After attending college at Prince of Wales College in Charlottetown and Dalhousie University in Halifax, and working as a schoolteacher, L. M. Montgomery returned to her hometown Cavendish to care for her aging grandmother. She remained in Cavendish from 1898 - 1911. During this period, she ran the local post office, began lifelong correspondences with penpals Ephraim Weber and G. B. MacMillan, and became engaged to Rev. Ewan MacDonald. She wrote and published her first book, "Anne of Green Gables".
L. M. Montgomery married Rev. Ewan MacDonald in 1911 and moved to Leaskdale, Ontario. She gave birth to three sons, Chester, Hugh Alexander (stillborn), and Stuart. She was filled with anxiety throughout the years of the First World War, and saddened by her friends' death in the influenza epidemic that followed. Lawsuits with her publisher as well as with a neighbour added to her stress. She continued to write prolifically alongside her duties as a minister's wife and mother.
The MacDonald family moved to Norval, Ontario in 1926. With her teenage sons away at boarding school, and convenient public transport to Toronto, L. M. Montgomery connected with old friends and fellow Canadian authors. However, she became troubled by her husband's increasing mental illness, her sons' relationships, and financial difficulties in the Great Depression. She wrote, both out of reaction to the "modern" age, and for lucrative enterprise.
After her husband's retirement, L. M. Montgomery purchased her own home in West Toronto where the Macdonald family lived until her death in 1942. She suffered nervous breakdowns and her physical health failed, increased by family problems, financial struggles and anxiety over the oncoming World War Two. She struggled to write
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