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Victoria Hayward (journalist)

Victoria Hayward (1876–1956) was a Bermudian-born journalist and travel writer. Hayward is credited with coining the term "Canadian mosaic".

Early life
Victoria Hayward was born in 1876 in Bermuda. At the age of 16, Hayward left Bermuda and moved to New York to teach math at a private boys' school. About ten years later, she returned to Bermuda and pursued journalism. == Career ==
Career
Hayward's writings were widely published in Canadian magazines and often focused on Canadian culture, though she was not Canadian. The two recorded Doukhobor life and presented it to the public first in their 1919 Fort Wayne Journal Gazette article "Doukhobor Farms Supply All Needs" and later in Romantic Canada. In 1922, Hayward published the travel book Romantic Canada. The book was based on her recent travels across southern Canada, though it focuses largely on Canada's maritime provinces. In Romantic Canada, she described Canada's culture, both in terms of ethnicities and architecture, as a "mosaic". Hayward is credited with coining the phrase "Canadian mosaic". Romantic Canada was illustrated and contained photography by Watson. == Personal life ==
Personal life
Hayward met photographer Edith Watson in Bermuda in 1911. The two would later live in Connecticut when not travelling. Hayward left Connecticut after Watson's death in 1943, relocating to a cottage in Cape Cod, where she died in 1956. == Bibliography ==
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