - Nonfiction**

The renowned Canadian landscape painter Tom Thomson likely die..."


This looks very interesting. Recently I have run into a number of his paintings while googling other things and wondered about him. I also am familiar with the Algonquin Park area but find his paintings somewhat gloomy and wondered if he was gloomy himself. I admit I know very little about Thomson. Now there is this added mystery attached to him. Think I will read this book!


Gregory Klages | 5 comments Shelley wrote: "Gregory wrote: "The Many Deaths of Tom Thomson Separating Fact from Fiction by Gregory Klages

**National Post (Canada) Bestseller - Nonfiction**

The renowned Canadian landscape painter Tom Th..."


Shelley: Glad you're interested!

I hope that there is something in this book for lots of readers - whether they are familiar with the park, Thomson, or Canada in general. At its core, 'Many Deaths' is about myth-making and history writing: a relatively unknown artist died under mysterious circumstances, and as his fame increased, the myths around his death grew exponentially. To help separate the facts from the fiction, I take the reader on brief 'walks' through the history of Algonquin Park and early 20th-century Canadian art, as well as forensics and close analysis of the documentary record.

If you or other have follow-up questions, feel free to visit my author page!


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