Watson Kirkconnell was born on 16 May 1895 in
Port Hope, Ontario, where his father, Thomas Kirkconnell, was
headmaster of
Port Hope High School. Kirkconnell was a sickly child and was accordingly delayed entry for two years into Port Hope Public School and only began taking classes at the age of seven. Despite the delays, Kirkconnell proved to be very academically gifted pupil and was twice allowed to skip a grade. Kirkconnell later credited his love of poetry to the influence of his maternal grandfather, Thomas Watson, who he later described as a, "grey-bearded... pillar of the local Methodist church". Thomas Watson used to reward his grandson by giving him one cent for every stanza he memorized from
Divine and Moral Songs by
Isaac Watts. Kirkconnell later recalled, "From an entire volume thus committed to memory, I gained considerable cash, indelible recollections of many edifying verses, and an indelible love of
prosody. Neither of us dreamt that back of several of Watts' poems lay the fine
Latin hymns of the
Polish Jesuit Kazimierz Sarbiewski (1595-1640)." Kirkconnell further recalled that his "first awareness of small town
journalism came" after his "second Christmas-time promotion". The
Port Hope Guide reported that "a local lawyer" had angrily protested during a
school board meeting that his son has not been similarly promoted and accused Watson Kirkconnell of having been "shoved", solely because his father was the headmaster of
Port Hope High School. For this reason, the Kirkconnell family felt both vindicated and overjoyed the following summer, after the same newspaper published the results of the Provincial "Entrance Examinations". These proved that the headmaster's controversial son had scored, "nearly fifty points higher than anyone else in town or county." Kirkconnell, however, seriously considered leaving the Baptist faith as a young man, and as an older man was far more
ecumenical and critical in his approach to Evangical Christianity than many of his Baptist peers were comfortable with. For example, writing in his memoirs that Evangelicals who "ignorantly or deliberately disregard
Zoroastrian elements in
early Hebrew thinking... are noisy without knowledge" and expressing "more love for poetry than theology." Also as a child in Port Hope, Kirkconnell's interest in
geology was sparked by attending a lecture about local prehistory,
Ice Age glaciers, and the
Glacial Lake Iroquois by
Arthur Philemon Coleman, who was visiting from the
University of Toronto. Afterwards, Kirkconnell recalls, "walking and cycling through the countryside now took on a new meaning", and after the family moved to
Lindsay, Ontario in 1908, Kirkconnell continued to research local prehistory and how it had shaped the landscape. By the time he graduated high school, Kirkconnell had learned Latin, French,
German, and
Greek, and had been exposed to works of
comparative philology. He later wrote, "The labours of my lifetime have been more in the field of language study than in any other." In 1913, at the urging of his father, Kirkconnell began studies at his father's
alma mater of
Queen's University at Kingston. Even though
mathematics had been his best subject in high school, Kirkconnell proceeded to honours in
Classics and graduated as a
double medallist in Latin and Greek. He received a
Master of Arts degree in 1916. ==World War I==