Background
Aged 12, she, her sister Alice, and her mother Phoebe went trapping and fishing to provide food for the family.
Aged 12, she, her sister Alice, and her mother Phoebe went trapping and fishing to provide food for the family.
She completed a Bachelor in French and Philosophy at Notre Dame College, an affiliate of the University of Ottawa.
She was a key figure in the study of Aboriginal History in Canada"s academic world. Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, her family moved to the Interlake region after losing everything they owned during the Great Depression. “Living in the bush as I did during my adolescent years, I very soon learned that survival depended upon assessing each situation as it arose, which calls for common sense and realism,” said Olive.
“You neither give up nor play games.” Encouraged by mentor, Father Athol Murray, she decided to finish high school in Saskatchewan, prior to pursuing post-secondary education.
She first became aware of her Métis ancestry as a young adult upon meeting some Métis relatives in Regina. She began a 24-year career in journalism at the Regina Leader-Post and subsequently, worked as a writer and editor at the Winnipeg Free Press, the Montreal Gazette, and the Globe and Mail.
She promoted coverage of First Nations and women"s issues. In 1970, aged 50, she entered the graduate program at the University of Ottawa.
She had to struggle with faculty preconceptions regarding Aboriginal History – including arguments that it did not exist – before finally finding a professor (Cornelius Jaenen) to act as her academic advisor.
"I was lucky. Belgian fellow, who didn"t know much about Native people, but knew a lot about discrimination, took up my cause, and the university eventually admitted medical " She completed her Master"s degree at the University of Ottawa two years later, and her Doctor of Philosophy in 1977. Her doctoral thesis, entitled The Myth of the Savage, was eventually published as were Canada’s First Nations: A History of Founding Peoples from the Earliest Times and The Native Imprint: The Contribution of First Peoples to Canada"s Character -- Volume 1: to 1815 (1995), which she edited.
Dickason taught at the University of Alberta from 1976 to 1992.
She retired from this professorship when she was 72, after fighting the mandatory retirement at age 65. Dickason filed suit against the University of Alberta, claiming its mandatory retirement policy was a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Her time as a professor and her significant contributions to the literature of history in Canada have influenced a whole generation of scholars, and will continue to be the basis for much historical work done in the future.
She has also been the recipient of numerous honorary doctorates throughout the years.
Dickason had three daughters: Anne, Clare and Roberta. Olive Dickason died on March 12, 2011, one week after her 91st birthday.