| <tab>Annie Bethune McDougald wrote articles in newspapers and magazines. Her poems were published in the //Canadian Magazine//, the Toronto //Globe//, and the Montreal //Star// and Montreal //Standard//, and in the Glengarry-area press, and in two small books, her //Songs of Our Maple Saplings// (13 pages, 1917) and her //Canada’s Coronation Cavalcade// (27 pages, 1937). Her poem “Langemark” (signed Annie B. Mc D. Montreal), on the First World War, is in the Cornwall //Freeholder// 8 July 1915, and her poem “Christmas Day 1941” (signed Annie Bethune McDougald, Westmount, P.Q.), on the Second World War, is in the //Glengarry News// 26 Dec. 1941. She received the Coronation Medal in 1937. She died at her home in Westmount, Que. The burial was at Mount Royal Cemetery. Prime Minister Mackenzie King sent a message of condolence. She and her husband had a daughter, Mrs Elizabeth Bethune Kiely, who predeceased her parents. | <tab>Annie Bethune McDougald wrote articles in newspapers and magazines. Her poems were published in the //Canadian Magazine//, the Toronto //Globe//, and the Montreal //Star// and Montreal //Standard//, and in the Glengarry-area press, and in two small books, her //Songs of Our Maple Saplings// (13 pages, 1917) and her //Canada’s Coronation Cavalcade// (27 pages, 1937). Her poem “Langemark” (signed Annie B. Mc D. Montreal), on the First World War, is in the Cornwall //Freeholder// 8 July 1915, and her poem “Christmas Day 1941” (signed Annie Bethune McDougald, Westmount, P.Q.), on the Second World War, is in the //Glengarry News// 26 Dec. 1941. She received the Coronation Medal in 1937. She died at her home in Westmount, Que. The burial was at Mount Royal Cemetery. Prime Minister Mackenzie King sent a message of condolence. She and her husband had a daughter, Mrs Elizabeth Bethune Kiely, who predeceased her parents. |
| <tab>Mrs Annie Bethune McDougald was the sister of the remarkable Mrs Elizabeth Bethune Campbell, who during a long struggle for justice during a dispute over a missing inheritance, argued her own case in person before the Privy Council court. For Mrs Campbell, see the article for their father, James Bethune. | <tab>Mrs Annie Bethune McDougald was the sister of the remarkable Mrs Elizabeth Bethune Campbell, who during a long struggle for justice during a dispute over a missing inheritance, argued her own case in person before the Privy Council court. For Mrs Campbell, see the article for their father, [[bethune_james|James Bethune]]. |