Charles Tory Bruce (May 11, 1906 - December 19, 1971) was a Canadian poet, journalist and fiction writer.
[2] Born in Port Shoreham, Nova Scotia,[1] Bruce graduated from Mount Allison University in 1927.
[3] By 1945, he was general superintendent of the news agency, holding that role until his retirement in 1963.
[1] As a creative writer, he published the poetry collections Wild Apples (1927), Tomorrow's Tide (1932), Personal Note (1941), Grey Ship Moving (1945), The Flowing Summer (1947) and The Mulgrave Road (1951), the novel The Channel Shore (1954) and the short story collection The Township of Time (1959).
[3] Charles married Gladys Agnes King in November 1929 in Halifax, Nova Scotia.