- published: 28 Mar 2011
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Bill Freeman (born October 21, 1938) is a Canadian author who has written historical fiction for young adults, film scripts, documentaries, theatrical plays, educational videos and non-fiction books. He specializes in writing about Canada and the Canadian experience.
After high school Freeman worked in Western Canada for a year and then traveled extensively in Europe. He returned to Canada to attend Acadia University in Nova Scotia. After graduating he worked as a Probation Officer and then did graduate work in sociology at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.
It was while living in Hamilton that Freeman began to write the Bains Series of books for young adults. There are now nine books in the Bains Series. Each focuses on a different industrial setting in Canada in the 1870s. The first book in the series, Shantymen of Cache Lake, received the Canada Council Children’s Literature Prize for 1975 and several of the other books have received awards.
Freeman’s books for adults follow political and social themes. Local 1005 is a political study of a Steelworkers’ local in Hamilton. Their Town, co-authored with Marsha Hewitt, is an analysis of Hamilton city politics and Hamilton: a People’s History, traces the development of the political and social life of the city. Freeman also authored a social and pictorial history of Toronto Island, where he now lives, called A Magical Place and another pictorial history, Casa Loma, Toronto’s Fairy-Tale Castle and its Owner, Sir Henry Pellatt.