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J. BOYD Obituary

REV. J. IAN BOYD Rev. J. Ian Boyd, CSB, the doughty champion of Gilbert Keith Chesterton, died in Edmonton on January 10, 2024, two week short of his 89th birthday. He was raised in Blaine Lake, Saskatchewan, where his father, John Boyd, had moved from Antigonish in 1913. As a young lawyer - having been admitted to the bar in Nova Scotia in 1898 - he remembered hearing John A. Macdonald in person, and his lifelong allegiance to the Conservative party bore fruit in Ian's conservatism, both political and religious. In 1920, John Boyd married Jean Thyrza McManus, member of a distinguished Maritime family of United Empire Loyalist stock; the couple had seven children, Ian being the youngest. Family life at the Boyds was solidly Catholic. They attended daily and Sunday Mass at the small church of Saint Andrew in Blaine Lake, where the sermon would be delivered first in French and then in English. Ian recalled reciting the rosary on walks with his father, all fifteen decades. The household was literary; one item in particular had a lasting influence on the young Ian: back copies of G.K.'s Weekly, Chesterton's newspaper. Ian attended local schools and then Saint Thomas More College, federated with the University of Saskatchewan from which he received his BA in 1956. Impressed by the intellectual apostolate of the Basilian Fathers at the College, Ian followed the example of an older brother, Leo, by entering the seminary. Ian was ordained to the priesthood in Toronto on December 15, 1963. Previously, he had taught for two years at Saint Michael's College School with flair and originality. He inspired his students to astounding feats of memory. One learned a Wodehouse short story by heart; another could recite the Ukrainian Constitution... in Ukrainian. Ian himself enlivened predication classes in the seminary when he would recite from memory John Henry Newman's magnificent sermon, The Second Spring, preached in 1851 to honour the restoration of the Catholic hierarchy to England. While studying theology in Toronto, Ian earned an MA from the University of Toronto with a thesis on Maurice Baring, a contemporary and friend of Chesterton: The Development of the Narrative Method in the Novels of Maurice Baring. Ian's devotion to G.K.C. was further in evidence in his doctoral studies at the University of Aberdeen; his thesis, Chesterton's Fiction: A Political and Literary Study, was later published as The Novels of G.K. Chesterton (1975). The new Doctor Boyd returned to Saint Thomas More College to teach undergraduate English, his specialty being the modern English novel, with an emphasis on Christian authors such as T.S. Eliot, Evelyn Waugh, Muriel Spark, Flannery O'Connor, and of course, Chesterton. Attendance at a conference on the occasion of the centenary of Chesterton's birth provided the incentive for Ian to found the Chesterton Institute and its journal, The Chesterton Review, in 1974. He liked to emphasize the Chestertonian character of the journal's production with members of the faculty and staff pitching in to prepare each issue, a major academic journal originating from a small liberal arts college in the Canadian prairies. Ian became known outside Canada, mainly through local Chesterton societies, some of which had arisen because of the Review. These contacts increased dramatically when in 1999, the Chesterton Institute moved from Saint Thomas More to Seton Hall University, located in South Orange (New Jersey, US). With more professional support and greater funding, the Institute was able to sponsor conferences around the world, sending Ian and his associates - Dermot Quinn and Gloria Garafulich-Grabois - to Europe, South America, Africa, Australia and the Far East. With failing health, in 2020 Ian surrendered responsibility for the Institute and the Review to Doctor Quinn, moving to Edmonton where he lived with his sister, Betty, until he died. 'Larger than life' best describes Ian. Virtually single-handedly, he brought G.K. Chesterton to the attention of the contemporary world by an indefatigable promotion of his vast literary remains, as well as by collecting scholars worldwide to write for The Chesterton Review. But it was his priesthood that was the centre of his long career as an academic, a teacher, an editor, and a minister of the Gospel. His profound Christian faith impressed everyone who met him, and it gave his priestly ministry a sensitivity and effectiveness far beyond the ordinary, whether among the indigenous community in Yellowknife, where he would fill in for his brother, Leo, an Oblate priest; or in a college or university chapel; or as celebrant in a local parish church in Saskatoon, South Orange or Edmonton. A brilliant conversationalist, he could draw effortlessly on his vast reading to provide le mot juste to drive home a point. His gift for friendship was enhanced by a wit which could be as devastating as it was, paradoxically, kindly meant, for like Chesterton he acutely aware of what was ridiculous in contemporary society. Father Ian is survived by his sister, Betty Boyd of Edmonton; brother, Dr. Mark (Lise) Boyd of Montreal; as well as many nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews. He was predeceased by his parents, John Boyd and Thyrza McManus; siblings, Dr. Angus (Mary) Boyd, Dr. Donald (Collette) Boyd, Mary (Vince) Dantzer and Father Leo Boyd, OMI.

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Published by The Globe and Mail from Feb. 3 to Feb. 7, 2024.

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