Not Just Apples: Survival Strategies of Annapolis Farmers Before World War II
James Murton, Nipissing University
Thursday – 4 June 2026 – 7:00 PM ADT – King’s County Museum, Kentville, NS
Before the Second World War farmers in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley grew apples to feed hungry people in Britain. That much is well known, but historian Jamie Murton will talk about how farmers not only produced a global commodity — the apple — but also grew food for themselves, their communities, and the rest of Nova Scotia. Farm families did whatever was needed to get by, combining capitalist farming with local food.
Feature Image: “Apple Orchard and Landscape in Nova Scotia, Canada.” Photo by lumix2004. Photo via Good Free Photos. Public Domain.
The following two tabs change content below.
Jamie Murton is a Professor in the Department of History at Nipissing University. His research focuses on the environmental history of food and agriculture, and particularly of subsistence production and its relationship to capitalist markets for food. Canadians and Their Natural Environment: A History is out now from Oxford University Press.
Latest posts by Jamie Murton (see all)
- Public Talk – Not Just Apples: Survival Strategies of Annapolis Farmers Before World War II - May 26, 2026
- Funded Master’s Position in the History of Food Systems in Canada - October 8, 2025
- Funded Master’s Position in the History of Food Systems in Canada - June 23, 2025
- Hybrid Event – 2025 Anne Clendinning Memorial Lecture Featuring Charlie Angus - February 28, 2025
- 2022 Anne Clendinning Memorial Lecture: Lianne Leddy - February 28, 2022
- CfP: Graduate Student Work on Food, Agriculture, and the Environment - February 28, 2022
- New Book – Canadians and their Natural Environment: A History - March 22, 2021
- Precarious Historians, Trade Unions & the Neo-Liberal University: Webinar - January 21, 2021
- Subsistence and Access to Nature in Canada - May 26, 2020
- Hope in Dystopia - February 11, 2020