From Citizendium - Reading time: 2 min
Richard Finnie [r]: Author, film director and Arctic explorer, who spent the last 25 years of his life making films for Bechtel [e]
| Richard Sterling Finnie | |
|---|---|
| Other names | * Richard Finnie
|
| Born | 1906 Dawson City |
| Died | 1987-02-02 (aged 81) Belvedere, California |
| Occupation | author, film director and Arctic explorer |
Richard Finnie was a Canadian author, film director and Arctic explorer.[1]
He was born in Dawson City, Yukon, in 1906.[1] His father, Oswald Sterling Finnie, was a senior bureaucrat in the Department of Mining.[2][3] From 1921 to 1931 he was the Director of the Department's Northwest Territories and Yukon Branch.
As part of the crew of CGS Arctic, in 1928, he produced his first film - an account of its voyage to the high arctic.[4]
He produced multiple films about the North, and wrote several books,[4] In 1942, when American corporation Bechtel got a contract to construct the Alaska Highway, Vilhjalmur Stefansson recommended Bechtel's book Canada Moves North to the President of Bechtel, as “the best general book about Northern Canada.” Bechtel hired Finnie, and he worked for the firm for 25 years, producing 60 in-house documentaries.
Finnie's life and work has been the subject of scholarly analysis, as in the 1996 paper "Visions of a Northern Nation: Richard Finnie's Views of Natives and Development in Canada's 'Last Frontier'".[5]