Newspapers • 1881–1884:
Essex Chronicle • 1884–1890:
News-Letter, Orillia - News editor • 1890–1897:
Empire, Toronto - News reporter and later city editor • 1897–1901:
Montreal Herald - city editor • 1901–1952:
Sault Star - publisher and editor Curran started on his father's newspaper in
Orillia before moving to progressively responsible positions in newsrooms in Toronto and
Montreal. Curran was News Editor of the Montreal Herald and was on his way west when he stepped off the
Canadian Pacific train in Sault Ste. Marie in 1901, and stayed. He spent a week looking into the work of industrialist
Francis Hector Clergue, and wrote 32 columns for the
Montreal Herald. He bought the weekly newspaper
The Star from Moses McFadden. Together with his brother John Edward Gardiner Curran, Curran launched into his new newspaper business with enthusiasm and optimism. Many of his children and grandchildren continued to publish the
Sault Daily Star up until the sale of the newspaper to Southam Press in 1975.
Books One of the benefits of owning your own press is that you can publish your own books. Curran published two books which were drawn from stories which appeared in the pages of the
Sault Daily Star. The first one was Here was Vinland (1939), drawn from 26 articles which appeared in the newspaper from August 1938 to February 1939. The stories sought to prove that Norsemen settled in the Great Lakes Region about 1,000 A.D. The stories chronicled discoveries of Norse relics, and the author opens with a plea for "open minds" and acknowledges the "Vinland debate" which is still ongoing. Some of the relics recorded by Curran remain in the collection of the
Royal Ontario Museum, in Toronto. The controversy about the Beardmore relics remains current. Later, in 1940, Curran published ''Wolves Don't Bite'', a collection of stories about wolves. Some stories were drawn from outings of the Algoma Wolf Club. The book opens with a sketch of Old Sam Martin, which the caption "Any man who ssys he's been et by a wolf is a liar." Curran offered $100 to anyone who could prove he had been "et" by a wolf, a bet which was never paid. ==Sault Ste. Marie==