Reginald Charles Stuart (September 1, 1943 – April 29, 2018)[1] was a
Canadianhistorian. The main focus of his work is on two major topics: the American experience with war as an instrument of policy and the relations of
Canadians and
Americans in what he terms Upper
North America. He retired in 2013 and lived in
Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Reginald C. Stuart won twice Merit Award for Scholarly Achievement at the University of Prince Edward Island (1982-1983) and (1987-1988).[3]
His United States Expansionism and British North America (1988) won the 1990 The Albert Corey Prize.[4] This book is also one of the references to
War of 1812.
He won the MSVU Award for Research Excellence (2004).[5]
Both Transnationalism in Canada-United States History and Dispersed Relations: Americans and Canadians in Upper North America are listed in the Further Reading to
Canada–United States relations.
Dr. Stuart's articles and reviews have appeared in The American Review of Canadian Studies,
Diplomatic History, Canadian Journal of History,
International History Review, Canadian Review of American Studies,
the Journal of Church and State, Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism, and
the Tennessee Historical Quarterly. He contributed a chapter, "A Thousand Points of Partnership: Upper North America to 1931,"[7] in the book,Forgotten Partnership Redux: Canada-U.S. Relations in the 21st Century. Amherst, NY:
Cambria Press, 2011, PP. 305–340. His article "Prologue to
Manifest Destiny: Anglo-American Relations in the 1840s" is in the references to
Louis McLane.