In 1873, the family moved to the then-frontier town of Winnipeg, Manitoba, where Agnes finished normal school when she was fifteen. She worked as a substitute teacher at the Carleton School in Winnipeg for several years, then enrolled at the University of Manitoba.[8][4][6] However, she was forced to drop out after two years due to health problems. She then turned to writing, and was soon published in the New York Evening Press, and the Manitoba Free Press. She also worked as an editorial writer at the Manitoba Free Press from 1895 to 1897, after which she took two years off to travel the continent from Atlantic to Pacific,[9] paying her way with articles contributed to periodicals. In 1900 she emigrated to the United States, taking residence in Wassaic, New York in 1901.[10][6]
Her first novel, Lords of the North,[6] was published in 1900. After performing research for this and possible follow-on writings, Laut noted the paucity of information covering Canadian history. She decided to address this need by performing research using direct sources then writing on historical subjects.[10]
Despite moving to America, Laut remained a Canadian nationalist and wrote works intended to teach Americans more about her home country: Canada, the Empire of the North; The Canadian Commonwealth (1909); and Canada at the Cross Roads. Her writing proved popular and she became "one of the best-known and prolific historians of her time".[10]
In 1919, she served as secretary for the Childhood Conservation League, a philanthropic organization intended to help children left homeless following the Mexican Revolution.[2] After traveling to Mexico as a representative of the league, she testified before the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations concerning conditions in Mexico.[6][2]
Laut never married. She died in 1936, and was buried in Wassaic.[1]
Bibliography
Canada's claims before the Anglo-American Joint high commission[11] (1899)
Lords of the North: A romance of the North-West[11] (1900)
Pathfinders of the West: Being the Thrilling Story of the Adventures of the Men Who Discovered the Great Northwest: Radisson, La Verendrye, Lewis and Clark[11] (1902)
^ abcdeBlenkhorn, Deborah (2002), New, W. H. (ed.), "Laut, Agnes Christina", Encyclopaedia of Literature in Canada, University of Toronto Press, pp. 636–7, ISBN0802007619
^Eliza George, born in the United States c. 1832, was a daughter of James George, who served as vice-principal of Queen's University from 1853 to 1857.
^At age 15 Laut was too young to apply for a teaching certificate.