ºìÐÓÊÓÆµ

This website stores cookies on your computer. These cookies are used to collect information about how you interact with our website and allow us to remember your browser. We use this information to improve and customize your browsing experience, for analytics and metrics about our visitors both on this website and other media, and for marketing purposes. By using this website, you accept and agree to be bound by UVic’s Terms of Use and Protection of Privacy Policy. If you do not agree to the above, you must not use this website.

Skip to main content

Mary Aitken Legacy Scholarship in Writing

Mary Elizabeth Aitken, born in Ontario on January 25, 1937 (Robbie Burns Day, as she liked to point out), was a prolific writer throughout her life, and a teacher for many decades, receiving her teaching certificate in 1976 from the University of Victoria.

The years of Mary's life were full by design. She was a creative spirit, demonstrating her skill and passion as a writer early with Muaka and the Raven, which won the CBC Vancouver Playhouse Playwright's competition. That creative spark continued to burn brightly as Mary became known as the teacher "Mrs. Aitken" at both Mt. Douglas and Esquimalt Secondary schools, and later teaching night school at Spectrum. Mary's students remember her as an inspiration, sharing with them her love of literature and theatre.

Beyond Mary's love of words was her love of nature: tending to her garden, her orchard mason bees, and always her animals—especially the birds—both at home and in the wild. Among her proudest achievements were serving in a variety of leadership roles at her church, and being a participant at the Banff Centre for the Arts.

Mary believed strongly in education, in fostering creativity, and in keeping up with the latest technology. She got her first email address in the early 1980s along with a Macintosh computer, and she was working on an online collaboration for a song until the day she died. Mary would have loved the idea of using technology to expand the horizons of literature, both in terms of its scope and its reach. Her family's hope is that the Mary Aitken Legacy Scholarship in Writing will enable a new generation of writers to get their start.