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                    <text>HAZEL CLINK--Barwick
Mrs. Clink arrived in Barwick in 1902 on a September night
she had a sister and h~r mother artd father.

There was nobody

to meet them, the C.N. was just coming through so there was
no de p ot yet.

They walked to the only hotel in town which is

on Main Street and spent the night there.

The next day her

uncle Hod Gillies came to get the~ to take them to his home.
Bar\ick

t this time was just mud of the street it just rained

and r ~ined.

Her father had a job as a clerk in Chicago and

then decided to come to Barwick.

Her uncle Rod Gillies had one

hundred and sixty acres and he gavL her father the north eighty
acres.

They had to clear five acres and put a building on it

and then they could get a deed for the place.
winter at the Gillies.

They spent that

her mother came from a well of family

and was used to all the luxaries like indoor plumbing, water,
electricity but she didn't mind it because the children thrived
in the country.
There weren't very m~ny doctors at this time so when women
h~d babies there was an Indian women who was a mid-wife the white
women trusted her very much.

The ~ e were quite a few settlers

between Rainy River and Fort Fran ces.

Before Hazels time it was

said a priest tried to teach the Indians about the bible but it
didn't turn out so well so he left, in his place a nun came and
they said they scal p ed her and she died.

By the time Hazel got

to this area the Indians were a kindly people.

-

In the early

nineteen hundreds tDere was an abundance of deer, moose, bear and
a few elk, they didn't hunt for sport but for food.
summer the

In the

ate partridge, mud hens, rabbits and there were lots

of coyotes and timber wolves, ;iazel loved to sit on her porch
and listen to them, it was an errie sound but she loved it.
The first store was on t 11 e river bank and the first storekee per was W. Thompson and the first hotel keepPr was Thomas
Weston and the first school teacher was Thomas Knetal.

The first

school was an old log cabin and in 1901 there was twenty seven
children, Kate Ruttan taught in 1903. At the end of September
1901 and all of October the school was closed because of an

�epidemic of diphtheria.

Barwicks first Reeve was Thomas

Weston and the first Baptist Church preach was Traiten Luckens
and he came in 1903. Mr Sam Booth was first and only blacksmith.
The Booths lived one half a mile from their place and
they hauled water to the school from Booths well. Barwick
got its name from a few of the first settlers in Barwick, they
were Thomas Weston, James Tierney and George Cawston.

The mail

used to come by boat as they didn ' t have a post office, the
Tierneys had a dock for the convenience of the settlers and the
boats.
These men then informed the Post Master ~eneral at Ottawa
that the name would be Boston but they said there was already
a Boston in Ontario so they decided Berwick was a good name but
again they were informed that there was already a Berwick in
Ea - tern Ontario,~the Post Master General did suggest they change
thee to a to make it Barwick so the three decided that it was a
fine name.
There were getting to be more people settling in this area
and more children going to school so the people got together
and formed a school board;:it was called Shenston No . 5. In
1903 and 1904 the first new school was built, at this time Hazel
was five years old and she remembers Nr. Knectal as one of the
firs~ teachers.
She remembers the pot bellied stove that heated
the school.
In the summer for recreation they had ?nnual picnics,
and often had box socials.

For the picnics everyone donated food,

her father used to make the lemonade ~nd her father-in-law used
to make th~ ice cream she remembers this time with nostal .ia.
Thebo~{ socials used to be lots of fun they used to sell their
boxes or auction them off the school teachers used to go for the
highest amount but the teenaged girls who were quite popular came
close to them.

When you bought their lunch you had to eat with

the person whom you bought . . In the winter they worked h8rd to
get a good Christmas concert, they would all get together at the
school one farmer would pie~ everybody up in his steish which was

�pulled by a team of horses, they had hot stones for the ladies
feet, the horses had bells on their harnesses and it was real
nice.

They had plenty of blankets to keep warm, they were

quite coillfortable, they sang songs going and comin8 to the
concert.

Santa came to the concert with gifts for everyone.

They had sleigh and tobaggan parties and did enjoy the winter.
In the summer they picked all kin~s of berries, she started to
pick berries at age six and picked berries this summer of 1976.
They canned them, made jams and jellies to last from season to
season.
They raised there own beef, pork chickens, ducks and
geese, they made their own vegetables, pickles and saurkraut,
they just bought the necessities in those days they made bread,
pies and even canned meat that was left over from the winter.
They didn ' t have a church at this time so they had their
Sunday services in the school.

They didn't need weiner roasts,

corn roast, games and parties to keep them from coming to church.
In those days it was a privelage to go to church and they went.
The only time people didn't ~o to church was if they were ill.
She always wondered why little children always wanted to be
0

grown up.

he feels childhood days are far to short, tha

they

are the happiest days of our lives, children are carefree, innocent
and blesse~,,we understood nothinG of the hollowness of life or
the treachery of nature, we don't know sorrow or distrustfullness,
or despair.
and tha

She feels it is good to know there is a wqy of escape

is to lean hard on the Hock of Ages.

Hazel Clink wrote a book of Poems and Prose which was published
when she was over seventy years of age.

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When I was just a little girl, not very much past four,
I had a lovely fairy bower not far from our back door,
And no one ever entered there, unless I gave them leave,
It was my very, very own, my land of Make Believe.
There was a flow'ry little path beyond the garden wall,
A lake, an isle, and golden sand, and fairy castle, tall,
I was the only princess there, in all this pleasant land,
And miniature castles made, upon the shining sand.
No errands there, for me to run, no baby to amuse
While mother did the dishes,- and I could always choose
The things that I liked best to eat, for porridge was unknown,
And I could stay down at the lake, 'till I had tired grown.
1-

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One day a charming prince rode by my castles in the sand,
He stopped and talked with me awhile, he even held my hand;
Much finer castles could he build, than any I had made,
He painted them with star-dust, the kind that does not fade.
Then we would sail our white-gull ships, away out from the shore,
Then we would scale the golden steps, right to the castle door,
And climb up to the highest tower, and ring the golden bell;
The castle was a special place, and we both loved it well.
One day when I had older grown, I went out there to play,
But lo! the castle, lake, and isle, had vanished quite away!
The prince ne'er rode that way again, it makes my sad heart grieve
That I can never, never find my land of Make Believe.

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�LONELY
I am lonely tonight, as the warm Spring rain
Falls over the town, and the road below,
Alone, in the twilight, with memories fond,
Of the dear past in the days long ago.
Then I was happy for you were here,
Never a worry had I, nor a care,
Now I am sad in the twilight gloom,
Turning Life's pages back, one by one.
I am lonely tonight while the whip-poor-will
Calls, and the echoes resound again,
List! his mate answers him down in the vale,
Calls to her lover out there in the rain.
She is so happy for he is near,
Never a worry, and never a fear,
Of this life's pleasures she takes her fill,
Living is sweet to the whip-poor-will.
I am lonely tonight, and the shadows fall,
Darkening down in a stormy night,
Dark, like some soul in its bitter woe,
Without a hope, or a guiding light.
Nothing is left but a bleak despair,
No one to comfort, no one to care,
Like a late leaf on an Autumn tree,
Waiting till Winter winds set it free.
(1955)

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                    <text>SC1IBT~ING ABOUT PAZEL ELINK

~~/ ~
~ Is{)

My life in early childhood was spent int t~c security of loving parents
who did all in their power to provide a congenial and influential atmosphere
in the home.

Mother was brought up in the strict old orthodoxy of the early

Presbyterian Chnrch in :Cas Lern Ontario.
Wesleyan Methodist home.

r,~y father was brought up in a

Hence, we were brought up to ~evare the Bible, to

shun profanity, which one said was ·"'le rely a crutah for a weak 11ind, and to
respect our elders.

We we:t·9 not to judge them and think they were eccentric,

who did not see eye to eye with us, and whorn we thought a bit queer. A verse

l

my mother often quoted was

"Vengeance is :-Jina, I will repay" saith the Lord.

We had a man in our district who poked fun at old crippled; one of these
:1ad been hurt in his early twenties, and left with a crippled withe red ha:1d.
He also used a cane when he walked.

He passed this farmer's house every Sunday

on his way to church, and this gave the neighbour an j '1is children an opportunity
to make fun o·~ 1.is gait and the way he carried his withe red hand up by his
chest.

It felt more comfortable up there.

The neighbour got a hearty\ la~gh

from his older children as they mimicked the dear old man.

Several years later

the 'a:9er• 5 ot his hand badly mangled in sorie machinery, and was compelled
to carry it up near his chest, and held the re by his other harld.
reap what we sow.

Verily, we

"The Mill of God grinds slowly,
But it grings exceedingly small."'

My own dear father died when I was not yet fifteen fears old.

Up until

that tine, al thoup;h my mother suffered with arthritis, 1Ye 11ad not known sorrow.
Now I could realize with full force what berea,,ement ·neant.
re 1)cllious

I was bitterly

at the thought of G,~d snatching my :ather when we needed him most.

I wondered how the sun could possibly shine so brightly, and thebirds could
sing so merrily, while I felt so desolate and alone. I wished I too could have
died.

-

�2.

"VThen sollle beloved voice that was to you
Both sound and sweetness, faileth suddenly
Aud silence, against which you dare not cry
Aches round you

Jj_ ke

a strong disease and new-

What hope, what help, what ~usi~ will undo
That silence of your senses?
.....•• Nay none of these!

Not friendships sigh

.........

My s~hool days in our little school would soon be over and I was r3ady
to try my entrance into High School, but ·:men thl s tragedy came, ~,! other
was unable to fj_nance m high school education for me, and I, who so greatly
longed to bf' a school teacher and Rn author, was forced to go out as a hired
girl, where peaple just needed me in the busiest season or where a prospective
mother was

I

biding her time 1 •

I worked hard and long for scant wages.

I was

embi tt.,ered and regrett,~d miserably the poverty which denied llle a good education
When I was eighteen years old, I married a boy whom I had kl'lown ::ill 'TIY life
al though he was eight years my senior.
War 1 anc in the end of De~ember we
had five chi 7 dren.

Vf~i."'G

li e had returned that summer from WorJ_d
narried.

Down throug·h the years we

The oldest was seventeen when the baby was born.

Our l-iouse was in a grove of pine, birches, spruce, cedar and poplars.
It was a lovely spot.

I have many happy memories of my home no:bth of Barwick,

along with some very tragic occurances.

In 1955 my husband waw killeo ~~ an

accident, one of those quick a8cidents that one finds all over the world, and•
which the loved ones find difficult to for~et, where desolation settles 1.ike
a pall_ on the heart and brain, and where you ::-ecover in slow degree from the
shock and horror or it, if you ever do recover.
I moved .from the farm which we

1\'ere

living on 8.t that time.

a year, with the option of buying if tt suited our needs.

We lived there

We had hot water on

tap and many other conveniences that were lackinG in our former\ home.

I moved

�3.
into our village of Barwick, as my children, with the exept.ion of the youngest,
were married or working away from home.

The youngest was attending schoojb at

Fort Frances.

I worked as a cook in a timber ~amp with a lady I knew, one w:inter.
the summer, I baked in a bake shop in Sioux Narrows.

In

But as 1 had pernicious

anenia for years, and had Bl2 shots every two weeks, I vms obliged, under my
doctors orders to come home as there was no doctor in Sioux Narrows.
T~en the Bell Telephone bought out our Municipal phone and I was taked on
as part-time operator.

I liked the work and on days I did not have to go to the

office, I di0 day work in Fort Frances.

In my spare time in t~e evenings, I

completed Grade 11, 12 and 13 Literature ~ram the Board of Edu~ation (lessons
by mail)

Then a course in Ancient History, also a course in Archeology and one

in Wilderness Consehvation.

I scribbled

poems and rhynes for njfferent

occasions and had scribble~s full of things I liked to put in rhyme on paper.
While I was taking the
by Sigurd Olson, Ely, Minn.

I

Wilderness Course' I was asked to read s011e books
I could not ge:b the'TI in our library in Fort Frances

and wrote to Mr. Olson as to where t}iey c0uld be procured.
and we corresponded for some ti~e.

He wrote imrriediately

ne ultim-ately read so~e of my po-ems and

urged ;i-ie to get ·.hem publisried in book :'orm, if' it was only that my ch.i..ldren
and grand :hildren might have them.

He enjoyed the 0nes I wrote on 'Wilderness'

and several others which are in my boolt ' Sele1Jti111e Poems and Prose 1 •

Mr. Olson• s

opinion I valued highly knowing what deep respect is ~iven hirn 'Joth in tl-ie USA
an:i in Canada, also in overseas countries.

I have read all his books except the

last one.
About this tirne, some friends of rnine, T' r. and Mrs. Bill Hay of Brandon
urged me greatly to let them undertake the publis~ing

0:

my poems.

After

some consideration, I dec~ided to let them have the books I liad scrawled them
in.

She w1s a receptionis6 in her husband's office, but found time to type

off much of this.

I spent much time in 3randon with them, and enjoyed their

�4.
kind hospitality.
I had never dreamed t.hat I could ever white anything t ri at was worthy of a
place in a book, although I haye had several poems in the 'Toronto Globe' as
it was then called.

After the first one ---arne out, I had a letter from 'Vm. Dyer

the Peace Poet, in Toronto.

He compl ~~ented me on it and had µassed it on to

his good friend Charles n. D. Roberts ( both now de~easedO and he wrbteto Mr.
Dyer and commented on my poem.

Told ~e how good it was in all but the last

verse and showed me how I could rectify it, and explaining 1vhat to av:oid in
writing poetry.

I valued this letter, which Mr. Dyer had ·sent on for my

perusal, and was amazed that two celebrities would even condescend to notiae
the scribblings of a would-be writer.
dcat~1.

I corresponded with Mr. Dyer unti 1 his

The poems that appe ared in th~ 'Globe I

ane in my book, which was

printed in 1973 when I was seventy-two years old.
I was disappointed in the type errors, which are many, in my book, but it
has sold well, and is paid for long ago.

I 1.1a,re a few left which I rnay get

sale for from ti~e to ti~e.

I was askerl f'or

;11y

philosophy of life.

My main belief is in the Bible•

which I read through every year, and haye done so for nearly forty years now.
I fiMily believe John 3: 16 and since then, He has s:.noothed :ny pathway and
the bitter thj 11gs have become sweet.

I re'tlernber that we all wi11 stRnd be-'"ore

a just God, at the judgement of the just an d bf the unrighteous.

I know 'It

is a fearful thing to fall into the h,mds of the Living God' so I govern 'TlY
life a~cordingly.

I an not a Saint but I ar1 accepted of the ~hrist who died

for ne, and you w~o love Him wiJl see me sone dqy, where all is hope, joy and
peace.

This is not a sermon, nor is it philosophy, it is sir:rp1;v Scriyture.

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                <text>Autobiographical writings by Hazel Clink of Barwick, Ontario,  a part of the Women's Decade Council Herstory project. &#13;
&#13;
The transcript is available by clicking on the image thumbnails. &#13;
&#13;
These autobiographical writings by Hazel Clink tell the family story of settling in Barwick in 1902. With an increase in population in the area, the first school began, as a small centre for country life. The summary tells that Hazel Clink became a poet and published author. &#13;
&#13;
Two transcripts of handwritten notes tell details of Hazel Clink's arriving in the Rainy River District with her family in 1902 from Chicago, to join her uncle’s family homestead at a time when settlers were arriving in Indigenous communities. The writing tells about the land, people, climate, and industry. The first store, hotel, school and church activity are detailed. &#13;
&#13;
Hazel Clink shares memories of social gatherings, school, country living, her childhood, family and area history in recollections and poetry. Hazel's life was shaped by the loss of her father, her working life, marriage at 18, death of her husband, and move into town with her children. Hazel was able to complete high school, publish her poetry, and share her philosophy through her writing. &#13;
&#13;
The texts include some language that is no longer considered appropriate, as well as discussion of settler-Indigenous relations and sensitive and offensive material. </text>
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j
HERSTORY PROJECT
Mrs. Peltier interviewed by Helen Lovekin

-

Q.

~hat year were you born?

A.

1896.

Q.

How long have you lived here in Atikokan?

A.

Since

Q.

When did you move up to Northern Ontario?

A.

In

1923.

1923. We went to Keshabowieand there were 13 houses at that time including

the school, the Post Office the store, everything.

Q.

What brought you into Northern Ontario?

A.

Work - we couldn't be were we had no work.

You see we were close to Winnipeg

and it was the time of the Depression and a man that comes from Montreal and
goes and settles in Saskatchewan with crop failure year after year will sell
it.

Q.

Did he work on the railway?

A.

Yes, there is where he started when we moved close to Winnipeg, he was laid
off in the fall because he was a new employee.

All winter long we had no-

thing to eat - just what I could squeeze so hard in the summer time, we just
barely lived.
Q.

So you grew things in a garden?

A.

Of course, we had to, we had to do something.

All the berries we could get

at least for at Christmas time - that was the least we had to have.

With

time and application, each time there was an opening at some place on the
CN, he kept applying until he got the job at Kashabowie.
Q.

How did you feel about leaving Montreal?

A.

I didn't live in Montreal, my husband was from Montreal.

I think it must have

been a hard time for him too.

Q.

Are you from Quebec or ... ?

A.

No, I am from Manitoba.

Q.

How did you feel about the change?

A.

I was glad as long as I got something to eat and feed my children with.

There

was not much of a future but at least we knew we would have something to eat
all year round.

When a man worked frcrn April to October and then he is laid

�off and not a dollar is coming in.

"' No matter how careful you are you have

to have a few clothes for the children, you have got to get a pair of
shoes now and then - it was no life.

I would have gone anywhere, anyplace

as long as we were earning our daily bread and I didn ' t believe in going
"on the town" and I was too proud to go and ask for help like that, so it
was rough.
Q.

For the sake of being independant, I was willing to go anywhere.

There was nothing I wouldn't do to better myself. q
When you came to Kashabowie you said there were 13 buildings - how many children did you have with you at that time?

A.

Three, I went over there with a three week old baby.

The other two were

tugging at my skirt, and a bag of diapers and a few cookies for them because I had 12 hours of train ride.

I never forget when I arrive over there

my heart went down so low.

Q.
A.

Why?
r
\'1\ .Q..'() l
•
Mainly becaaee) they don't trust us too much sometimes.

.. 1J IYI

1,

He told me about a

nice, white little cottage that I was going to go to, well, I was so happy
and I looked forward to that white cottage.

It was on a hill alright, but

it was an old cutter ' s shack only partly whitewashed..
Q.

When your husband was working in Kashabowie what sort of things did you do?

A.

Entertainment, you mean?

Q.

Yes.
We stayed there four years and the only thing that we could do was at Christ-

A.

mas time when they had some kind of Christmas Concert~y the children who
were going to school, in fact - e ¼:c
was one of the pupils, she did her
first year, Outside of that, they were all Finlanders and there were maybe two or three families that 1,eren 't - two Francais and the others must
have been English.
those

Finnish

I'm telling you it was lonely and they would invite us

women, and they were very nice and very entertaining with

their baking, ver-J generous.

But they all speak their language and us, we

were just sitting there like a bump on a log.

Actually it was boring for

us but for the sake of seeing somebody - you get to a point in places like
that - I guess you go backwards instead of forwards.

You think more of your

problems than of something brighter.
Q.

Uhen you were with these women, and although it wa-s boring because they didn't
speak any English, was it more for the sake of being with the company of
women?

�3
A.

Yes, it Has for company's sake.

You

Even if it was boring, it was still something.

were g etting dressed, you took time to get dressed, put on the best dress

you owned, fix your hair, you made your girls as pretty as little dolls and
it was something to do apart from cooking the cheapest way and' scrubbing
those bare floors and carrying water, like I did by the pailful.
pail up the hill.

Pail after

It was a change that was really helpful al though it was

boring to sit there and not know what was being talked about.

Then every-

body lmitted in their own way - the Finlanders don't hold the needles like
we do and do they ever go fast and the beautiful knitting.

They were won-

derful women and wonderful workers with the exception of the language problem.
Q.

Did you have more children while you stayed at Kashabowie?

A.

Yes, I had two more and each time I moved back home to have them.

Q.

You never had them in a hospital?

A.

Never.

Q.

Who helped you with the children?

A.

A neighbor - there was always an old neighbor, somebody older than I was,

Who helped you as a midwife?

Everybody did it, I helped you today and tomorrow you helped me.
it myself too after I was older.

I did

Not for money, at no time did we take money.

And then the entertainment - I've seen at times if somebody who could sing
came, it was a singing party.
Q.

A.

lhy did you come to Atikokan?

1

For a better living again.

From Kashabowie, of course my husbaJ1d kept bidding

for the section foreman's job and then we went to

------- for

year but he couldn't handle the work so we got transferred to Emo.

one
I wanted

school by that time for the children.
Q.

They were old eno,ue;h to go to school?

A.

He had two of school age and then I wanted school because I didn't have all
the schooling I lrnuld have liked to have and I didn't want my children to
be in the same boat.

So we went to Erno and we stayed there 28 years so the

children all got their education there and of course in Fort Frances soon
as they went into other courses.

I came here after my husband retired, you

have 8 children and small ch~cks all the time, in fact I always tried to
earn money myself outside to make up. All he had was a $40 pension per month
and we couldn't pay ta-xes, we cou:1dn't pay fuel, we couldn't pay hydro, we
couldn't eat/and the work over there was not good enough for me.

�Q.

What were these jobs?

A.

No, in the hospital.

Cooking in camps?
Anyway I decided we should come here and I '11 get a house

and I'll keep bo\ders because
mines were still in full swing.

of the mines - this was 22 years ago and the
That is w-J:nt I did, I caine here, and I

bought a house for 9 thousand dollars and I had almost 2 thousand dollars of
furniture because I had to have a large freezer and leaving a place where I
had no electric appliances, I caine here and I needed those things.

In seven

years, I was clear - I didn't owe a dollar to nobody.
Q.

For both tmms, Erno and Atikokan, when you moved to Emo, was it already an
established toim?

A.

Yes, but it wasssmall, about 700 I think.

Q.

Not, like Kashabowie.

A.

No, at least there was a four room public school and there was a two room
high school and there were three churches.

There was a better future for

my children and I wanted my children to have better than what I had.
Q.

In again,- Atikokari, what was it like 22 years ago?

A.

Not too many sidewalks.

Q.

Was it like a hole punched in the bush?

A.

Not, really, it was better than Emo.

Better grocery stores, better schools

but then I didn't need those things then because my children were all gone,
in fact, my twins had just finished their courses.
self.

So I was really for my-

I had three grandsons that were that age besides my own.

Then they

were teenagers so they were not small as to tie me dmm, so I was free to )
work.
Q.

You are very strong about the idea of improving your life for your chttdren,
from the interview from Mrs. Uebber she has mentioned that you are deeply
involved with the Catholic Church?

Was that a religious conviction, a pers-

onal convic:tion to work for your children?
My parents were Catholics and I was brought up a Catholic.

But there was

always something - I don't know - not that I think it is the wrong religion,
but some of their rules to me were man-made rules uhich I dirln 't agree with.
I'll take from the Bible, I'll accept it but from another man, it'sllike I
read from some of today's books. Sure it is a beautiful story but it is still
a man's stOT'IJ.

There was aCatholic church over there but they had a priest

only sometimes and then sma.11 group of people like that who are poor, no
matter hou honest you are, you are always the little one.

There were always

the ones better off who we had to look up to and I resented that very much.
Myself, I believe in equal rights.

�5
Q.

Do you believe equal rights for not only classes but from the standpoint of

A.

men and women?
Yes, and no. I like to be independant from men, I'll admit - I don't like
men to boss me around.

They're not going to tell me what to do - I know

what I have to do and I'll do it.

And if I know I can't do something, I'll

say I can't do it or I don't care to do it.

I don't like to ~e pushed around.

I think I am a queer woman sometimes, but ... I have been fortunate and I am
at this time, one of the most fortunate senior women that is living I am sure.
Q.

A.

Why? How do you see yourself fortunate?
I look at all of the wonderful things there are in this world. I have the
nicest friends and it is not because they are poor women like me - as far
as money is concerned they are far better off than I am.

They have the ed-

Q.

ucation that I don't have. I never learned English at school myself.
Did you find it a problem when you moved to Manitoba, not speaking English?

A.

I was born in Manitoba and I was raised on a bush farm.
enjoyed it but I don't think my mother liked it too much.
money was as scarce as it has been for us now and then.

Of course, us kids
In those days
We were fortunate

that my mother was a school teacher, so she taught school there.

Not through

the government like they do today, she did it for the sake of the children
and she liked to help out.

That is how come we got out French but we didn't

have English - she knew English but those Frenchmen - you had to be so French
and it is drilled into us to be French and we are.

-

When I left home to go

and work I found it difficult and I was lonesome and I was amongst Englishspeaking people, but I was determined to work and to make my living.

Q.

Did you encounter discrimination in your wages or in your positions because
you were a woman?

A.

I don't think so.

Q.
A.

For instance, the differences in paychecks?
Oh, yes.

Q.

Was it a great deal or was it just a little bit?

A.

It was not that much - of course with the work I was doing, I was not a
professional and I was just cooking.
a man does.

Maybe us women get away with more than

Q.

What do we get away with?

A.

Let's say a crew of men that you are cooking for will expect more from the
man than they woul d expect from the woman.

�In time they might cat er to us and to take too, to what the cook will say.
Q,

A.
Q.

A.

That is important in a bu;3h camp,ci
It was not in a bush camp, I never cooked in a bush camp, just in the hospital
and the railroad.
How did you feel after p~tting so much of this tremendous energy into giving
the children the best that you could possibly give? After they erew up,
how did you feel when they were gone?
I was happy. They turned out to be good women, every one of them.

They are

all living, I got my eight girls and they are all living, and they all finished
something and they are all able to keep themselves above board and better
off tha.n I ever was. I am alright now, I have got plenty to eat and I don't
have to worry, I don't have a palace but I like it - I like old things, I
am old and I like old things.

I am happy with my girls, they are all good

to me.
Q.

So, your family hasn't left you, they are still around.

A.

Oh, yes, they are all here and generous and so are my son-in-laws ..

Q.

So it was an accomplishment to you?

A.

Yes.
And you found all the effort was worth it?

Q.

A.
Q.

A.

Yes, I'm repaid for it.
It must be very gratifying.
Yes, of course there is religion involved too.

I guess I preach sometimes

too because some of my girls are ver-J close to religion too, some are not
so close and their husbands too.

But they are all good men, that is One thing

I am thankful for. When I hear somebody say something about mother-in-laws,
I don't like that. I have no difficulties with my son-in-laws - why do others
have difficulty? I don't Imow. What more do I want in life? Right now
I couldn't ask for any better - I don't: live in luxury but I like it. I
keep my house as clean as I can and of course I am busy.
Q,

Do you feel that when you had this large family, did you feel like a pioneer?

A.

No.I tried to get to the top, that is all.

Q.

And this was a place to do it?

A.

Really what I had in mind was the future of my girls and I wanted them to have
better than what I had, at any cost.
time, no sacrifices.

I wouldn't back up on no work, no

I would have done without shoes or stockings, or any-

�1Q.

A.
Q.

A.

thing to let them have it so they could go on.
It is nice that all of your girls grew up well and they still come and see
you and you a.re vecy happy with them. You mentioned about being French
and how you loved being French.
So what I go for that I believ e in is to lea:rn to speak it well, use the
proper words and your proper grammar.
So you don't like the Quebecoisi.J;c.,.\e&lt;..~ 1~
Not too much. When we were small a funny thing happened.

There were some

Quebecois but the kids were always tormenting us because we were French
Belgian, you see, my father was from Belgium. They kept hounding us and
calling us "The Belgians" or something like that and at one point we went
to Mama and asked her why they kept calling us that name. We were proud to
be French Belgians you Imow. You see, my father's parents were from France
and they had to imigrate to Belgium after or I think before my father's time.
My mother just said "Call them Green Canadians" and of course we went out

Q.
A.

like a shot and if after they said anything about our being French Belgian,
- I don't know why we resented being called that because that is what we
were - of course we called them Green Canadians.
Did you find that this pride was a spiritual need in you?
No, I think it is more the French feeling - and old country French - and that
is home and country.

You die for your country - you lay down your life for

your country first of all - and I think that is what it was.

Although my

mother was a Canadian born and my father was old country French and their
mother was from the U.S.. My mother never really talked that way to us,
but of course we had old count:ry French people too and then our relatives
were all older than my father was and without hestitation you lay down your
life for your countcy and your flag was .. that's it.

Q.

Did you find any of these feelings lacking because you lived in these small
communities in Northern Ontario?

A.
Q.

You mean lacking in me or in other people?
From your sur-.coundings .

A.

Yes.

. .......... Nobody has the same interests.

Maybe they would if they were

in another country. I don't think people really talk about it or are interested the same as we were. Because most of the people of my father's generation
were from the old country and that is what makes the difference and maybe

�t
r:. ~lk.r

c...; '"1"?.\"'\J;~

if I were in another country myself it would make a difference. A •••••• And
that is the only kind of wood she had in the winter time and she had only
a cook stove.

She had to keep on making fire all night long in order not

to be cold because the little boy was not very old and the little girl either.
So my kids found out on the way to school that they stopped so we went to
see her and she told us_she had been up all night making the fire.
her to come over

I told

and they stayed with us until I don't know what happened.

Until she had something else to help her but the wages were all the men
could get at that time

Q.

- was five dollars a month on the highway.

Do you wish there had been more co-operation between the women in these communities or do you think there was a great deal of co-operation?

A.

I think the co-operation was as good as it could be, considering the conditions.

If you have no work, what can you do?

Iffyou don't earn any

money - I know, I went through that after the First World War - you just can't
do nothing.

What can you do?

You are raising children, poor little babies

and you give them all you can and you are just barley living yourself.
could tell you a true story.

I

When I just had Jean and Madelaine - that-

spring was before my husband went to Kashobowie, he was out of work all winter
long.

As careful as I was to try to have something to eat, and all we had

was bread and p:o:vrid.ge and brown sugar.

And then came springtime so my

husband left to go to Kashabowie for work there which was supposed to be a
steady job which he gladly took, and then I didn't want to spend any more ~
money than I had to.

When it came to the last of the brmm sugar I just

cave them to my two little kids and I did without it with the porridge.
That last month I wanted to spend as little as I could.

That were the sac-

rifices we did during the Depression along with so many other people.
sure I was not the only one.

Some were more fortunate of course - those

that were established you know.
thing.

I am

But when you just start, you start with no-

It is just like a business, you start a business on small money.

You do it but you have got to be careful and know that you get no wages for
yourself and it takes time before you have enough to call your own.

Q.
A.

Did you have any time fo:r yourself at all?
With 8 children in less than 14 years?

No.

·-"":

and I washed diapers for 8 children on the board.
on the board.

\

I did my sewing, I did my knitting
I washed for ten

- e

&amp;us

�Q.

Did you ever think sometimes that you couldn't stand it any more?

A.

I felt there would never be · an end to it sometimes.
I saw other people it was or-ay, it boosted me up.

Not aJ.l the time, if
If I didn't see people

every week, or if I couldn't go to church - that is why I went to the United
Church actually, that is what took me over there because by going there
every week it gave me a boost.
Q.

What was the longest period you went without seeing anybody?

A.

I don't know, weeks or a month.

Q.

What did you do?

A.

In a place like that, you've got to carry water in to cook , to wash, to wash

That must be very very depressing.
I

your floor, to wash your children, to do the washing, to do everything.
is a lot of water to carry, and that takes a lot of us.

That

There is wood to be

carried in, there is ashes to take out, there is water to take out, there
a clothesline uas never· too close to a house as a rule.
bread once or twic~ a week for that many people.

You hawe to make

You had to go and dig

your potatoes if you had them, you have to go and work your garden .. You
have to sew, in those days we patched, not like today.

We patched clothes

in those days so it was Monday; wash, Tuesday you did the ironing that we
don't do today; Wednesday you mended and you mended socks until you couldn't
mend them any more.

You patched and sewed buttons.

So you wash your dishes

you wash the little faces, the little hands,put them back to bed and the
next morning you ihook the covers and you made the beds again and you feed
them and all that and you are busy.

There comes a time when you want -t o

see someone from outside.

a

Q..

You just have to get away for

little while.

A.

Yes, you have to otherwise you uould just - you get so lonesome, you fe·e1
there will never be an end to it.

It is as if you were caught in a trap.

Q.

So you did feel trapped sometimes?

A.

Yes, I did.

If I saw somebody taJ.k to somebody, I was up again.

I could break loose.

As long as

Break from the burden of the family where I was tied

down and I i-ron 't leave them, they were my children and I stood by them at aJ.l
times until they were about 18.

There was joy and a lot of sorrow and dis-

appointment.
Q.

Can you tell me about that?

Hhat would make you particularly happy, aside

from seein6 your children grow up happy and intelligent?

�,o
A.

To Imow that your children are away and you see that they are going to do
well for themselves.

They grow up to be honest women.

Uhat more do you

uant?

Q.
A.

That was completely fulfilling for you?
Yes.

What more could I wish :for?

pies - they were reserved.

Q.

They choose good men, they were not .hip-

They choose their company also.

_

Do you believe there has been a positive change for women's roles in this

~

community, for say, your daughter?

A.

I think so.

They are freer.

In my time, women had to be so careful not to

look sideways - you' re talked about - or you don't have to do nothing but'.
people will think something.

You didn't dress like I am dressed now.

matter hoH hot it was you had to have stockings on.
free - they are so lucky.
Q.

No

Today the women are so

Oh, if I had the chance that the girls have today.

If you did have the chance to be my age, what do you think you would like-to do?

A.

I would travel and I would go for mission work.

Q.

Hhy mission work?

A.

To help the less fortunate.

Q.

So, you like_giving things.

A.

Right now, I bet you I am the only person who does what I am doing right

·:.1

now.

Q.
A.

What are you doing?
Of course I work with the hospitals, I donate good things, new things or
almost new things.

Sometimes they have too much and what can they do with

that but pack those good clothes and have them burnt.
should make quilts for the poor with that.
six quilts.

One day I said we

So far this year I have made

All it costs me is just 2 or 3 dollars to make and if I have

quite a few on hand sometimes and if I sell them I usually turn the money
over to the hospital.
Q.

So you would like to do missionaI'J Hork in Canada?

A.

Abroad.

Q.

Any cot1ntry in particualar?

A.

In the days when I just would have loved to go to school, I would have went
to China.

Q.

I hav~ been to China .
.fl

A.

Have you?

Ue have a Chinese girl here.

I would do the work here, but as:"l ong

as I help somebody less fortunate than I am.

I don't like to give to people

�uho can afford to buy.

Somebody that needs it, regardless of colour or'

creed.

Q.

Do you think that you got this attitude because of your childhood - of giving
and sharing and hard work?

A.

No, I think it was more the Depression.

In the Depression after World War

I, we were not the only ones who were hard hit.

It is like when we were

small we went on that bush farm - there were other settlers also- but I don't
think they were much better off than we were.

Q.

Do you think that your mother taught you a lot of things that were valuable
Hhen you had a family?

A.

I was not close enough to her.

Q.

You wish you had learned more you mean?

A.

No.

I wanted to: .look out for myself, I was a bit independant.

told that many times and I believe it now.

Q.

I have been

--What

You must remember the time that they brought in the vote for women?
did you think about that?

A.

I think it uas good.
the work.

Why shouldn't we have anything to say, we do half

I believe it is right.

think what the, what it is.
•r hey don't care.

I don't think the men really stop and

If they vote, they just vote and that is it.

And I guess some women too.

When I vote, I vote for that

man because I think he will do something .
Q.

You wouldn't like to get deeper involved in politics though?

A.

Not now, I would have once upon a time.

Q.

What did you wish to achieve?

A.

I would have liked to have been up there and give them my opionion on some

___.--,

things.
Q.

~Then was this?

A.

Durine; Depression time .

In the 1930 's.

It was a time when my girls were

studying to go to high school and they had to write exams.

ll ell, we had

to pay for that - that one dollar meant so much, and of course I d:ldn 't
like that.

I thought some of my girls would be school teachers but they

got into anything else but teaching.

Q.

Did you teach them to be independant and stand on their ,os.m two feet rather
than depend on someone?

A.

I must have because they are all independant.

Some of them, my goodness.

The same with me, the smaller ones are so spunky.
that they are all honest women.

Uhat I am happy about is

And they are all hard workers.

When they

�do something they do it well, they work better than I do •
.Q.

A.
Q.

Well, you must have taught them something.
I guess I started them, but, it is like if they are knitting or crocheting,
it has to be perfect when they do it.
Is there anything that you would like to see done within your society? Anything about people's rights that you would like to work for? For instance
the Women's Movement?

A.
Q.

A.

I don ' t Jmow.
Other than missionariJ work, and you do do a lot of work for the hospital.
Uhat I regret, maybe in a larger center it was like that a long time ago
although I uas young then, but if it was, if such situations existed, then
I don't know, I wasn't in the gang.

I regret so much - you see some young

people with all their lives ahead of them with nothing to do. I have tried
because sometimes I had to help some of the women with a group of girls to
do something in their clubnork, and they have nothing to do.

I say that

they should learn to sew, and that I would show them if they wanted. If
someone wants to learn, I'm right there - or knit. But they don't seem to
be interested. And it seems to me, at least with my sisters, and cousins,
we had something that we were working at.
we even had work we could do.

At noon hour and recess at school

We were at it and we were so ambitious and

tta t was the case with everyone, but you don't see that today. And another
thing you notice at school, I don't say everyone is like that but that is
what. I saw, when they learn their sewing at school, they put something
crooked or something wrong, they don't want to undo it and start over again.
Undo it and start over again and then it will be well done.

If I had been

a teacher I would have been too strict I guess - I would have expected too
much.
Q.

It is a hard life and I don't think you can train people too much to go out
and face what goes on in the irnrld.

A.

And then, it seems to me that we were so busy when we were that age and I

Q.

don't think that the kids have that today. We had a group of girls for a
couple of years, that the school sent to us if we wanted them.
llho is "we", what organization is this?

A.

The school teachers. In a way they were to do some work for us.
waited for the day they were allowed to come out to do our work.

So we
Try to see

�.·,.

.

--··

;,

if you can ma;ke them do it. You show them how to go about it, and that is
the way I want it to be done and that is the way it is supposed to be done.
No way they would do it. That wasn't the way they did it. They want to do
what they want and not what we want. When I went to work and I learned when
we worked, we do what our mistress wanted us to do, they wanted it done
that way and that was it. They don't always send the same girls and we
must have had 8 or 10 girls, and if 2 from that 8 or 10 was willing to do
the work, that was about it.
teach.
Q.

A.

Q.
A.

The kids don ' t like to learn, they want to

Ihlearned that a long time ago - don ' t tell me you know how to work

better than I do.
I asked you what you would like to do if you were my age, you are obviously
very active - what do you plan on continuing?
As long as I can.
You just want to keep doing.
I hope so. I had one of my aunts from Belgium,

She stayed all alone until

she was '90 and that was in the country were there is no convenience - carry
the water in, carry the ashes out - and she stayed by herself until she was
And thn I guess came the time that she couldn't do anything else ..... .
You just shoned us what you are doing, the beautiful quilts and knitting
90.

Q.

and . ...

A.

And my scrapbooks.

Q,

You have scrapbooks too? So you like to stay on top of things.
In one of my books that I have, I have the first stamp of the hospital when

A,

there were only two rooms.
Tha.nk--you Mrs. Peltier.

I like. all history like that.

�</text>
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                    <text>MRS. PELLETIER-Atikokan
Mrs. Pelletier will be 79 in December 1975.

She has lived

in Winnipeg, Emo and Atikokan.

She has eight children and has

also raised two grandchildren.

She is a deeply religious

person, now she has four dogs and says she is very good at
playing cribbage she has played since 1949.
She would have liked to have more for her children when
they were growing up, she said she was like the Old Woman In Th
I

Shoe, her children were always clean and ~ e never in rags.
She always washed and ironed and patched all their clothes.

In

those days if you had to manage on seventy dollars a month you
did.

They paid $800 for their house and paid $20 a month with-

out interest and of course she had her garden.
nothing to anybody.

Today she owes

Inflation doesn't affect her to much, she

says she is careful with her money and is used to hard times.
She said as long as her children were fed and were comfortable
it 4idn't bother her.

She thinks you have to live from day to

day and make the best of it, you've got to be willing and accep
it.

Her husband was different from her she was very outgoing

he didn't like it but when she wanted to go out she did her
work at home and slipped out.

He never stopped her from going

out.
If she had to do it over again she said she would never
live like this, she would have travelled or taught.
had it rough and cried a lot but stuck it out.

Shes had

She never had t

the pill so the babies kept coming and coming and she never
had one of her children in the hospital.

.

�MRS PELLETIER

ATIKOKAN
old in December

Mrs. Pelletier will

Religion
Mrs. Pelletier a de eply religious person states "So many things of
course we think about it, no m~tter how we are r aised ............... .
.................. some belief of our own even if wed 't
about it or discuss it wj JJ:i nobody eJ se 01 1r f .lith grows to be ia
such a wa
ou k ow
You believe and I believe and some things
we don't believe and we think doesn't make sense and so·on. And
it was like that with me, but I'm against certain things. If it's
supoosed to be that way OK let it be, don't matter to me but, don't
make sense to me so I let it go over my head."
Mrs. Pelletier makes reference to a recent stay at Avila Center which
she enjoyed.
Dogs t

Mrs. Pelletier has 4 dogs in the house, ..................... " My
Baby sleeps beside me."
Cri
at it but I can handle

On her pioneer life
What I hated most was to wash his jeans and iron them and patch them,
It had to be done, my dear lady, we WJuld have been in r~gs and it's
something that no matter how little I had and how many children,
) ; ke the OJ d vyPWiU1,.__i_n ~ll.oe,_.my child-r.-.en ne~.r: -went with soi Jed cJ otbes.
: the·

-.....--=~=~,~...;..,;,c~-

da
but at ni
In those
days -=-~=-=!""'!!llli~~
be ironed, nobody went out with clothes that
wasn't
---~:--did and you know some women
Often wondered hov,1 I done it but it h;;id to be done. They wondered
how I baked. My husb 1nd was working and I had to bake something for
for his lunch that was better and of course with the children I had
to. Pies maybe for Sunday.
:.::.::..;:;.c....,....::.:.;;;~~::-,,r...;..;....~..__-= __,~ . _ _

�Question
"Were .YAU eyer reaJ ly Pnbaooy wi r,b yo 11 t 1 ; fe?"
Answer
" I would h ave liked more for the sake of my children, I always
wanted something. I would h ave liked enough money, but when I needed it,
I ne~ded to buy a pair of shoes I could go and buy it, but I always had to
wait, sometimes 'till pay day, 15 days maybe sometimes a month before
I could go buy the pair of shoes and I hated like heck to go
to the store and say "Well, could you wait 'till next payday so we
c 3.n pay for th3.t pair of shoes."
••····•··•••·•··•····•••·•···••••··••····I suppose everybody was hard up
but they and 2 children. Oh it was 40 below that morning, so cold so

after my breakfast ............................. "She had been up all night
just making fires, she had ~nly dry poplar wood to make fires, it's
a fire that don't last and no heat. She had been up all night just
keeping the fires, so cold. So I took them all in, her and
her 2 little children and I kept them a couple of days."
Question
"Could
Answer
"When you h ad t~. you d~."
Question
nn·
d OU h ave to
? n
~~.....:.i..~~----~~l\'g-~~==t:~~~~
Answer
"We aid $20.00 a month on the house
We pought it fqr $$QQ QO
but they made it e asy. We f.).aid $20.00 and no interest. ..Q.f -uCPwc.s
we h~d our arden too
~mprJ1-i o J;_bo.se...da.µ, 6
Packa es of seeds for 25¢ •

..... .... .... ... ........ ..... ..... ........ ... . ..... ..... .........
You have to do it. When you think exactly what you need. With my
pension I live good, keep somebody, give them a cup of tea, what you
like to do. Each day I'm above board, I owe nobody nothing, I want
something extra ....... and I h ave still something in my pocket

�QUESTION
?fl
"Do y:ou find infl
Answer
" Not me personally, guess because I'm careful, I'm used to hard times.
It's the best time in my life, the easiest time, because when I have my
little babies as long as they were fed, dressed and I Know they
were confortable, nothing mattered to me. _It didn't matter if I had
one dress to wear. I'd take if off a night, wash it at night, let
it dry through t ~e night and put it on the next morning, it didn't
matter to me. I would h ave liked to have more, but as long
as my baby was comfortable. . ....................... .
Sometimes I felt there was not enough to go around, but I got something
that had to be got. My husband was working outside, he h d to have
clothes that wqs wann. It was far more expensive to dress him up
th an anyone else. There was a few things that my mother gave me or my
sister . gave me, I could always cut it to make a little dress for my
girls ••..........•............. "knitted mitts, knitted sox and scarves
for my 8 children, I don't know how I done it but I never stopped ..

... .. ... ... . . . . .. . .... . ........... ..... .. ...... .. ....... .. .. .......

"I t hink you have to live from d ay to day and you got to be willing
to accept what comes and make the best of it."
"We li veei in a small town, Emo.
something for t h eir future"
husband was not
Ques tion
"M

ny gµ

are

All my girls h ad to leave home to learn

mix.!~.,• ~ox t..ake p art-.in SQmething.

a yer.,,._.r,.:~~~~~~a1:::ld!:'-"

Answer
"Yes I am. I'm the o oosite"
Question
nn•ct OU
ou?"
"Yes"
"How did :t_OU live with it"
'~0h you
"Was he unhap py b~cause yqu were gute;ging?"
Answer
"Oh he was but for me to live
out
like . t .tlgt wbe,,q
not that I leave
to be done, when I see t~at it's
done then I sli
commi t _tee work.

----

�Question"Was your husband eyer mean to you becau se you went apt?"
Answer
"Oh he told me a oi ece of his mind."
Que ~tion
"He di dn' t s to 0 •..ro u from
Answer
"No I was too detennined •

. .. ... .. ... . . . . ........ .. .. ..

"My self

ad -the chance • n life believe me I would have done
nothin like I did do. I wouldn't h ~ve lived this,~.~~;~~~~~~been tre.vellin
te '::. chin and in mi e. sion work but I didn't have that chanc
I just h ave public school, in f act I didn't leArn Eng
just picked uo EnglisJl:
"I wish I could live another 10 years like I -=l_i _v___,.;:...,,......-;::;i,.....
fun in that 10 years •

................. ... ...
"I cut grass" (This was the first year she didn't dig the g Rrden twice
a year herself)
" t First it was hard."
rt/
ou marr a man we think we know him but we don't. After we
pa ere he's not the man
that contract, he's
you have some arguments too, I've shed tears and ha
throu h h ard times. But I stuck tom

..... ........ ..

Tbere was ·no_p_ill in that time and the b ~bies were
coming just as fast as I could have them without all the ne The only time I was in the hospital sick in my life, not th at I felt
good either, it was when I h ad a broken kne6w about 9 years ago.
Question
nyou never
e bos.p-;Lt al?"
Answer
I won't know what to ex ect to
ed home " "0
I think I neeaed those 10 days.

�\

to sur:no~t

?.

/ \ ~- \J
\

t

I ~::...,

l'l

·•

doctJr in ful.l, 2.mi 1,-;ouJ..J -r.er:d assistance ir. sh·: ,•:[1.._- of

,1e ar&lt;J situated on the Ct-: 11adlan iJatiom.1.l :(aih.,ra:,:s, the f j rst

t9r:nln:1l '&gt;'lest of i-'ort Art\rnr and hd.ve a large number of railway men
runnini~ into this villag~ llncl 0ul te a nwnb~r of ernnloyeP.s in thr:' loca.l
yards a;1d s!10ps. uur nearest doctor to t!1e east is located at i· ort .:1.rt . .1u',
lL/' miles &amp;.way,

and to the west at Fort .r'rances, 90 ;n_~les dista:1t.

l}.n·

c•::ly rn-:: ar..; of trans Portation is a tri-weckly train service ,:.1.ch ·.,.r_..y. "e
t1 ave !10 ~o.:..:.d::; or lligln-la:/s. in case of serio:1s illness we ·1us: Hn.i.t for
two or t hr~-&gt; iays or1 train service.
de have created

0 oclr.&gt;t:r rr.aintn.ins

c1.

J.

small Red Cross Hc,spital

nurs~. This would be an advantap;e

__;i;rnP-d:
.·:Lirk ,1hi teheaj
;~. Cho~/slwn
:10 r~n-~I':' ."\. .:hn:..:s
,(. i-'arad.i.s
,., . u • Connell
Glc.,:·"'nc~ Jefff!cy
; . 0hrdepuik
J • tlcCutclleon

°:,J.C.

s.~.

Gordon
Sameron

C. Gliver
H. Ra.suck
·.--J .J. HcKonne;r
~. ~oy~o
J. riaffyGlrnk
!~. Sandalowich

f·:eN~

t,.1

\·.rLer~ t!1 ,.,

a doctor.

:•.l~~- ; v;;ter
}'.. ~l;:iba

F.t. 1-loore
:...d.anta
it. Jrni th
Hi.~e Looa
F. Au·r&gt;cy
A. Albert
T .. :JF~d:1arsk:i
U. 3krinsid.

v.A. Otto.

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&#13;
The recording consists of two sides of a cassette tape, available here as two MP3 files. (Click on the speaker logo to play each file.) The transcript is available by clicking on the image thumbnails.&#13;
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                    <text>/)Jo. ~~ ~~/4 .,

/}fl~ ~~ ~ ~~v ~
-

:;;~

~~-~p
2:{)
,~()/t/3-t

,I read your bookletoon Silver Islet history and you indicate on

!"

'µ\,,

,~

. VQ IM..i......

the label set but I don't want to leave XH anything in that area but what
I would like to do is to go back into your own life in the early

~

part of your childhood and talk about as you remember growing up,
~hat i~ ~our personal life story.

-A

Well among the first things that I remember of course living in
Port Arthur, there were board sidewalks all over the place.

I imagine

they were made of good white pine planks, all over the place, there
was no cement at all, and there were cracks and if you happen to
drop a nickmm or a penny why you could see them through the light
of the crack but then it was to get an older brother with a
not~s

~itx

and get it out.

p=

a pick or something to hook up this plank, you see,
It was quite something that all the young people

did as they walked along to see if there be a glint, and if there
were xexx why then finders xsssexs is keepin you see, aM ~f course
there was just one public school.

Now the first public school mind

you there were two or more that were run by xke just Miss somebody
or other that would gather a group of children but finally there was
a school set up and was two rooms and it was divided, I don't know

ex~~ii¥ what grades went into which rooms but anyway that's all there
was.

Q. What year was this?

A. It was before my time because that

school is now a double house or else four suites next to the Baptist
Church in Port Arthur, but when it got too small then a front was
put on and that's the front of the Central School over in Port Arthur
up on by Gore Park.

Well then when the ... and the two rooms were at

the back of it joined on and when that became too small th~setwo
rooms were moved over by the back of the church somebody bought it
and made into two or four suites or a double house and then the

�present addition I think 8 rooms was put on the back of it and
that was the only school there except the Catholic school.

Well

then about 65 years or more ago there was a new Methodist church
being built which is Trinity and the old church was moved down the
hill and down Bay Street now Algoma Street to where Secord School
is and it made two rooms and that was the first school, what do
you call those schools not the central school (primary) anyway it
was the first school other than the central school in the city
and everybody,everybody had to go to Central school first and
then the people that crowded in and built up the south end of
Street
Port Arthur had this Secord/School to go to. Then I think the next
school that was built St. James Street school way down Court Street.
Q. Of all

first, Thunder Bay North, Port Arthur,

preceded Fort William development?

A. Oh no, Port Arthur was

or Fort William was first, it was the fourth.

xxxsx

Q. What we call the

East end now must have developed then was what was called Fort
William then, near the old Fort?

A. Yes, that's why down in the

East End there are McLaughlin Street, McTavish and all those Scots
names, named after the Hudson Bay men, the whole place most of it
has Scots names because most of the Hudson Bay men were Scots.
Port Arthur you walked to school of course.
then, in what area?

In

Q. Where was your home

A. Well the first home was at this end of

Court Street before Bay, there was nothing from Bay Street on
(just wilderness) Yes, just wilderness, just swamp, cranberries.
Q. Even in the 40's when

Jix

moved up here that was still swamp

Intercity was largely swamp there?

A. Oh yes, well you see in

prehistoric time this was a great bay than rairup as far as XR&amp;HEekH
Kakebeka Falls and then they claim that there was a Afpping and
the water drained here and piled up over on the south shore of
Lake Superior but however, it drained out and only wiggling Kaministiqua

�River was left to drain it and x it was all swamp right from the
height of land at Port Arthur to the mountain, it was all swamp
and they declared they could never build a town or a city here because
it was, they called it"Frog Town" it was full of frogs, it was a
real swamp.

lands and of

Well they started in to build

course the draining just kept on in some part down in the coal dock
they pumped the sewage and the ...

Q. All of waste that has to be

A. Up and out you see EHRKHSe but of

pumped because of

course Port Arthur is on the hillside so they had to

around

as well there but Port Arthur was wooden sidewalks and mud or gravel
~
or earth t.hrowed. Q. When you were very young some of the 11e1x very
well established society in the Lakehead Thunder Bay was very elegant
in comparison to the outliffing areas?

A. Well you see all the

settlers came from the east and most-of them came from good homes
down there and they E~H~ brought some very nice furniture with them
and as they could they built their own homes.

At first there was

just the peek-through wooden houses everywhere 7well then nice homes
were built on what they called the Court Street ridge that is from
made by the hillside there and the

Court Street and
very nice homes were there.

It was many, many years afterwards, I

IVl. {,U-u,(~

suppose, ~ow 60 years or so, when they began to build up in Maragay
and those parts they were operft-y

men that would buy great

space and of course up in Mar~y it was swampy~ it was a great
blueberryppatch up there.

Q. This area here out in McIntyre River

and out towards Chippewa Park was designed to develop originally as
the
in?

~

area of the Twin Cities.

Industry has crept

A. I guess those sections outs there were finally left to the

mosquitoes and roads and they had to think of the centre of the
little town or village because after-all the stores were there.

d

�So they just kept building houses.

Q. Yet there were streetcar

tracks moving out to Chippewa Park and streetcar tracks right ijtx~ 0
Rosslyn?

A. Well the idea was that they would take them out to

Rosslyn and you know that bridge that goes xx~kx over the Kam River
has an upper structure. y ou drive through in the lower part, well that
was built meaning to have the streetcars go right out through there
the
and if the top deck is on a level with/hills on each side. There
was to be a high level xa

~

and go over the bridge right through

and span the immediate valley but then trucks came in and the farmers
didn't need the/railway to BHiX~ bring their produce in and in fact
there wasn't such a tremendous population to encourage large farms
with the selling of produce in the town,

...s.Q

i

understand it .tfo be

~laced before very long but that bridge must be oh I suppose that's
70 years old or more.

Q. There's a story that a woman designed the

first bridge across the Kam River~ so far its only a myth, I haven't
been able to track it down?

A. No, I couldn't tell you of that.

Near that bridge, the first bridge that went across and into Flint
River Valley and all was there.

You turned lQ~scorner and go across

the bttdge and you went straight on and it was a level on a river
level bridge. Q. Bigger families ~
llectio~ ~J here's
~ I
) -- ~ - - U ~ IJ..R.Arff)-4p i ct ure S of 80for 9~t.Q Oeta5ie 1golhg to Silver Islet for Sunday picnic
and very elegant thing5 ~~each other packed and so on.
ever a part of the excursion for Sunday afternoon?

Were you

A. No, we

strictly went to church and Sunday school, we wouldn't go on excursions
on Sunday but when we first were out there, Capt. Malloney xaxke~
would leave the Port Arthur dock at 10:00 on Saturday night and the
men would scramble to be shut up their stores and get it, and XHB¥X tgen
they

would reach Silver Islet by midnight and the wives would meet them
there, and help them carry home the basket of fresh meat and so forth.
The men would stay then until 8:00 o'clock Sunday night ~

the

�tugs would leave and get into town around 10:00 o'clock Sunday night.
It was oh some time after that I suppose what 65 years ago anyway
it became a grand spot, Silver Islet.

It was theonly place where

there was a dock ax decent dock and there was no highway, no #17
I

either way, you couldn't get out of town except by water and so these
sailing boats w~re old boats that were bought down east and brought
up here one at a t i m e - /44ien it was wrecked or scrapped another
one would be bought.

There were daily excursions

Ji Silver Islet

because that was the only place you could go and the old carpenter
shop was fixed up and a hardwood floor put in it and they had dances
and then for picnicing why they picniced all over the place whexerever
they wanted to open their basket.
picnic consist of in those days?

Q. What sort of food would the
A.

potato salad,

cabbage salad, but not any of the frillies pretty baking now-a-days,
sandwiches, cake and pie in the original baking dishes.
you have a bottle of wine?

Q. Would

A. Oh, I never heard of that, I suppose

some of them might have, it wasn't the outside drinking that there
is now.
changed

Q. Has the attitude xx~a towards

d~I½

in Fort William

in these past fifty years?
IA,M/'

A. Oh ~ea~

~~,,(~

ya, you see in the olden days t h e r e ~ they tell a saloon on every
corner of Cumberland Street, four corners and four saloons and right
from Arthur Street down to well Pearl Street~•- cnrd"J:t was a different
type of person that drank, drank abundantly, it was the men that
came and worked in the bush and then they would come in and they would
spend a good part if not all axx of their winter's earnings on just
getting drunk, and what they haven't spent somebody would relieve
them of.

Oh it was terrible, and a lot of drunkeness but not

educated people, not the kind now,well then when how many years ago,
Lt-'1v7

~alcohol was entirely outlawed and then it got to be considered
smart to find a .-----blind keg or be able to sneak in and then the

�/. ,. educated people they should have had more sense t ~

n'-

1'

-.le 1,,.
~~

and it§ continued, I hear so many well educated people that could

,.
be fine citizens and therjust alcoholics and the poor people, well
I guess there's a good deal of drinking of there.&amp; beer, but you
don't hear so much about that, except in the way of crime0 J tk
generally drinking RH~ that brin~s on the crime.

So it would look

as if were headxH~ed for many years that it would be outlawed again.
In catalogues see all of the paraphanalia

xf~

making wine and beer.

b

�J

Q.

A. Well the important point is love, but then people
their own home have inner thoughts and

in
and they save

the dining room, the living room has an arch way between where the
is wooden why because of taste and some people had quite
large living uh
dining room.

This is

you know and across the hall

from

MRS

there large

I think

a comedy

thing

and they would send to Toronto

would have a first

in those days and they would send

I think it was coal that was

food sent up by Train and coal into the cubic

form and

Mrs. Mccullen

showed me a big form that just looked like a big piece of wood, but
that's what she said it just was sent up the other way the coal would
be boned

at KxxkxaHa and separatea with a fontth meatand put a

jelly in

XH sthis

form and have

H

some radishes and different

things imbedded in the jelly and then they

cook
and then the whole

this was xke a coal you see this was

thin~ was sort of levelled itself and that's what turned up here by
train and then the night of the diner party I suppose
and it was turned out onto
it would be dipped into
a
R
plack oh huge one HHa no Houbt, and then Mxss Mr.

i

great

there was no bone in it, and he would just slice right down
and leave the outside room with jelly and
be ice cream and
70 years ago. This was a terrific
maid or maids
maae/and others borrowed

Then there would

before cherries that's about
and we had axxxs girl

and they had all this cleared away and after the ice cream, and the

�cake and the cheese cake, and pie oh the cooking would be tremendous
Graham
and then there's a dance. Well George Rxa~ now they and the
McTabish were the leading socialites in Fort William and this George
Graham's first home was down on the river like the McKellar home
just way down here out straight down and they had lawns and a lovely
that goes
home ~xase down to the river and they had beautiful and they were
very nice.

When the~ the railway

tracks were moved from down in the East end up here, all those houses
were either raised or moved and her's was moved out to the corner
of Archibald and

Metcalfe?

? and

on the south corner of Archibald and

quite a large

house well there's

after he built everything on this side and he built a
great big park

and when the other

of the old house there's a garden decorated with
big parlour and then Peter had an
office there
interested and

Died off and I was no longer

xx

he came down just a meeting about once a year

or once every two years or so, and when he

and

there's all the papers were brought to me one time to digest and write
but I was ill

and I was ill for a long time

but I happened

for whatever I could be any worth

on my bed the box could be geared over and Mr. Langley had brought
so
this here to skaH when I was
so he
took the

one day when he was home and gave it to Bill

Langley in his office.

They had them kept in a trunk in the basement

of the library, the old library, well it got to be oh not many years
ago somebody wanted to know where those papers were, so I told them
in the libaary.

Well they hunted in the library and then
thing.insi'd e out cou ld n I t f'in d t h e
turned thexaaxxH~

trunk and in the mean time Mr. Langley had just died

and one of

I

�daughters
oh was I thrilled because I did my part xax~ex he

~~x

gave them right

back to me because he had brought thmmx to me and I couldn't tell
John go xi~kx &amp;Hgk find whoever had the key to this trunk and whoever
finds xxwa ix the key I would do my part.

Oh that's what happened.

Well the older people those thatw were left, when those older people
had joined to form what we call ..... they would alternate the
meetings but would be very well attended because there xaliieae more
people wka maxe«

and there were some in Port Arthur

really new comers although they were elderly and then they progressed
to having a building and my mind simply thought well at xeHxx these
meetings were over the library and this is why the ... and then you
see these new people which was all
revitalize the

wanted to
and do the museum and have about

up and coming things was in my surprise I said would become of these
Port Arthur people where very impressed, they

outside

and I said well my goodness are you going to do it?
its wonderful to have some a~iside that are going to revitalize it,
they didn't even sayH anything, however,
but you see the end of these between these two towns, but of course
they're one now but I mean

in the west xi«e end isn't died

off, it takes a generation of folks to die off.

Mind you in the

olden days it was a «ixxiii~x thing because they MaHx« were quite
isolated in the winter, cut off, entirely isolated
cut off still and they had good fights just tremendous fights that
brought often HH« xkex any other day and this kept them alive.

Q.
weren't enough.

A. Oh yes, because there

Q. There wasn't enough

A. Yes ae~HHXe if they want they could have it, you were

�/0
in Port Arthur and they were very
friendly, those people
? A. Yes, you see

Q. Do things like that
their grandfather came to Ontario when everything

a long time ago to the land
if you took the land and you were told that only mining was sss xke

~~xsxKHsx~~HXkKs

KHSX~~HxkKsxx~ x~ took a fold and you had to hope

cariboo and also to the California gold and therefore be
something a miner and you just sent by the Allie Mining Co. who their
representative here and they kKs have prospectors all through the
bush.

I would expect there would be a thousand prospectors all

through the bush, mind you it would be so many miles out where they
were

and I suppose they were out about xke all the

substance where they win but .... Q.

A. Yes, maybe forty years ago, a long time ago, ...

Q. Would

A. Well they, yes, that was established by a

:f:xxm called a

i~~,

they had six xliii and the grandmother and he and my aunt they
then
had six sons KHs, then there was
and/they had three
daughters.

Then grandmother and grandfather and the girls at that

why the sons were all fixed with tradeaown east
machinist
and father was a IIXKHSX and they weren't just ordinary tradesmen

time were

they were really sHpex supper, I guess all of them had two trades
before they were
a handyman.

, and of course in those days you were

There was a University in Toronto father wanted to
us and back home there was

what we found in Toronto.

So father

from
and

my mother and brothers like a
another one has a foundry now and also coal mine next to the one

�II
who has a foundry and something else, and the oldest brother has
something call

RH~

end of an old building

~ln'.HXXH

not an archway,

oh my goodness that was very long ago, but only he would
he would be back and also with a potter maker and that's very still
Well they had all these things,
the brothers, and m¥ grandmother thought that this was going to be

arain city
•
a ~xeax
an d t h ere way you h a d to come h ere an d th e west wou ld
come here

and they

coming into this
they would set

now but she just told the boys

up and they would all go inx~ =together, so the day came when they
guilt the Port Arthur Iron Ore
all

under one roof, and they were

BR

?
and it was
A. The year, well 92 years ago, 1873, and father was married/before
Eva
lffRthe first child was born so he stayed down east and he knew the

Q. What year did

Indians?

He bought them food and came up

in July of that year and the Crothers had been here putting up buildings.
there~was

The CPR was coming through and it was going through

RR

~x~

no

foundry between Toronto and Winnipeg and there was so many
being done so father would that they
would be working night and day to settp the

and get the

He had this xi~ little engine that they had set up a
boiler to give them the power to run the little engine, it would run
all over

in the machine shop.

to put up a

Now in the foundry they had

and all kinds of things there and

in the blacksmith's shop

fordge and all this.

Well iMewas the

machine shop that was taking xkeixx~x~exs the longest and they
were trying to get this boiler to get it started but in the meantime
.
as
it was hard for them to get the material so they set them up XR a
line and if you know anything about a steam shaft why they
or electricaR~&amp;they had a ~zezz¥ great

�overhead and they had leather belts over those between downhill
heal on their

and they would sew the machine

belt,,would be to turn the machine

this rubber thing would be
on.

and

and then he put extended

So they set them up

and he put a great big candle and would ....

the

long

enough for two or three men to stand, but those men could and turn
it was a

the handle of this forget the word,

anyway

they came back then they could release the strap came on from a small
wheel to a large wheel the large whe~l and then back again and
they could turn, I don't know how many men, they could turn
the

and then before you have the boilerJ~He engine boiler
they
then you have the cooler working
and then ¥~H would
matter
i~rkx~most of the night to fill th e
then
r-X ~-xH
/boiler and that was no easy
they got the little engine going and its a kooky engine but you
and
but it was an old man who
know the staff/they were well
would start as long as I could remember but it was a grave price
so much noise, so much going on after
shop
blacksmith/ around

school there were always boys who

town that would need men well the blacksmith would RH ask him to
help with the fordge you know this sort of
A. Yes, and X

Q.

KR

I

ix was awful after school and on Saturdays this nice old boy and I
found out

that he was one of the men
he worked

I guess
he kept track of everything and

like the handyman

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                    <text>.·, 1

MRS. GER~RUDE DYKE~-Norah Street
The first thing she remenbers is living in Port Arthur
and that there were board sidewalks all over.
She thinks
they were made of white pine planks, there w s no cement at
all.
The boards had cracks in them and for fun they used to
try and get money that was dropped between the cracks out they
used pliers or a pie or anything to hook the board so the \
0

could get the money out.

There was just one public school and

she doesn't know the date this was.
It had just two roans and
they were divided.
It is now a do 1ble house next to the Baptist
Ghurch in Port Arthur, this is the ori r. inal building they did
build on to it and it is now the front of the Central School
near Gore Park. About 65 years a g o there was~ new Metho ~ist
Church being built and the dld one wa s moved down the hill
and down Bay 0treet to where the Secord Schoo1 is and that
was the first school besides the Central uchool, the next
school was on St James Street. Port Arthur and Fort Nilliam
were built fourth the first to be built up was the East End
were l 1cLau ·· hlin and McTavish Streets are.

The first home w·s

at this end of Court Street before Bay from there on there was
just wilderness.

In the forties inter~ci ty was still swamp area.

The} s~id they could never build anything on it, it was full of
frogs and when the~ did try to build the sand just sunk and it
dr2.ined.
When people settled here they broucht t _e best furniture
as they did come from good families ~own East.

The nicehomes

were built on Court Ridge and many ~, ears later they started to
build in Mariday and it was swampy this was out towards Ghippewa
Park this was suppose to be the residential area but industry
crept in.

When she was young she was never part of the e~cursion

that went to Silver Islet for Sunday picnics.
There was no hi 6 hway or any other way to get out of town so they had to use old
boats that were sold down East and brought her~.

The picnics

used to consist of potato salad, cabbage salad, sandwiches, cakes
and pie.

In her day there was the usual drinking, there were four

�saloons, and it was men that worked in the bush that used to
drink all their wages up in one ni c ht of drinking.
Ste said
it was outlawed to drink and it wasn ' t educated people who drank
then but she thinks there would be better people if they didn't
all drink so much, crime wouldn't be as bad if there was no
drinking.

Around the year 1875 0PR was coming thro ugh.

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                    <text>7/ J..~ lI
✓

•!

I

' I.

\
HERSTORY

PROJECT

Mrs. G. Dyke interviewed by Helen Lovekin
Mrs. Dyke:
Q.

Now what do you want to know about?

First I would like to ask you some general questions and then some specific
ones that we have come across in our research.

How long have you been in

Thunder Bay?

A.

All my life.

Q.

Uhat did your family do?

A.

My grandfather came 130 years ago and at that time his mail was addressed to
Thunder Bay.

I was born in Port Arthur.

He came to Thunder Bay as representative of a mining company,

he had gone to the California Gold Rush and to the Caribou (Canadian Gold
Rush), so he knew quite a bit about minerals.

His sons all lean1ed trades

so four of therncombined and came to Port Arthur and built Woodside Iron
~1 orks.

The company still exists in P.A. .

It is

9.5 years ago, this July since

my father and mother came because the boys stayed down east when their father
and mother came he.:ie, and they learned their trades.

Then there was the black-

smith and the machinist and the pattern maker and one was a carriage maker

an:i painter.

They all seemed to have two trades and they were all master mech-

anics in whatever they undertook.

So their mother thought that the Lakehead

would be the Chicago of the north, before there was any C.P.R. running through,
So they came up - four of the six boys - to the Lakehead and with their
father they built the first building and had that all ready and father was
buying the machineT"J down east and making it because he made the first engine
that was used in the shop, and it was

8.5 yars ago, the 19th of July.

I don't

remember dates but my oldest sister was 6 weeks old when they came up; they
crossed the lake in a sidewheeler and one of father's oldest brothers was
settled in Port Arthur and so they started up right away.
inery in rie;ht away, as soon as it came up with father.
ing towards P.A.

9.5 years ago bu£.\ is wasn't up to P.A..

and so they could cast iron things.

I

They put the mach-

The C.P.R. uas buildThey hall a foundry

The C.P.R. was desperately in need of

foundry and ma&lt;:!hine work sas well as blacksmiths.

The blacksmith Hasn't so

bad because you can move a blacksmith and a foree and an anvil, but you can't

/

�move a machine shop and a foundry.
work at once.

So they set it all up and commenced to

Father was tryine; to get the boiler in place and get the engine

so it would do the work and there is a shaft overhead. with the machines
underneath and you pull a lever and the belt that is up top will turn the
machine you are working on.

This one shaft will turn all the machines, if

there is two rous, then there are two rows of shafts.

Well, father couldn't

get it up at once and there was such a need for it that father put a great
big iron thing which could fit 3 or 4 men and put it at the end of the shaft.
These men turned the shaft by hand to run these different machines.

Uhen

one was winded he would step out and another would take his place - and they
worked until all hours of the night because there was such a demand for
their work.

There was an old man in the shop and I remembered old Ned Hill

and he was always kept on and when I knew him he was old but he had the job
of just Imowing where everything was and he also turned the crank and a man
that endured that, father kept him on.

The other men had gone of their own

free will but Ned had a family and he stayed.
Woodside Iron Works.

That was the beginning of

There is really a great story of the beginning of the

shop, when they had the place set up, men uere married and had their homes the brothers, and then there was grand.mother and there was the three girls that
Here 13 yea.rs younger than the 6 boys.

So there were a lot of women and they

decided they would have a pink tea dmm at the shop to celebrate the opening.
Q.

What is a pink tea?

A.

It was called a pink tea in those days just for a little decoration I guess.

But the women had pink teas at church - we say they had teas nowadays - wHl
they added pink and gave it an air.

So they had a pink tea, they brought

cups and saucers and the baJdng and all arid the work stopped for a half hour
and they had pink tea to celebrate.

This brother who was in the other molding

room or shop as was the case, had cast a horseshoe, a little horseshoe.
There was a patten1 made of it in the pattern shop and then you put it in
sand - you have to see a foundry to know how it's done.
shoe for every woman there.

And he cast a horse-

As a child I remember that every kitchen had a

horseshoe with a li ttl e bit of - not canvas but anyway, yuu put a piece of
cloth on the back and you made this little pouch and it was a matchfolder.
I don't know where our's went, I don't know if my brother keeps it or not.
Anyuay, that was a souvenir of the opening of it and they had a lot of things

�like that, and they a.re really a story nowadays.

Q.

Could you tell me a little bit about your education?

A.

In p. A. we had the Central School which was the only school in the whole
city and then we had the high school which was the only school in the whole
district.

They came from Fort Frances a.rid Murillo if any of them wanted to -

I don ' t remember that any of them did though - and Fort William and Westfort.
They came to this four roomed high school.
Q.

Where i-ras it?

A.

It was where the gym is at the high school on the hill - P.A. C. I.

Q.

So they were quite close - the two schools.

A.

Yes and the high school was torn dmm and the big one built then, they added
the gym.

It was just four rooms and two teachers and finally they got a

woman teacher which meant three.
Q.

Do you recall what yea.:r that was?

A.

I don 't Imow.

Q.

But you were at school at that time?

A.

Yes.

Q.

Did that cause any sensation?

A.

Of course most of the teachers were women but in the high school there had
just been the two men always.

That a woman was teaching?
Then I think this woman was buffeted around

by the two men but she stuck with it.
from the east.

Niss Achison was her name, she came

We had a e;reat many teachers who came from around Sarnia

because they could come direct by boat.
Q.

Has she a young woman when she came?

A.

She seemed young to me - she may have been JO.

And I think she taught history

and geography and the principal was a Scotchman who had taught boys ' school
in Scotland and why he came out here, I don't know.

Except that he drank

once in a while.
Q.

Perhaps he was just another black sheep that was shipped off?

A.

I don ' t lmow, but he was a very superior teacher.

The other man was l\'Ir.

Morgan and he taught physics and chemistry but he had learned German and at
the most unexpected time we would have a little lesson in German just when
the principal wouldn't know anything about it.

Everybody picked up a few

German words.
Q.

So you feel you got a ue2..l rounded education?

A.

Yes - . and a great many Hent to Toronto University which was something.

•

It

1

�would take on the part of the teacher, a lot of real teaching to get them
so ambitious as to go on.

Q.

Did you finish hieh school at all?

A.

In P. A . ?

Q.

Did they have Grade 13 at that time?

A.

T-J ell,

Yes .

they didn't have grades - in the public school it was the book - Junior

and Senior 1,2,3 and 4 and then in high school, I guess it was the year, 1,
2 and
Q.

J.

There was just the three years?

Hm1 old would you be if you graduated each

year you passed?
A.

I started school 1-1hen I was 4.

My father was chairman of the Board of Educ-

ation or a member of it, years and years.

This time they were short one

pupil to get the goverrrn1ent grant so they said, "Tom, you have lots of children, you can just spare one."

Well, I Has tall and big for

4

and so I was

sent to school and my aunt Ann, his sister, was the kindergarten teacher.
And she taught up to the end ofthe first book I guess.

So I was strorg and

nell and I uas just 10 or 11 uhen I Has in high school and I got through high
school and we had teachers college in P.A.

Q.

You became a teacher?

A.

Yes, for L~ yea.rs.
1h .

So I went through that and when I graduated I wasn ' t quite

And they couldn't Grant me a certificate, I was too young .

Q.

You had to lJe 21?

A.

You had to be 18, however they grru.1ted me a special dispensation and I went
down east to mother ' s old hqme ru.1d taught there for a year.

Q.

~Jhich town would this be?

A,

Out of l'ieai'ord, near Owen Sound.

Then I came back and because they bad done

this, allowing ne to teach, I was obliged to teach one year here, so I supplied in the different schools in P.A. -well, there was just the Central
School.

Then they built the south ward and I took the principals place, she

was sick or uent on a trip and I think that was when I was 16 that
principal of a south ward school.

But I was

5' 10½"

I .was

so they didn't argue

:'1ith me.

a.

Q.

This was

A.

Yes.

Q.
A.
Q.

Because you went through teacher ' s college rather than normal school?

secondary school?

Yes - because they didn't have a normal school/
And you taught, married, raised your family - how did you become interested

�in becoming an historian?
~:

If you grew up here, naturally you saw it all happen so you couldn't ~elp
but be interested.

You might say I just stumbled onto it or grew into it.

Q.

It has become for you a career?

A.

No.

Q.

Do you look at it as more of a hobby?

A.

Hobby, yes.

Goodness, I hadn ' t time.

You raise a family - these women that

work and raise a family are braver than I.
Q.

How many children did you have?

A. ;

I raised 3 children, but I had a lot of company.

Q.

Company with friends or with your children?

A.

Both, and relatives - we had relatives all the way from Halifax to Dawson
City, and they all stayed on, on trips.

Q.

Hith both your career as a teacher and a historian, did you find any discrimination?

You mentioned that Miss Achison had a bit of trouble with the

men but you were able to hold your
A.

01-m?

Yes , but it was the first lady teach er and if any pupil had to stay aft er 4
she was delegated to stay too.

Q.

But you were the principal in the south ward - how many teachers were under
you?

A.

Just one - of course don ' t mention that - I was principal at 16.

That ' s

why I was young when I was teaching, because I started at 4.
Q.

Was this a lady teacher as well?

A.

Yes.

Q.

You would have had no experience between wage differential?

A.

My goodness, I think the teacher got $32 a month or so.

Q.

Regardless of whether you were a man or a woman?

A.

No, I guess the men got more because they were the principals and sub-principals and they had families - they would have to have more - but $32 and

$35,

There were some of the girls that had a special permit and taught,

that saved money and went on to university.
Q.

Was a teacher paid according to whether he was married or not?

A.

I think there was a set wage.

Q.

For a man or for a woman.

A.

Yes, but the man was al ways married and the woman wasn't.

Q.

This was before women were allowed to have a career after marriage.

A.

You didn ' t dream of anything after marriage, other than scrub bare floors
and scrub clothes - you hadn't time for ...

Q.

No married ladies taught, even if they didn't have children?

s

�A.

I don't think so.

They didn't here anyways.

There were widows - that was

Q.

different.
As a historian, I have come across some of your works which are extremely
competant and have you ever had any trouble with the - there is quite a few
male historians about kn-ocking anything you might have to say.

A.

I have never had any trouble because whatever I wrote I had printed myself
and they didn't consider me a full scale historian - I was just a woman that
was writing down a few things.

I don't know whether anybody wanted to have

any trouble with me or not but I never did.
Q.

A.

I wrote 3 booklets and I have

the .. ........... .
lfaat about the organizations and co-operation between women and their org-

anizations?
I really can't recall any dirty work, they seemed to have - well you can't
say they have worked together always because they haven't always. There
have been women - some girl teachers who came from down east who were stirring
the teachers up to go on strike, years ago.

Such things had never been

heard of - teachers going on strike - too bad because teachers have a wonderful influence on their pupils and they don't have an influence through

It sets them down a bit I think - for the pupils. :Bu:-:t I think
that this one that was the leader in all this, wasn't hired _in the second
year and things were done gently, they did.~'t have a fist fight.
What was her proposition? Hhat was she upset about?
Wages, and she was principally upset about it, everything that a strike would ...
So you felt your wages were high enough?
No, the wages were always low.
And yet, you would not consider strike action as the course to take?
Not ...
She was upset about wages, she was upset about what else, hours?
One thing they were upset about was that we weren't pr0ducing teachers of
our own and these teachers had to come from down east and of course, in those
days, the girls were very glad to get a position and so they came from Petrolia and Sarnia because it was close to the boat. So, one thing she was
going to strike for was that the Board of Education would pay their boat
fare here. There were people in the town who boarded teachers - they were
well cared for and were honored citizens in the churches and all were fine
strike.

Q.

A.
Q.

A.
Q.

A.
Q.

A.

�women.

Some of the finest women we ever had are teachers,

~:

Can you recall, as a young girl, the suffragette movement being discussed?

A.

Yes,

Q.

Was there a suffragette organization withing Thunder Bay?

A.

Of sorts.

It wasn ' t very strong but of sorts.

The suffragettes had many

cartoons in papers of the suffragettes and I think some of them were accused
of wearing pants and you could be run in, you could serve a term if you appeared in pants.

It is not many years ago since my husband told me that I

could~..go to his tailor and order a tailored suit with pants - any material
or any cut - and he would pay for it.

He knew perfectly well that I would

never wear pants and out here it is just the kind of thing because it's cold
and keeps your ankles warm.

It's not so many years and now we don't think

anything of it at all.
Q.

Must have been auful hard washing long dresses and ...

A.

Yes , washed by hand.

Q.

After the suffragette movement of sorts, do you recall the organization that
also had something to do with that movement?

A.

Miss Black who was one of the first librarians in Fort William wasn ' t a
fighting suffragette but she was quite in favor of that.

Mary J. Black,

Q,

Unfortunately, all her people were lost when she went out to B.C.

A.

Yes, she had a brother that she went to when she was sick - before she died,
and I suppose like. so many people, they cleaned up everything thoroughly.

Q,

Too bad that she hadn't given evecy ...

A.

I suppose, like many people she was going to write it up herself.

Q,

I believe th?.,t the Homen 's Christian Temperance Union supported suffrage?

A.

Yes, they weren't fighting about it but ...

Q.

They gave support.

A.

Yes.

Q.

They sent petitions and endorsements.

A.

Mother believed and belong ea~ to the WCTU for years. We were a big family but
mother always had help - always had a maid and hadra washwoman, that came
Monday all day and Hednesday for a half a day.

That was the day when our

dresses and our underwear were washed but not the sheets or pillowcases.
That was once a week.

She was president of the Ladies Aid and a member of

the Mission Circle and the Miss WCTU and the Mother's____

Anyway,

mother went to that and the one thing I remember abo~t it - she came home

�and mother was the kind that she never looked for an argument, she was a very
wise, sw~et uoman, but this night ~he came home and we sat down .... had not
experience keeping house for a man and had no family and never did but she
undertook to tell the mothers how to bring up their families and Mrs. Dr.
Smelly had 8 and Mrs .. Neelan had 7 and they had big families and here(wRet
was this woman telling them how.
Q.

What sort of things was she recommending?

A.

How to dress your children and how you fed them an.d what you taught them and
everything - ;gh'e knew how.
answers.

These women with no children who knew all the

Mother and Mrs. Smelly talked it over and they agreed that they did

the best they could at the time.
Q.

To get back to the WCTU - you mentioned it in your book so I wonder - you have
never heard what happened to Ricobs or anything - nobody seems to know.

A.

Young fQlks organization - The White River Band - and we had the record books
for them but Dr. John Ritchie of Regina - he was a surgeon· there for years he is an uncle of Ken Ritchie the doctor in P.A..

A very fine man - well he

was secretar-J for years and years and he was a pure wit and his minutes you got there early so you wo:i.aldn 1 t miss John B's minutes, it was lovely.
So we had them - it had closed dmm for years and finally my sister sent them
to him and of course he wrote back - he was delighted - he said many of the
words he didn't know what· they meant but he had used them.

So that is were

that ·went, and as for the rest I don't know but Mrs. Hamlet -

Q.

I found several books in the library that were minutes.

One of the more

notable was a report of a social survey by the Department of Temperance and
Moral Reform in the Methodist Church.
a great amount of detail with it.

It is rather complete, they went into

TJas that a woman's organization or was it

just church members?
A.

I don't know for sure but I would say it was an organization within·__. the church
not necessarily all church officers.

Q.

What was it called?

The report was called the Preliminary and General Social Survey of Port
Arthur, March 1913, Directed by the Department of Temperance and Moral Reform
in the Methodist Church and the Board of Social Service and Evangelism of
the Presbyterian Church.

A.

So, you can take your pick there.

Q.

Yes, it is rather - so detailed, I was wondering if it had been a notable
organization.

�A.

Q.
A.

Well, I think it was like so many organizations that just are born and flourish
for a while and then go. They were doing good work in getting that written
down.
The statistics were very good.
In my letter I told you to contact Mrs. Hamlet who lives in Waverly Towers.
She is still
there is a little nuclei of the WCTU - she and her sister,
who is now in Westmount or Grandview in Fort William. Let me see, did she
die just lately? Anyway, Mrs. Hamlet will know - she•s a little birdie woman

Q.

a very nice woman, a widow.
I have noted on my studies of the English suffragettes - they were the prime
movers~ that they allied themselves with temperance movements, for the
rather obvious reasons. Nellie McClung was very closely allied with the
temperance movement. Although it wasn't a militant movement, literature was
circulated for women's rights and this went along with temperance, which was

A.

because women couldn't afford to ....
I don't think so, it was the same women largely in all organizations. King's
Daughters and all of these - oh, mother belonged to the K.D. or the Queen's
Daughters - it was the Queen's Daughters in Victoria's time and then it was

Q.
A.

the King's Daughters.
Could you explain the function of the Queen's Daughters?
It was an organization that fostered patriotism and when any noteworthy person
like a Govenor-General etc. came, the Q.D.looled after them and they had
meetings and showed the flag, like the Imperial Daughters - but they were
older women - younger than lots of the IODE.

Q.

It was just a patriotic formation.

There was also another book I came across - a report on the Local Council of
Women - The West Algoma Local Council of Women.
didn't you?

A.

No, I didn 't .

Q.

There was a Mrs. Dyke.

A.

It might have been my mother-in-law.

You convened that JO years

But I attended - I don't know whether
I held any office in it for q_uite some time. But I wasn't a leading light but I think my mother-in-law was and she was a member of a hospital aid before
the RMG hos pitaJ. was built and during which time, mother and Mrs. Dr. ~1Smelly
and Mrs. Neelson and Yi.rs. Mical. Quite a bunch of them that were very friendly and they enjoyed their friendship at these meetings and once the RMG
started - once a week they went to the hospital and mended the sheets and
pillowcases and towels. Mother always had a good maid, woman or girl, so that

�her children

were in e;ood hands and mother was up early so that in the a£ter-

Q.

noon she could go and bring word back of what they did.
This would be the ladies social contact I suppose because they didn ' t work
out of the homes. If you didn 't belong to an organization, you wouldn ' t go

A.

out very much.
Yes, that is so.
I did come across the minutes from 1894-1950 and I wrote a list of all the

Q.

proposals and the ammendments that the coucil had made for the wanen.

They

strongly pushed for women sitting on various boards, particularly the School
Board and in 1917 they wished to have at least two women appointed to the
Taxation and Organization of Homen Labor Boards. Although they were interested in hospitals, they seemed to have suggested - in 1930 a pre natal. clinic
in Port Arlhur - all sorts of things that women are still asking for. It
seems that they were thinking along feminist lines - did it strike you that
A.

way at the time?
That ' s why they organized - to have mightier say in things than they have had
before because they were supposed, just to run their homes and bring up
their children. And now they bancled together and asked for some things like
the RMG hospital. There was just St. Joseph ' s Hospital and women didn ' t go
to the hospital. to have their babies. The RMG hospital., the women urged that
until they got it and the primary idea was for it to be like a maternity
hospital. They had wards .and private rooms for maternity but it was RMG that was General, The Railway, Marine and General Hospital.

Well, in those

early days there was a great deal of typhoid, and they had a lot of typhoid
wards and men ' s and Nomen 1 8; And my oldest sister went to the RMG to have
her baby and there was a night nurse on for the men's typhoid ward - she crune
across the hall to ansuer the bells of the young mothers. To have a nurse who would be far more interested in gabbing all night with those men than

Q.

A.

bothering washing and scalding her hands before coming to the mothers and Eva
went home with typhoid fever.
Did she survive?

A.

She survived but she was ill for a long time.
The baby as well?
Yes.

Q.

They were both very lucky.

A.

Yes and lucky too there was a Scotch nurse - a married woman .

Q.

You see any

lO

�trained nurse was scarce and this woman married and came with her husband
to Port Arthur and someway, I think my brother-in-law knew them well enough
to have her come and look after Eva.

She was Scotch - trained and we had

very few trained nurses in those days.

That is what started the RMG - to be

Q.

a maternity hospital.
Were you also a member of the Women's Institute?

A.

No, that was a rural organization.

They made - two or three years ago - the

word went through all the institutes : "Have your district written up." and
Mrs. Oliver did it for Slate River.

Each area had it written up and I pre-

sume all those books and papers are kept at the headquarters.
Q.

We are having a difficult time extracting the Hymers book from a Mrs. Thatcher.
She has it and she is not giving it out.

A.
Q.

Well - and hasn't had it published yet?
No.

I know that the Women's Institute did some valuable things including

setting up libraries and providing rural women with what they needed - a
place to go and be with other women. The council is more politically orientated - was there any tension between the two or did you co-operate?
A.

I don't recall any tension.

Q.
A.

Was there any co-operation between the two groups for projects?
Some.

Q.

Can you give me the areas?

A.
Q.

I just have the feeling.
Did you hear of the Dominion Women ' s Franchisement Association?

They did

change their name to a much easier one which was the Canadian Suffrage Association.

I talked to Mr. Russell Brown and he said he remembered but he

couldn't remember anything about the suffrage movement other than they wore
pins.

A.

They tried to be militant to stir themsel~es up and to head up a slight war
but they never got that far. Each strove a little bit and all together they
have got some very good things for women.

Q.

After looking at the minutes I am findin 6 so many things that we are still
fighting for. Looking back, do you think we have changed very much?
gotten anywhere?

Have we

A•

They have really done very well. Slowly and without making big distresses.
They quietly accomplished a good many things.

Q.

Have you got something that you had worked on then, that is still not an accomplished feat, that you would very much like to see happen?

\l

�A.

I don't think I can pull that one out of a hat. Because there ar~ so many
things that they just have quietly gotten. Nellie McClung - she used to come
and speak.

Q.
A.

Her father-in-law was Presbyterian.

She came to speak here?
In P.A. and F.H.. The men loved Nellie McClung, she was witty.

I used to go

with father, and to hear her speak in the evening, there was lots of laughs
in it.
Q.

A.

She was very diplomatic and very kindly but she made a point.

lfas she an inspiration for you?
Yes and she had some experience with liquor and so she was out and out for
WCTU.

I remember her speaking in the Presbyterian church in Port Arthur -

St. Paul's - and there would be as many men as women because she was worth
going to hear and you quite agreed with what she had to say because she put
it quite nicely. She spoke this evening and I think there was some big ~ I
don't suppose it was a war, but something was on and the Archbishop of Canterbury had said that he couldn ' t do without his wine because it helped his
digestive system and stomach do it ' s work.

And the way she would state it

and she had a little twinkle in her eye and everybody was laughing about this.
The Archbishop uasn ' t an out and out prohibitionist, he liked his wine.
was a very fine woman.

She

She went west - her father-in-law was one of the

earliest ministers in P.A. - Methodist, because Robert McClung, who she married
taught a Sunday school class of boys as a minister's son was expected to do.
My aunts were all teachers and my grandmother taught the Bible class and my
uncle was a Suuday school superintendant, and his wife played the organ in
church.

These were unrilly boys that Bob Mcclung was teaching.

young man, 19 or so,

He was a very

Hell they would sit around him with their row of chairs,

heads tight together listening to him.

And they discovered that he had a copy

of Robinson Crusoe in a Bible cover and he was reading that to them and they
just~ loved him and loved his stories.

Nellie went west to teach in those

early days and she fell so in love with Mrs. Mcclung and there was a young son
and she was so disappointed because if she could marry a son, she would be
Mrs. McClung's daughter-in-law.

To her great amazement and joy, this bo:;y sh(n1red

up one time - he was a druggist - and here was a ready-made son of her own age.
So she said that she - well, she would say it of course - she simply said her
cap and he couldn't get out of it.

So they married.

led a great deal and was acclaimed wherever she went.

She lectured and travelShe was well-known and

one time she heard that her husband was objecting to her being away so much

\2

�without telling her.

So she went home and she had been honored in Toronto and

Ottawa and he felt she was getting beyond him so when she got there in the
evening and they had tea, she said to him, "Would you please pass.the brown
bread?".

That was the staple food, brown bread, and she wanted him to under-

stand that she was still staple.

So it went on from there.

She loved Mrs.

McClung and Mrs. McClung loved her, more than any of her own children.
Q.

Was she treated well by the papers here?

A.

Yes, wherever she went.

Q.

Did they print up any of her speeches?

A.

Oh, yes.

Q.

So, if I go through the microfilm - you don't know the years she was here?

A.

No, I couldn't tell you .... If you just get up and give dates and times, it
just bores you to death.

I see you have read "Plane Down" , that story in there.

It is pure fiction but this is the house they crune to.

They came in that door

tumbled down their goods there, and went into the livingroom and we made fires
in the kitchen and the back shed still has the great woodpile.

Ann Caaslet,

the Dickinsons were really pioneers, her great grandfather ran - r·don ' t know
whether it was the first paper published in P.A.

e

His granddaughter is Mrs.

Ann Causelet and she lives in this cottage where old Captain Marrin lived,
Ann Dryna - my mind went blank, what was I going to say about Ann Dryna?
,a/,.

'· 1 e

A.

. .... Oh yes, that "Plane Down" and they have been here for ever and ever and

were talking about Nellie McClung.

Ann speaks very slowly.
morning.

She lives back again in F.W. and she phoned this

She said, "Mother and I have racked our brains trying to think of

the year that plane mishap and we can't remember it at all.
pen?"

When did it hap-

I said, "Imagine, have I convinced you?•, "Convinced me of what?".

"That's pure fiction" and she said, "You told it too well, we thought it was
true,"
Q.

You have been very active in women's organizations all your life, and so has
your mother.

A.

How do you feel about the women's oganizations now?

I'm stric~ly a temperate woman, Father called it the "accursed stuff" because
he had such trouble with th.e,~:men, especially the foundry men.
fines and hauled them out and got them back to work.

He payed their

He and mother were

strictly temperate and one thing I o1;&gt;ject to is that these organizations now there is wine and cheese - well, it doesn ''t seem to dawn on them that they
don't need to have this wine and cheese business but they think they've got
to do like some of the others do.

There are other less outstanding things

�that they are also embracing and it used to be that now the Canadian Club was
a splintered organization, it was for the most part made up of cultured,
educated women, and I don't say that they aren ' t educated now, but I don't
like some things and I feel that the women ' s organizations should stand forth
for the best in Canad.a and you can't bring up children to avoid alcohol if
you belong to these organizations that serve it and take it.
to be on one side or the other.
didn't need it.

You have got

We didn ' t serve it and we didn ' t miss it and

And then, after all, women have a place that is separate

from men and women are dressing like men and their doing so many things that
men do,
Q.

Do you mean working?

A.

No, I mean in every way.

For example, car racing and boy, the women are driving

the cars along with the men.

They have to do with all the sports.

Q.

You think that 's wrong.

A.

I think the men like them to be women.

Q.

Nellie HcClung had a saying:

We were t~J.king to a woman who preferred to have

her coat taken off and the doors opened etc. and Nellie McClung referred to
that once as "wantin 0 to eat the icing rather than the cake."

And that goes

right along with her brown bread saying, where yoy. have to be recognized for
your ability, and whether they open the door or ill.at shouldn't stand in the way.
To me, this is the goal I 'm trying to work towards, and I think a lot of other
women that I work with would agree with me on that.

It is the cake that I

would rather eat, you get too many cavities eating icing - too many holes in
it.

Do you have a daughter?

A.

Yes, in California.

Q.

Do you think that it is a better life for her than it was for you?

A.

It was pretty rugged and we didn't know it because it was where we lived and
what we were used to.

They have sidewalks and roads now that you can go

without going down to the axle and in my day, in Fort lilliam especially.
we have coveniences now in the house and travel etc.

And

Yes it is much easier.

I was telline; somebody of a classmate of mine who got to P.A. from the States
and came to high school.

I don't know how she got to P.A. and her father had

died and her mother was lecturing for something.

She and her brother and, I

don't know how they jerked themselves up but anyway they both got to P.A ..
She was poor and had no ml':biley or \~achl.ng
worked her way.

but she got up to Collegiate and she

She got up for this English woman who had 2 girls and she

�washed and dressed them and got them breakfast and eot them to school and
did the beds and dishes and left the house tidy - to come to school herself.
I didn't think she paid and as for clothes, she gave her her cast-off clothes
and this woman was two sizes smaller than Lula and Lula I remember had no hat
so she wore a bonnet every winter and it was all she had.
jolly well take· h er with a bormet or leave her.

And you could

She went through public

school and went to the teachers college which we had for a few years and then
she went up the line to teach and married the first man that asked her.
hadn't had a home, so just to have a home.
about him.

She

She wasn ' t asking the man much

He had a farm but it had been bun1t over and when I saw her after

some years of marriage, her hands were like horns - she was still using this
burnt over wood and she had 5 children and somebody said "one every Friday" .every year, anyway. Her husband wasn't interested except to feed them - that
was his duty done.

She wanted them to have an education so she sewed and she

proclaimed herself a barber and then she got a second hand chick hatchery an incubator - and turned one of the two bed.rooms she had into an incubating
• room and hatched chickens and sold them around the district.
tomatoe plants and sold them and sent her children to school.

Then she raised
Then they had

to go into town for the hi¢gh school - her oldest daughter went first and
she got babysitting - had a room but I don't think her board, but did that
and it was enough to bring her cash.

Then she went home Friday night and

her mother did the s~wing, washing and ironing, fixed her up on Saturday and
then she came back Sunday night and brought a big basket of food. Her brother
was ready for hig9.school and they just put a sheet up in her room with a
bed on each side and she managed the food for them.

He eventually became a

teacher and she trained in HcKellar Hospital and she had the money that they,
paid the girls - $2.50 a month or $J.OO and if she broke a thermometer, it ~as
a disaster and she had clothes her mother made out of old clothes. Stockings
and those button - on shoes was all she had and she learned like her mother:·
that was what she had and she wore •-il and she was thankful.
denims so she could go hiking with the girls.
RMG and had a bad time.

Had a pair of

The next girl went into the

The matron didn ' t approve of her - a poor girl in the

class with some of the girls that had more - so she dismissed her on the first
pretext she could find and she herself was dismissed for cilsmissing the girl.
They all managed and were splendid children.

How many are doing that nowadays?

\S

�If they haven't silk stockings and all the rest of it, they sit down and howl
at the moon, but these youngsters didn ' t.
Q.

I feel sorry for the girl you went to school with who married the first man
who caJ.11e along to get a home and live with a man - probably not a very happy
life.

A.

Oh, I'm sure, but she wouldn't cheep, there would be no squabbling, she made
her bargain and she kept it.

Dad finally died and he had a thousand dollars

life insurance in some organization - very little.

Now that is five $200 ' s

well the youngest girl had died so there were four and she was the fifth so
they each got $200 and that was just touching the •::louds.

She came to F. W.

and two or three times she came representing the Women ' s Institute and they
would pay her way down and then she would stay with me and she told me "I
just went on a regular binge, I bought an electric iron and an electric kettle"
and then she bought enough black silk or rayon and a neighbor helped her make
a dress and a jacket and she had $.50 left and she put it in the bank - so she
had a bank account.

The others - it was spent the same Hay - had to give a

good account of every nickel.

She died long since and at Christmas time I

write one of her daughters and this daughter - her son and another boy in the
neighbqrhood were going to play PeeW ee hockey in F. W. , so they stayed with ll!e.
Youngsters love to see through a house so when they had been there a little
while .I suggested that the boys go on and look through the house and see everything.

One youngster went home and I guess he nadn 't been in a big house

before and he told his mother all the details - the furniture, what they had
on the beds, how they took a bath . in the bathtub.

He is now a grown man and

married long::::since but she still gives me a little of his history and she
and her sister were fine women and well thought of in the community and the
one boy is a teach er and the other is head of the highways in Kenora and I
don't knou whether he is still there or whether he is retired or not.

They

have always accepted any help - so nicely - no embarrassment, just thank-you
very much.
Q.

Uas there any help for a woman uho wanted to leave her husband - perhaps if
he physically beat her or the children?

Has there anyone she could turn to

if she had no family?
A.

1

tfell, they turned to the church and the minister and his wife.

went into housework - that was her refuge.

Of course, she

�Q.

Would she be able to take all of her children?

A.

If there Here children that would be different.

Q.

She would have to put up with it.

A.
Q.

Yes, many of them did.

A.

There was often a ver-J nice neigbor map. who would beat the daylights out of

This is one of the things we are still trying to work on.
him - which he well deserved.

Q.

I asked an Italian lady in Italy what a wife would do if the husband beat her
and she said that generally they never moved from the original village and
she had her brothers protect her.

It would take on&lt;f.'•• thump and generally he

got the message.
A.

There was an early priest - Father Baxter in P.A.

He was a great big burly

man and if he heard of any man that had been beating his wife, he ' d talrn off
his clerical black gown, "nightg0vm" as they called it, and he ' d just give
him such a thrashing that he wouldn't forget it.

Many a man stopped beating

his wife when he had a beating from Father Ba,'Cter.

He came out here in the

early days and said mass and that white house down there is built on the old
foundation of the old Catholic church - the Sellars live in it.
quite a family of them.
in the Lakehead.

There was

They were the early elevator people and grain pe ople

Hr. Al Sellars bought it but it was in such disrepair and

it was finally torn down and then the foundation was. remade and he built the
same size on thesame foundation.

It was during the years I was away from

Silver Islet that it was finished so it took some arguing on Ethel Sellars '
part to convince me that it wasn ' t the old Catholic Church.
Q.

Do your remember WWI?

A.

Yes. '

Q. ·

I am a history teacher - do you remember after the Har, in your experience,
if the attitude towards working women changed much?

A.

Yes, it commenced a change because the women had irnrked so hard during the uar.

Q.

At jobs that a lot of people didn ' t think they could do.

A.

1-J ell,

Q.

Did it progress further after WH2?

A.

Yes and after WWI and especially after WW2, the people had learned to go out

there were more stenographers and bookeepers and things like. that .

and enjoy themselves and people had learned to leave their children and go out.
They took their families lightly to what they had been before,

A mother wouldn ' t

\7

�leave her children and go gabbing.

They think nothing of leaving them and

they can pretty much bring up th ems elves, the youngsters.
Q.

Do you see no discrepancy between a woman hiring a girl t.o feed her children
breakfast and lunch and do their clothes and send them out to school, even
though she lives withinl. the house, to women who have to use daycare centres
to do the same thing? ·no you see much of a difference?

A.

Of course daycare - Miss Michaels has now set up her evm school in the Salvation Army Eall and has the daycare.

That is a real profession.

She has

a real degree and education.
Q.

The point I ' m getting at is the effect on the children,

Why would it be more

acceptable to have a girl living in your home to do that?
A.

Because they are home - that's the only differ-~nce.

These daycare centres,

where the girl has to Imow a lot and the child must learn a lot.
Q.

Yes, they are very careful with them.

A.

There was a couple married in Hesley Church a11d they were quite active, they
were both teachers.

They had a child and they didn't show up again and it

was some time before one of the ladies went to call and found that· this
beautiful little girl baby had an enormous head - it was terrific.

There

nas something wrong with the children a11d so from that, they banded together
and Wesley let them have a room and they met every mon1ing uith a different
mother looking after these 5 or 6 children.

It meant a holiday for the mother

-l~ days a week and 5 mothers, and 5 children and they did simple ~ai.11es and

things and looked after them and the mother would be refreshed and rested.
I went d01m for about 26 years.

I was the relief officer - that is an at-

tendant to the second-hand clothing and people would come to my house, I had
a trunk that was never empty and never full. ....... I would then send overseas twice a year there were greatshipments.

I" remember one time .we sent 850 lbs.

a.nd that is a lot to pack a.nd Hr. Gerr'iJ would come and help us rope and the
McKenzie dray came and took it, shipped it, a11d paid tho shipping charges and
just charged us for the shippinc charge - they never charged us for their
dray and went on for years and yea:cs ... I would often be at the church in the
morning~ after school and these children - the little girl with the great big
head, I don ' t know how she held it up - it must have taken a long time to get
it

O

o

I•

Q.

How long did she survive?

A.

I think she was 9 or 10 when she finally died.
shapen and mongoloid.

The others, they were mis-

I always stopped and talked to them and told them a

story, so that they got to know me.

l3

�•
Q.

A.

Aft er the war, when ladies had been working in factory jobs and that sort of
thing, when their husbands came home, did they expect them to go back to the
way they had been? What sort of conflicts Callle from the change?
They expected it. Women often went out without any squabbling, they get their
own way and they had more money than they had ever and they weren ' t going to
give that up right away.

Q.

A.

So there was difficulty.

The majority of women

stayed with their husbands.
And the husbands learnt to live with liberated women?
It wasn't so easy for the men to get jobs and there are a few sensible men
that would see that their wives really had to bring in the bread and butter
and they had to work at home themselves.

You saw quite a few, but also you

saw the one that wasn ' t going to have it.
going to stay so.
ironed out.

He was king of the castle and was

That was the unfortunate few but it is wonderful how many

There was one English girl that came out - the men came home

first - well they sent the women home first - anyway, she was-______
and she married and Indian from the mission over here and in England they are
not so concerned about the color of their skin as we are.
them marry from the Near East - red and brmm skin.

A great many of

One of our ta,-ximen was

at the station and this girl came to him and wanted to be taken to the mission,
and he was shocked. She was a fine looking :I!nglish girl, so he said "Are you
sure that is the right address?"

She had married a native Canadian and was

going to stay with his people until he got here.

H2 very nicely tried to

persuade her not to but she was going - he took her for quite a long ciistance
and then you turn up tolthe reserve and he said he noticed that her chatter
ceased when he turned up because it was pretty crummy in those days, they've
decent houses now. He told her that this was the house and he told her he
would wait and for her togo to the door. So she did and a big, fat, very unclean looking squaw came to the door - the mother of this boy she married.
She just threw up her hands and came back to the taxi and said for him to
take her away from there.

He told her he knew and had tried to tell her but

he decided she had better see for herself.

He told her he would take her to

his house or to the Salvation Army, 1-1hichever she wanted and she could get
help from the Red Cross to go back home.

She chose to go to the Salvation

Army and reported to the Red Cross and they came and helped her.
went right back home.

She just

They would have been marrying boys from all the colonies

so she ..... now they are very fine, smarl Indian men that are working on the
highways and worki:pg at machines.

They've had a tough time, our native people.

/9

�.,·

•
Q.

A.

We have a lot to account for.
They used to scalp people and shoot them down with arrows and burn them and
do all kinds of things.

If we had a hoard of p~ople come in and take over

our country - they had it for thousands of years - of course they ' d fight.
Q,

As far as scalping goes, it was white men that taught the Indians - they used

It was easier to bring in a scalp, they thought of ears for
a while but a guy could bring in two different ears and say they were ears
from one person and so, the scalps.
A.
More power to them - fight for their land. If somebody crune along and put
me out of this house, .....
Thank-you for your help Mrs. Dyke,
it for bounty.

l.C

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!

/ (-~
This is

,
Kanen Graves(?) talking with Mrs. Almos in Port Arthuro

G:
At
G:
A:
G:
A:

Could we start by telling me what year you were born?
1913
And where were you born?
I was born in a little CPR siding, called Melgand.
Where is that?
Now this would be, Oh, I don't know, past, well half way
between here and White River, I think, on the CPR Mainline.
My dad was a CPR pumpero This was when they had the steam
etiginjs, and they had to take water, you know,every so manyo
And¼::here we moved to Cauldwell; he was a pumper there,
and then from there, when I was about four, we moved to
Jackfish, and he was a stationary fireman there. They took
coal in for the docks, the CPR dock there,for the trains,
and he worked there till the deasel came in, and then they'
did away with the coal, natµrally,then he was.o. No I'm
wrong. They did away w~+h bringing it in from the States
~ by _boat, and brought it from, from the eh, provinces,
somewhere, by CPR boxcar, and it had to be unloaded by
boxcar, so they didn't need anymore fireman or anything
li like this, see, to keep things going,to unload the coal, so
he was transfered to a place called Britto
G: That sounds familiar.
A~ - That's down, oh, around Perry Sound, and there he stayed
until he retired.
G: Did you move with him?
A: No, I married, and stayed in Jackfish.
G: Had your parents been born in Canada, or were they immigrants?
A: No. My grandparents came from Scotland as Hudson's Bay
factors, up to Moosonee, and my Dad's family was all born
there. And they came down to, by canoe, to, where is it now,
the CPR anywayo And then just scattered around. My grandfather on my mother's s.ide had a store in Heron Bay. And
the rest of the family fished; on~ uncle had a fishing and tourist
business in McDermod. And the others were mostly railroaderso
G: What do you remember as a child growing up in a small town?
A: Well, I don't know. We weren~t very rich, we were a big
family; eleven of us, twelve of us.
G: Twelve kids?
A:

G:
A:

G:
A:
G:
A:

G:
A:
G:
A:

Uhm uhm.

Really!
Eleven, and adopted my mother's, be more like a nephew to me,
but he was adopted, because his mother and dad had passed away.
And I don't know, we just seemed to have enough of what we
needed. We never had to go without anything~but we didn't
have any frills, that's for sure. But I think we were much
happier then, than the children these dayso
You appreciated things I guess.
Everything just handed to them, ayh? ' What we got we really
appreciated. An~ we had to work, you knowp I worked from
the time I was~urteen, for, ten dollars a month, I thinko
Doing what?
Well, I went to help this, he was, Mr. ~ Nichol was the
station agent, the gas station agent, there. And she needed 6: \. ~~
somebody in the sunnner, because she had so much company an~1/~0 ~VV
that. So I just went and, as a cl-, like a girlc;-~ a y h o
~ .
And, that's about all. Went to school until graoeeight,
J
and
How big a school was it?
Pardon me?
How big a school was it?
It was •:up to grade eight. It was from one, there was no
kindergarten, ~ rom one to eight ayho And there was just the
one teach~r~~ ;.._b,.we had very many happy memories there, because
there wasl concerts, and field days, that kids have never
heard of, these dayso Arbor d~y, I asked the kids if they
had Arbor day. "What's that Nanny?" And, I don't know ._~
This was the centre of activity, the school and the church,
ayh. The c~urch, once a month, there was two churcheso So
everybody ~fo the, and the Salvation Army cam~ probably once
every two months. And strange, I do quite a bit of volunteer

�-2-

""~

work, and I do a lot for Home League, or~with them alot. And they
knew all these Captains, and that, that came to Jackfish, like
60 years ago.
G: What would they have come for?
A: The Salvation Army?
G: Yes, this is the first I've heard of this.
A; Oh, well, just for a service.
G: Counselling type?
A: No, just a church -- o., meeting at night, you know. And,
everybody would bring a lunch, and we'd have a little
gathering after. This one chap, especially. He came from
the Yukon, and I just heard recently, through a ~
Home League here, that he died in Californiao OThese are
just the little things that we'd look forward to. We were
fortunate enough that we had a pass, and relatives, that we
could travel. Where a lot of the other children didn't
ayh, we could go free, we had relatives in Saskatchewan and
Manitoba and that. So we were able to goo•• My dad took us
pretty often for a trip to Toronto and Montreal if we could
afford it. But then I married, and we lived there, it was ,,,
I was just saying, some girl came here the other day, said
she was tired because she washed the clothes. I said oh,
what kind of machine do you have? Well, an automatic, ahy.
I said''what if you do like me when Don was, we had one boy,
and one still-born child. When ~,Don was small, my husband
was a railroader too, so he had to go out and relieve on the
different jobso And in the winter I had to snowshoe down a
hill like about Hillcrest Park, and snowshoe back up with
the water to wash clothes. And I said, "And you push a
button, and you're tired? And when my brother-in-law wasn't
home, I had to chop the ice, to make a hole in the water,ayho
Sometimes it was pretty thick in that bay. And then I'd come
up and wash clothes on a board. So, when I look back now, I
think, 0 dear, I woT\der how you ... My neighbour across here,
she was raised on -Me. farm too. She said I wonder how weJ&lt;l.id
it ayh. We sit back~ nd wonder and really, you know, Jhat .. o
But like I say, I think we were much happier then than now
that you could ... I know when I go down town now and, we
were married during the depression, and when I go down town
now and think "Gee I wonder if I should, maybe I'll buy
this. Do I need it?" That's a throw back from the
depression. So it seems strange that life goes on s·o •
G: What kind of social things did you do, say in your m_a_r_r~i_e_d_
years? Community dances, and things like this?
A: Oh yes. We used to have pie socials,to raise money for the
Christmas fund. And bingos, later on we had bingos. But
mostly it was, oh, teas, church teas, and pie socials, and
cake socials. And what else now, ohJ then we used to have snowshoe
parties. We'd all get together to snowshoe out to
a certain, everybody had a little, tracking camps, like, you
know, and you'd make beans out there, have beans and that.
Like I say, I was one of the more fortunate ones, Art always
had a job, and we had a free pass, so every year of our life
we've always had a holiday. Even if it was, I know !'! come
back often, with just enough to tip t~e porter ayh. Or
maybe not even that, but we had our pass, and we knew we
could get home without any money ayh. But every month, I'd
put away maybe even sometimes 50 cents to a travelling fundo
And when our holiday came, well that was our money, and
when that was spent, we came home.
G: That's an interesting way to travel.
A: But other than that, like, and ... I think the teacher was
the head of the social, like you know, she put on the
Halloween dances and ...
G: Would these all be held in the school?
A: Yes. At one time we had no ibasement in the school, so it
was quite a chore to, our seats were on two by fours, and
we had to pull them all out, you know. So the, I can't
remember, they must have got a grant or something, and
they ... I was married then, when they put the basement in
the school, and this was were we held all our socials, such
as our ...
G: How large a community?
A: Pardon me?
G: How large a community?
A: I would say about 35 families. And of course, during the
summer the Patterso, you know, these freighter folks, they

�-3would come in with coal for th~ ... It was the only industry there,
was the coal industry, for the CPR, for the engine'S. And it seems
every time a boat came in, they'd put on a dance of some kind,and
they'd let us know, and we'd put a sig~ up, and the ladies would
bring a lunch, or the boat would bring Q 'lunch. So, pretty nearly
every week we' d have a danc·e.
G: Then this would be with the people who worked on the boat.
A: This was with the, yes, with the Captain and the mates would
put it on, like, you see, and everybody that was free~.Rn the
boat would come. I guess they'd been out on th~i ~~e~a week,
ten, twelve days, and they were happy to get some~recreation.
At one time we had a pool room there, and that was part of
the, you know, they played pool. But that closed down, too.
wheA we built our own skating rink and looked after it. We
played hockey between Rossport,and Schreiber, and Jackfish.
G: Did you seem to have been a lot more sports minded, a
little more active1
A: Yes. There didn't seem to be any cliques. Everybody seemed
to get together. Then we bou•ght, there was a general store
and the Post Office, and Immigration Department thereo And
we had that, we looked after that, til the placed closed up.
G: So that would be an office to receive benefits?
A: Well, no. The officer had to come here to clear the
American ships. You see, the American ships came in, and
they had a clearance before they go out. So that office was
in the store too, the general store, and the Post Office.
So then when that closed down, when Jackfish closed down,
my husband got a job as a, went out on the road as, he was 7
of course he's an engineer, this was what he did in Jackfisho
But it was more like a~_ ~mergency; he was sent anywhere from
Fort William to, oh~~~crwthe Sioux, to Ottawa, to Mattawa, and
anyplace that they needed him, ayh. So we lived, we had our
own car on the railroad, and we lived there for seventeen
years.before we retired. So that was an interesting way to
live. I know one weekend,one middle of the week, we were
in Rossport, or just out of Rossport, and (interrupted by phone)
So whatf was I saying?
G: You were talking about living on the rail
A: Oh yeah. We were up near Rossport, about Tuesday, and they
said to Bart, "Get ready, there's a train picking you up, and
they're going to stop at White River, and get your groceries,
and you've got to keep going til you get to Mattawa, for the
weekend." Because they were building an overhead bridge, and
you can only do it on a weekend. It was things like this that
made it so interesting ...
G: So you just took up your car and,.o
A: Well, the train picks us up, ayh. We were on the railroad,
like a, like a trailor ayh. And a train would pick us up
and the machine that Bart worked with, ayh, and take us all
the way down along. And wherever we were, like if we came
into a divisional point, where there's a train waiting for
us to take us out, so we'd get there in time~ So you never
knew what the next job was going to be.
G: I guess, you said you just had the one son?
A: Yes, and when Bart took this job out on the railroad, he had
just started high school here, so he was up here like,you see.
And when we were close to home, close around here, he'd come
there for the weekend, and if we weren't home, he'd go to
Jackfish to his grandmother'so So we were there for eighteen
years.
G·: You said you were married during the depression. How did
the depression affect you?
~ ------- r , I think we were very fortunate because on the job that
tiart was, a hoisting engineer's job. In the winter they just
had , maybe eight or ten staff, or twelve. And they had .\o ~&lt;.,'-le.
time keeper. And none of them could do office work. None
of thot+older men, even if they had more seniority than Bart,
they couldn't do the office work, with the result that he
was never out of a job. As small wages as he had,we were
fortunate; we never lost our insurance, or our house or
anything like that. So many of our friends did ayh. Other
than having to be very careful,you know, make sure that you
didn't go off on a buying spree, or somethingo
~d

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Did it affect Jackfish, particularly bad?
Not too much. Most of the people there were, I would say
have permanent positions, they would be, like section men,
and in the wint~er, like section men, and then th~v had to
keep this plant going, because they had to keep a. coal
shute going to keep the coal eh, ready to coal all these
trains, all these ... So it was more of a steady thing,
except in the stnnmer they brought in these extra men to
help with the unloading of the coal for the winter. But
we were very fortuna..te.
• -~
There was nobody, I ~~bink, out ot work in Jacktisn ouxing
the depression, because of this CPR coaling station, see.
Maybe the junior fellas on the way, like on the track were
laid off, but pretty well it didn't affect them at all. But
all around us, terrible. I know friends of ours that had
lost their homes and their insurances, and things like this.
Did you get a lot of people travelling through on the railway?
Oh yes.
men in the box ...
Boxcars, yes, yeah. In fact there was some of that still
when we went on the roado Cause they warned me, I was often
alone, you k~ow, out on the siding,and they said not to let
anybody in. ~~ t ~is was not like the depression,! think it was
just those who were travelling more just to see the, the,
cause it was during the war when we were out there, so there
was lots of work.
How did the war affect you?
Pardon me?
How did the war years affect you?
Ahh, not ...
I guess things became a little more prosperous?
Yes, yes. Well I know when uhm, when Bart went out on the
railroad, when we were in Jackfish, there was no union. So
he would have to go, he went to work at seven every morning.
And if that company, boat company, wanted that boat unloaded
for a certain hour, he would have to work, all those hours,
maybe sometimes up for 5 o'clock the next morning. And he
never got paid for more than eight hours, ayh. So as soon
as he went out on the railroad, on the, on the mainline, he
was able to join a union, and he did, and I could never get
over him being paid, in fact, this was how we bought this
house. All the overtime that he made, I put it aside,
because I said "If we, you know, this is just money found,
because you'd never have it, if you didn't have this job."
So this is how we put money away to buy this house. Because
if you travelled, at night, with the crane, then he had to
look after it, and he was paid for it. And if there was a
mainlinefl and the mainline was busy, then they would have
to wait maybe til after 5 o'clock, or 6 o'clock, til the
trains were all gone, then go out, and he was still paid.
And I can remember my son was, it was during the war, they
couldn't get a helper, so the boss asked Bart if he didn't
know anybody. So Don said he'd go out. And I can remember
the first day Don worked, he had to go out an hour ahead,
at six, to get the crane ready, and they couldn't go out til
8 o'clock that night to work, cause the passengers were late (?),
it was a mainline job. He made 42.50 that one day. I can
remember his dad saying, "This was what I made in a month
when I started to work". So it was quite a, it was quite a
thing to be able to get paid for what you did. But, and
that job in Jackfish, we were paid for eight hours only, no
matter how, and you couldn't refuse, ayh. Especially Bart.
He was the only who could do this certain job. He had a
helper, but he couldn't work when there was men, they
emptied these boats of coal, well when they got near the
bottom, there
had to go men in there to scrape it up and
-•~~ put it irlZ0 the bucket so they could get it upo Well the
(ljfa"'. _
~ helper couldn't do that, because they were scared th~-'-=d-- ~ ✓0
swing the bucket maybe, and kill someone o So Owhei:l there
was a cleaning job, Bart had to do it all. There was two
of them, like two cranes, but they had to do all that worko
Was there any talk there of organizing a union?
They tried. But, this was the way they got around it.
There wasn't enough, uhm, steady members, like. I think

�-5there had to be ten or~welve. And the CPR made sure that
_
they, (joke and laughter), but the
company made sure that they got, you know, that they were
kept below that. The steady ones, like, you know. They
could have in the SUllllller, but then these were just men that
came in for, maybe three or four rr. Jnths, so that didn't
count. This is how I think I, I have never voted anything
else but social, NDP or, please be careful whatever you
~all it. Because this was when you heard all about it
during the depression, ayho And I can remember, uhm,
Jack MacEvett, he was organizing, ayh, in Schreiber. He
said"I've gone out in the country and preached", and he
said "I had to be in a truck, because they'd throw tomatoes
at me", ayh, or eggs or anything, if they didn't like him.
And I can remember the first, uh, convention I went to in
Regina
I said to Mrs. Jacobson, " I
never thought I'd
ever see the day when I'd be coming to Regina, in a hotel
for an NDP convention, ayh, the way it started out, because
I know many a time I did without things to, to help
&lt;-·calm down there, like, you know, the people that came in _e,v~ )
they always came to our place to sleep, or eat or anythi11g.
Mr. uhm, what's his name (\t,~Tate, he's an old timer,
Jim Caullie, I was just reading about him the other day, and
Jack MacEvett, of course, he was from Schreiber, and uhm,
there sure was a lot of talk of; you know, political talk
during the depression, and I think this was
for,
because, uhm, when yo,, looked around and saw what was
going on, these guys working for five dollars a month, I
think,on the highway. So, uh ... Oh yes, I think the whole
of Jackfish was, was CCF then.
G: I've been studying Dorion and Hurkett a lot, and that was
a really progressive ....... town during the depression
too.
A: Yeso I think all these little towns, you know, that really
uh, it hit them quite hard.
G: I guess soo Uhm, I wanted to ask you about the early days
of CCF. Did you ever think that it would become sort of
a credible third party at the time?
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Did it start off really
really small?
I
Uh ...
See I don't ...
Oh yes, like I say, I can remember, especially down
our
way, because uh, oh there was so many other factions
against it, ayh. Strong factions, that people were afraid
to, to even talk about it, in lots of places, ayh. Uh,
and I really can't remember how it, that was overcome,
because, like in Jackfish, nearly everybody w~s a CCF, ayho
There was the odd one, but uh, they didn't
do to much
about it, so uh,.o• But they had no problem there. I
think Jackfish was CCF ever since I can remember. And uh,
everybody worked, helped, and eh, you know, ...
Were the women just as active as the men, would you say?
Uh, Yes, I think so, uh, 'cause I know I waso And uh,
and any of my friends, there was, oh yes.
Did you feel that you were, I don't know, taken seriously,
that's not quite what I want to say, but you know what I
mean ... You were as respected, in the Party1
Oh yes. Uhm Uhm. Oh y~s. ' · Yes, because, uh, what I
found, we had so many gooa arguements, that these, the
was arguing against us, You know, they couldn't
find anything uh,'- come back wi ·:th, really. When we say,
"Well, look-et, what's this government doing; five dollars
a month, ayho And all, well Canada was, it's a rich
country, and, you know, these are the arguements~LJe used
to get literature~ t, and study it, you know, and have
study session, and that, and uhm, and we really ... No I
don't, we never had any problems down there. It was
always, uh, it was always, as far as I can remember ...
Of course, now, the earlier years I don't know ... 'cause
I wasn't old enough to vote, ando•• But uh, ... it was
alwasys strong, the CCF, ever since I can remember.
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Do you, I doo., I think you're probably to young for, to
remember women getting the vote.
No, not really, no.
twenties.
Yeah, no, no. It's ahh ... You know, I can remember
something about i t , all right, because I remember aguements,,,
I can remember ministers come and arguing, and you knowj
about ... My dad was very religiouso Uh; I don't know
whether really religious, but he, uh,'cause people were
very religious, and apparently always had to study the
Bible very .. And they used to argue these things forth
and back, and uh, and uh .. o This was what he used to, uh,
argue mostly with, was because he was figuring that this
Bible wasn't quite right., from the things that was said,
and then some of the things that was preached, ayh. But
like I say, when there's a large family, we all had to get
up and do our own chores, and that; there wasn't much to,
to, uhm, like ehh, there was chor~s,
.and, and then
schoolwork, and different things ~that. We never got much
into political, uh, arguements at home. But I really took
interest in it when Jack MacEvett started to come down.
Of course I was married then. I was nineteen when I was
married, and of course you couldn't vote until you were
twenty-one, theno But I was really into--My husband has
always been, 'cause he said that, uh, his dad was from
Norwayo And he used to tell them how the big shots took
everything there, from the fishermean, no matter how hard
you'd worked, you had to ... And uh, And so, he was always
socialist, if you'd like to call him that. And I haven ...
I've never voted anywhere else ... anything else. So, .. o
How about transportation in these days1 How did you get
around?
~
Oh you know, this is uh, the strange thin oo ... We
have
never had a car. We have never had a car.
Really?
And uh, for the simple reason, that in Jackfish there was
no highwe y, when we lived there. Now, uh, the highway
came through after we went out o~ ~he road, oh maybe a
year or so before. And we had totuhm, I don't understand
too much about it, but everybody had to pay so much, then and
do
. .. If you didn't pay, you had to work so many
days on the road that they had cut in, like. I guess the
town id it, ayh. Well then, the car was no good to us
then, because we were away all the timeo My son had a
car right away, of course. But we always travelled by
rail, or ship.
How about within the community, though. I guess if.tbings.o.
Oh. It was all railway, all rail. But the community was,
uh, You've never down past Jackfish?
No, I don't think I have.
Well there's, there's just the railwasy, in the middle, then
the lake on one side, and the mountains on the other. So
with the result that the, that the cut-in from the main
highway was very hard to put in,because it had to come down
through this plane, and then over a mountain, and then
(cut back to?) And there was no place you cou--There
was no place in the town where you could drive a caro You
had to drive just to the railway, and leave it there. So
it was all railroad travel, when we were thereo
And you'd just walk ............. .
And just walk,~ yeaho It was av ery small village, somethin'
likeo•• Oh, it wouldn't have as much walking space as
Rossport, if you've been there.
Uhm uhm. Rossport's really small.
Yeah.
But, see Rossport is, is kind of flat, ayh, and at
least you can drive into there. In Jackfish you could just
come in behind this mountain, there was just a valley in
between this mountain, behind the church, and then right
down to the railroado And that's where you had to stop.
Oh some people, uh, p~t planks across there, and went
across. But you couldn't go anywhere, so there was no
point, ayho So, ah, everything was by car, by railroad,
and it was so small that you didn't need a car,anyway, to
get around.
I've been thinking of Thunder Bay standards.

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Yeal.. Oh, no. I know my aunt, she came from the west, she
used to say "I can't
breatrehere, like, 'cause
she
lived in the prairie, ayh. And she said she just seemed
like she was closed in because there was just this little
place to walk, ayh. Mountains on one side, and the lake
on the other, and the railway in the middleo
It sounds like it would be really beautiful.
Yes, it was, it was a lovely spot. Uh, a very busy spot
bsecause, uhm, in the summer they had, uhm,uhm-a, a
pulpwood, the pulp boats used to, uhm, how. can I say this?
The boats used to come into Slate Island, l that was out
quite a way) and load the pulp there, so we had th~, uh,
men come in then to, they stayed out there all summer
and worked on this pulp business. So it was always a very
busy spot, in the summer, very quiet in the winter.
But and a good, we had quite a good tourist business when
we had the store too--we had a lot of Americans come in
there, because beautiful lakes lac~ in there, very, uh,
untouched, ayh ..
good fishing, and so we haa "')"-&gt;.ri. £k C?)
quite a good tourist business.there, too. The Americans
used to like to come in. But, uh, there certainly wasn't
any cars around
there was no place to drive them,
Everything was done by wheelbarrow, if you had to, uh, ..
Move things .
Move anything; wheelbarrow in, in the summer, or toboggan
or, or sleigh in the wint er,ayh. I know we used to have
to, we burnt coal, naturally,-we were on a coal depot, and
they used to bring it in bags home, on the toboggan. So,
everything had to be moved by hand, wheelbarrow or, that
old wheelbarrow outside, that was what we used in
Jackfish.
An antique wheelbarrow.
Yeah.
What was life like for your mother, with so many children?
Well, you know, we all had our
own job, ayh. The older
had to look after the younger, and ah,
as many as us, there was of us, she has b~ ders beside.
Men that used to come and work in the summer, ayh, would
come
board with us, which she always used to say
it doesn't make much difference putting a few more
potatoes in the pot, ayh. But we all had our own jobs,
and we all had to look after
our own clothes, and
things seemed very well organized. I don't know, I can't
remember tha t;here was, uh, we all had to look after our
own rooms, ana beds, and, and uh, we all had our turn to
do dishes, and uh, .. o
You had to be a lot more responsible.
Oh yes, oh my gosh, yes. You know, if we ever got up and
we
I think there was only two of us that
was born in Schreiber. The rest were all born at home
with a midwife.
Was there a local woman, who acted as one?
Yes, uhm uhm. Bart's mom--my mother and I used to do most
of it. And before that there was an Italian lady that
used to do it. And uh, it was just, one other thing, just
another ..... I can remember my last two brothers, they
were born in Schreiber, because these women were getting
older then, ayh. And uhm, so they, my aunt, she was kind
of a midwife in Schreiber, too. So she went there, and
had it there. But uh, but uh, I can't remember any, uh,
I think today they'd, when I see children, the way they,
I think it's just uh, oh, I think it's partly parents
fault, today. Because they take the line of~ east
resistance, they say you can't do
that, and they do
it anyway, and they don't do anything about it. I can't
understand that. I know with my grandchildren here, I say
\\ you do it; and they look at me, and I say "and fast ;;
Don't sit and look at me o'r And
63, ayh.
You've got a lot of nerve.
I said "You justo .. o" Of course I do a lot of kidding,
but uh, I, I just couldn't take that. When I said
somethin to Don, I said "I want that done", and he went 0ndJ
done it, ayh. And if he didn't do it, he just had his
privileges taken away from him. And I think this is
half the battle. Because they just, just don't seem to
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�-8bother, I don't know. I can never forget one woman said
"I'll be so lad when they're married, when they're out of
my way." Oh.9 I couldn't understand that. I said "don't
you enjoy them?" And
then when I saw the way they
acted, I thought, "no wonder", but I thought "lady, it's
eour fault" .
. I think television has a lot to do with ito
A: Oh yes, terribleo Just want and sit and look at that
uhm, My little chtm1 was sittin' there yesterday and put
the, and put it on for some x sports, and I thought,
"I bet you
ten years for
G: Is this why you workEi_d?
A:
since we move'l_1ere. We moved, Bart took an
early retirement~ e've been here about seventeen
years. And he still worked two years, like we bought
this house, oh maybe, ten or twelve years before we
moved up, ayho We knew that we couldn't go back to
Jackfish, we had a house there, but there was nothing
there, ayho So l ike I say, we had to buy somewhere, so
we , everything_J--;t~~"' got
overtime, I put away to put a
payment do~house, . Well then we bought it, and
we rented it for about twelve years. Well then, the
people who rented i~were going to move away, so I said
to Bart, "Well whf} t -.f taki n' an early, he, this was how
we started~fto Mex. i~ o, in '57, He had an arthritic hip,
and they said that, like the winter's a slack time, ayh,
'cause there's no building or anything like that. So, uh,
I started looking into going to Mexicoo So we went down
there, and then, uh, the
. nP.xt winter they'd,
the people said they were going to move, so we moved
down then, and we didn't go anywhere that winter. Just
So we've been here eighteen years, and ah,
Like I say, we never stary in the winter, except the,
the two years since I've been sick. But ah, we've never
had a car either, so we've just ... Like I say, then, but
he came up, he worked, he still worked two years, at,
summers, while we were here. So I, I just couldn't sit
here and do nothing, so I started to babysit first.
Babysat for all the doctors, and that, thereo And ~
then ah, this little, this little store down by ah,
the clinic, McKay's, they looked, they were looking for
a clerk, so I worked there, for ah, five years. Then we
were, every winter we ~
.~ away, she'd have to get
someone else, so ... This year we're goin'to, summer we're
goin up to Alaska, so I said "I'm oing to quit", I said
"You911 have to get someone else", 9cause it's not fair to
her either, ayh. So we came back in October, and then I
knew the woman that was working in, in the uh, what do
you call the office down there, employment office, and she
phones,
and "Would you like to go and work at Burk's
~ itts. I said "What?" So she said "They're looking for
someone for Christmas rush',' so I said "Okay, I' 11 go down
and try it". So I went down and then I worked every
summer then, for ten years. I really enjoyed ito •
G: Did you work, uhm, in your early_..y,ears of marriage?
A: No, except for our own . bus flies s, when we had, had our own
store, like, you·-know; in, in the country. But when we
were on the road, we were never anywhere maybe sometimes
.two weeks, and then
maybe sometimes two days, ayh. So !~ just ah,
G: Are this, I
that there are3/many opportunities
for women to work, in small towns, small ~industry towns.
A: Small--No, no,no. Uhm, what there was an :~ an hotel in
Jackfish, during uhm, now let's see, that started during
the war. But, there had been previously, a hotel
before, and it, people died, and they just closed it
down. Well then, this family, Spidoni brothers, you've
heard of them in Schreiber, I guesso They bought the
hotel, and they opened it up, so this was the,really the
only place to work, ayh. Cook, or
or, ah, upstairs
girl, and bartenders. But I never did, I never worked
there, 'cause we had our own store, then.
G: You had the general store?
A: Yes, l the post offic~ and this, uh, other office, that the

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Immigration guys
So I worked there., most of the time.
But uh, other than that there wasn't, there was nothing
in, in smaller places.
Do you remember any people, I'm thinking particularly of
women, being really lonely, really sort of cabin-crazy?
No. No, I don't think so. Not that I can remember.
Everybody was too busy. You knowo Like the men worked
steady, ayh, and the women just had to do, take over for
the men laid off when they had to work,ayh. And like uh,
you just didn't come in and turn a button on, and a
stove go, you had to keep your stove up and carry your
water in. Heat your water on the stove to wash clothes,
and it, and iron ) the iron's on the stove, and this all,
you know, it took so much more time than it does these
days. So I say laugh. · when that girl said she was tired,
pushing a button on an automatic washing machine. Ahh, no
I can't ... Oh there was lot's around eh, you know, in the
1 .
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the farming district, I thinko
Yeah, I guess women really isolated, in the country.
Yes, but we were never really isolated, because we had
mail twice a day,ayh, which is something, because the
mainline went right through it, and the railroad carried
the mail then. And ah, so we had mail twice a day, and
we had, uh, we got fresh fruit and vegetables twice a
week. From town her~,they'd come down, on the train.
And fresh milk every morning, 'cause it came on the
train, too. At one time there was seven trains going by
there, ayh, passengers. And uh, So we
really weren't~
where we were, we weren't isolated at all because we,
~
other than that we didn't get out too much,. Like I say
we made our own fun, and, and we uh, oh we were never
without anything. And like, there was a doctor in
Schreiber, which is, was nineteen miles awayo And if we
needed him, we just phoned through the CPR phone, to the
station in Schreiber, and he came down on the first
freight. So we really were better off than a lot of
places that didn't even, when they didn't have a highway~
ayh. We
at least had the mainline going
right
~
through. And anything happened, well, they were always
kind enough to stop a train and pick anybody up that was
hurt, and bring them in to whereever was, to Schreiber,
or anywhere. I know all the uh, sick people that had to
come to town, they just stopped them, put them on a
stretcher, put them in the baggage car. And then we
came up with them on the baggage car. So uh, and we'd
phone the doctor in Schreiber, and say so and so was on
the baggage car, and he'd come in and see if they needed
a needle or something. He was a CPR doctor then--and a
town doctor too. And if they needed help before we got
to town, well he'd give them a needle of some kind, like,
you know. And we just stopped in time to expect a train
here, and took us to the hospital.The, uh, only thing
that we found, the younger ones wouldn't stay there to
have their babies,ayh. Like, before the babies were born
they came up to town here, or to Schreiber and waited.
But the old
timers used to have them right in town
at home. But no, we were, we were very fortunate there,
because, like I say, we were just like on the mainline
of ah, uhm, lots of places that's all they, the only thing
that was, you know, there was no highways in a lot of
those places. So uh, we were, we were, I guess, we never
thought of it then, but now I realize that we were lucky,
much luckier than most people, where they were isolated
away back in the bush.
What did~ ~u say, that there was a school in Jackfish?
Uhm uhmJ_~ rade one to grade eight.
And how ~ Mdid many people go on to high school?
Yes, quite a few.
And they'd have to go to Schreiber?
They'd have to come to town hereo
Oh, to here?
Uhm uhm,
Really?
Uhm uhm.
There was no high schools i ny of the ~~
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There was high schools in Sc reiber, but, now, I don't

�-10-

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understand what the ruling was there, I guess you could
have gone there, but it, uh, no, I don't think so. 'Cause
nobody ever went into Schreiber too. My son took music
lessons, and he had to leave, Like he'd leave ot night at
seven o'clock to go to Schreiber, which is nineteen miles
away,stay overnight, have his lesson, music lesson in the
morning, and come back at noon the next day. But he
didn't mind that at all. And first he, the first time he
went to White River. He started in White River, but then
the music teacher died, there, and eh, I thought "well
gees it's much easier to go to Schreiber, because I, that
was two days to go to White River, ayh. You went down in
the morning, and then you couldn't go back until the next
nighto
So that was the whole weekend, and he, he used to
love to fish, ayh, so uhm, this way he went in at night
and he was back in the morning. But
eh, no, everybody
there, I don't know what the reasono You know, I never
thought about thato I think that most of them that came
up to high school, wanted uhm, to go to technical school,
they didn't just want high school. They did their first
year, and then they chose their, what they wanted to do,
ayh. I think th¾_s was why they mostly all came up here.
'Cause I know Doqhad to come up here. And anybody that
came, eh, it was out p, unless they wanted to go to, eh,
to be a teacher, then they had to go to North Bay. There
was no teacher's college here then eithero And-a, nursing,
they mostly all came here,because at that time there was
a residence~fhat they could stay in, ayh,o Now it's all,
isn't it alJJJniversity and just ...
The college, stays there, yeah.
Yeah, uhm uhm. And, 'cause quite a few nurses, quite a
few pupils come out, ayh, quite a few pupils came up.
Do you recall the, uhm, it would be mostly boys who
continued on to high school? Or was it sort of half and
half?
~~)
No,no, no. Half and half--a lot of~girls, nursing, teaching.
Like I say, I know they had to go
to
North Bay to teach, because when we wer
on the road, we
were in North Bay,working, and this young girl was in
college there, and she used to come down to visit us, ayh.
And this is how I know they had to go to school,into
North Bay to go to school,
Oh no, the, the, girls
had uh, came out, there was ai many go , as boys.
having more, uh, they were, should go first, were the, uh,
foreigners
. You know, they thought the boys
were, should go, and the girls should stay home. But in
among our, we, that was never, .uh, prevalent were we, you
know, girls, if they wanted to gOf'\iad the same chance as
boys, whereas with some of the foreigners,the boys had to
go first. Even if they're dumber. You know. They were
the, they were the misters.
You mean there were.
~~-_·,:~a:.,~~,.. a lot of
foreign families?
Yes, there waso Uhm Uhm.
What nationality would be ,,.,, ----7. (~)
Uhh, uho Mostly Italians, there was ah, a couple of
Ukrainian families, but they were mostly *alians down
thereo And ah, then all, men that came i o work in the
st.mnner, brought their families, in Sudbury ?)o But ah,
Did the connnunity, uh, did they reach together?
Oh yeso Uhm , uhm, uhm uhm. Like I say, there were so few,
ayh, that it took everybody to, to get anything going.
But as I can remember, we had some good times. We used to
ha ve big picnics, you know, in the summer. And ah, pie
socials, kids didn't even know what a pie social was.
What's a pie social?
It's a box social, where you make this fanc, oh no, fancy,
and there was at this, uh, most of the time there was
such a competition on who would make the best, the nicest
box, ayh. And uh, then you'd have to have it auctioned off,
and ... You know, you never hear of those things any moreo
That was just something you do for ... I must, I must
suggest that to Home League sometime, just for fun. 'Cause
their always looking for something different to do, you
know. We have teas and, and~things, but that\/ was J1~fent:_
~-~t\\~

~\) 5~

�'
-11-

G:

A:

And they always said they could tell the teachers
' box,
'cause it was always so much fancier, she had so much to
work with, ayh. And I can remember this one guy had
quite a crush on this teacher, and ah, this, she just put
it in a, in a plain brown box with a bow on it, ayho And
this great big fancy box came up, and he thought it was
hers, and he bid, bid so way up high. And here it was
~
married woman, she had about six kids. And here
comes this box, and he didn't bother, and here it was the
teacher'so It went for about a dollar, ayh. But, like
I say, everybody had to, to chip in, ayh,because it was,
but we had, we made our own mi
, we had to go and
build our own mi
shack, put a stove in, to, to
change our shoeso We used to do it in the station, and
then the officials got mad and kicked us out of there,
so ... But everything seemed to, I don't know, everybody
seemed to pitch in and, •o• I guess
smaller
cotm:Ilunities are like that. I don't know, they always
like the ... Like I was telling the kids, I think we had
just as much fun then--there wasn't G!.any money, but, but
we were fortunate enough that nobody was hard up. And,
like I say, if anybody had a problem, everybody was there
to help them.
.c~1:r --\.
Yeah, I've also found that places that women~didn't have
so many social service agencies as we do now, there was a
whole sort of, policing force within the, in the region.
If someone was mistreating his wife, or those kind of
prob 1 ems .
~ ere.'s·
Yes, yes. Oh yeaho I think A far too much hand-outs
these days. I know I did volunteer work
and I
do meals on wheels, too,ayh. But boy, oh boy, there's
some funny things going on there too. I know I used to
go

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\

HF,RSTORY

I

P10JECT

Mrs. Helen Atkinson interviewed by Geore;ina Garrett and Karen Dubinsky

G.G.

You were going to tell a story about Mrs. Miller, the b~acksmith in Dorion.

A.

She wasn't really known as a blacksmith but she always had a lot of horses
on her own farm, back in the valley, up in the Ouimet Canyon area. In the
early '20's you had teams of horses, particularly heavy horses - this is what
they used to haul pulp in the bush camps.

Mrs. :Miller and the hired man,

Alec Boisie, they both hired on to t he Provincial, I think that was in F.W.
the Abitibi was a few years ago, was the Provincial Timber Co. - I don't
think it was the Provincial Timber Co., I'm not sure whet it was really called.
Anyway, they went back into camp and of course she took one teai~ and Alec
took another team and the shacks they lived in in those days are a far cry
from the type of things they live in today, in bush camps. It came time to
go to bed and of course all the other men in that particular sleep schack
were all a little wary about ~etting undressed because a woman was in the camp
but she couldn't load her - I guess it would be sleighs because they did most
of the hauling in the winter time on sleighs.

Q.
A.

Did she hire herself to haul lumber?
This wasn ' t lumber, this was pulp - ther's a difference. She had to load it
and it was 4 foot sticks and you would load it from the piles the cutters
had cut and they were all cut with ordinary saws in those days, not power saws.
She turned around to the men and she said, "Look fellows, you might as well
go to sleep .... " (she was already in bed) " .... all I came for was to haul
pulp like the rest of you."

And she turned over and went to sleep.

I al-

ways thought that was so 2.propos - women's lib. away back 58 years ago.

She

was g_uite the old girl, I just loved Mrs. Miller, she was really a darling
person.
Q.

Where was her husband at this point?

A.

I don ' t know, I asked about this the other day because I thought of this story.
I've got two or three of these, of these old stories, with these old time c:;als

�with women's lib ideas.

A lot of people nowad.ays figure that they went along

with everything their husbands said.

They did to a point but sometimes they

could dig their toes in and make things pretty miserable, in a very subtle
manner that a lot of girls nowadays don't do, can ' t do because once they had
the training how to do it.

But her husband, I don ' t !mow whether he died or

she left him, I really don't know. Bill Holder might be able to tell you
that. She stayed one winter with old Bill Holder down there, and she was an
old lady when she died - she was way into her 90 ' s.

She was the most beautiful

cook and it used to be cute to go and visit her and old Alec Boisie, he had
been the hired man, but by this time you're both getting old and he had his not his part of the house exactly, but he had a sort of sittinG room bedroom
and it ·was quite large because it was a fairly large house - and she had her
end of the house.

I remember the last time I was there.

They had no power

back there yet, there wasn't sufficient population for the expense and they
each had their radio and we were there one Saturday afternoon.

We had gone

out - my husband had to get something from Mrs. Miller - however ::he turned
on the radio, this wasn ' t that many years ago, I don ' t think T.V. 'shad come
up yet, we were johnny-come-lately's as far as T.V. reception was concerned,
with Thunder Bay. So we had to listen to the radio and Alec, he comes to
the door and he says, "If you think that is a good one, come and hear mine."
Well, I wasn't going to say that this was better. It wasn ' t exactly a feud
but it Has a sort of one-upmanship all the time. It was really charming.
I don't think a lot of people were aware of it but it used to really tittilate
me because my grandfather and grandmother were very much the same - always
Q.

one up on each other, but that pulp story I thought was beautiful.
How did she get a reputation as a blacksmith?

A.

She did do her own blacksmithinB so far as I know.

Long after I came out to

Dorion she riould come out to the store, to Bratten ' s store, it used to be up
on the side road, ana_ then they built the big new place and they sold it

3 or 4 years ago.

She came out with a buggy - she was still coming out with

one of them.

Q.

How did she survive financially?

A.

She farmed back there and that uas exactly why you go back in the bush with
the horses in the Hinter time, because He used to have this cash, I don't
know what they goi, but it shouldn't be that hard to find out.

�Q.
A.

She'd cut her own wood?
No, she wouldn't be cutting the pulpwood, she was just hauling from somewhere
out to a landing which would usually be on a lake so they could raft it down
in spring.

Q.

A.

You must be from the east.

No.
If you've never seen them form a raft, they haven't been doing that for a

A.

long time.
I've seen it in Lake Nipigon.
Yes, you see the big rafts there.

Q.

too.
Does she have descendants that are still living?

Q.

A.

'l.
A.

Not that I know of.
She never had children then?
I couldn't even tell you that.

Used to raft down here on the Black Sturgeon

Never heard it mentioned but I'm not saying ....

when I first met her she was a woman in her 60's and you don ' t ..... When I
first saw the house, and it was a log place that they had built, it was really
nice, I always wished we had had it. It was a really beautiful place with
a great

Q.
A.

big lot

- they are the "in" thing now.

This is your husband's mother.
Yes. But mousy places because mice could get in.

Oh, boy, there were mice.

They had come from England in 1910, Joe wasn't born until they got out here.
They lived in F.W. for perhaps a year or two and then they got the place
fixed, the farm.

They bought the property down her, or homesteaded it.

That's

somethine; I'm not sure about, there is a difference. I think it was bought.
They were in it together - Grandpa Atkinson and Grand.ma Atkinson who has
been dead for years and years and her brother, Foster, was his last name.
Anyway, when they got off the train, when they came from F. W. and they had
everything loaded into one box car - they landed out her out on
Station, so they had to walk up the track a mile from the station just beside
the ____ to the ______ which is not too far from the track.

It is

right across the highway from where the track is and where the highway is now.
The sister was about 4 when they got to this farm and the house was just
rounded logs with the cracks because they don't fit smooth like timbers do.
There were even the chips lying around - this is a family story told over the
years although Joe was only a baby - about 3 months old - he wouldn 't remember but he has heard it often enough. It was just a rough building and this

�is what you're supposed to live in with a 3 or 4 month baby and a 4 year old
daughter.

Bessie, the 4 year old - Elisabeth - she looked around the place

and said to her mother, "Do we have to live in this woodshed?"

I found out

anyway by asking members of the family - Bessie in particular -.how you
could get a place like that liveable. You can imagine walking int.o a rough
log place, what would you do with it? She said they used mud and sawdust and
anything you could get to chink it for the winter because it was about June
when they came in.

They got it all chinked up and then they used gunny sacks

in which the animal feed came in and I think perhaps one cow·was all they had,
and you would tack that to make a smooth finish, as

smooth as you could 5et

it and then you would, later on if you could afford a few rolls of wallpaper,
then you made home-made flour paste and glued it on.

It took several years

to get tse place into something decent, when I first saw it in 1938, it was
Q.
A.

really'a charming place but when you think of how it at first was.
tlhat did they do for furniture?
Theirs was with them, in fact there is a walnut rocking chair - it is really
beautiful, I think it's called a Queen Anne style - I ' m not saying 1t's a
real Queen Anne, I don't even Imow where the thing came from.

I just gave

Q.
A.

it to my daughter-in-law and my son because we used to use it in our summer
cottage. There is quite a few things like that - the clock they brought with
them was a wedding present from England. There was also china.
Did they want to farm? Is that why they came here?
In those days in England, if you owned 160 acres of property, they were always

Q.

relating it to what it was like in England. Where would you ever buy that
property yourself? Anyone in a working class atmosphere, themselves would
never be able to buy it in England - they can't yet I don ' t think.
You 're a large gandowner if you own 100 acrs.

A.

Right - Grandpa owned more than that - he owned 320 acres, 160 anyway, that
would be safe to say, and a grandson has it now.

Q.

We found that so many people when they came to the middle of the bush in
Northern Ontario, would always bring something likecchina etc, to represent
the good life.

A.

That's right because, they were perhaps a little different then all the settlers.

Joe has pictures of when they were just kids ·- all of the pictures

of Joe and the younger brother, Ben, who owns a garage over here and is living
in a fantastic house, shows them with their white shirts on on Sunday with
the ties on and always the white linen tablecloths on the table.

So you

brought your culture with you, even though your environment was a little crude
like it would be in the bush at that time, but you did have a certain amount~

�of culture, especially the

people from Britain.

Q.

Do you think they were disappointed?

A.

I don't think so, Joe's mother died 4..5 years ago and Grandpa Atkinson went
back to England - the first time he went back - Joe and I 1xere already married
and you used to hear these stor~es about England and you used to think you ' d
never want to see the place because everything was super.

I asked him how

he found things and asked him if everything was better than Canada because
this was how we always used to rib him.

He said "Oh, Blast.

They are so

blind over there, some of the places don't even have electricity !"

That shut

him up, I never heard anymore about England.
Q.

~Je talked to a woman - Catherine Stephenson.

A.

Oh, yes, she was a war bride.

Q.

No, she wasn't because she came over here as a young girls anddstayed with her
aunt and lLY1cle.

She has been here since 1924 and. she would say "home"

meaning England.
A.

They do talk like that because my people are Scottish from Manitoba and it
,;•ms "home" and when you get to see those old Scottish people together.

I

remember not too long before Dad and r1other died there were a few Scottish
people and they uould all go back to the brog11e like they had only come over
a year ago and they'd been out here since ... Dad since he was 17 years old
and that Has 60 years and they could go back into that easily.

In fact my

brother and I used to be able to do it too because you hear it for so long.
~.

Do you knm-.r if there was any i:nvolvement here on the part of the Women's
Institute in the suffrage movement?

A.

That I have never heard of.

Ontario were johnny-come-lately ' s women-wise,

as far as separtism was concerned.

Manitoba was the loader in that.

Q.

It seems most of the rural communities were ......... .

A.

Have you any idea how many women it doesn't mean a damn thine: to as far as the
vote is concerned now?

You know what one woman told me at the last election?

She said, "I'm not too sure who I'm going to vot for but ....... "

I can rem-

ember one girl telling me, "There was a big dance and I wanted to go and I
didn't have a decent dress" so she dug out some flour sacks, nq sugar bags,
and "I dyed them and I macle myself a dress.

I cut buttons off old shirt·s

that were in the ras bag until I had enough" and she had it buttoned all
down the front 1--rith a belt to match.
new to wear.

I was 16 and you had to have something

�told me how her mother would make dresses out of flour sacks -

Q.

they bleached them so that all the writing on them caJne off and then made

A.

dresses.
And pants, underpants.

I remember when I first came to Dorion - you were

just getting out of the Depression in ' 39, I came that fall and the war started
in September.

I remember a friend that lived a mile from us, making kids'

underwear - slips - but she put lace on them, little panties with lace, so
Q.

A.

Q.
A.

there was this little bit of culture.
It's funny, now they sell flour sack tops in stores and leave the writing on.
You're kidding.
Oh, yes - Robin Hood. I doubt if it is real flour sacks ....
. ... That was 1904 .... but I do rememner that because 74 years ago I was even
surprised when I read this, that they actually elected a woman a treasurer,
when there were all the men, . . . .Nrs. S. Holder ....

Q.

A.

I thought the pr~iries had long, severe winters.
They do, but not as lonr as ours. You go out there in April and the grain is
up all around, where you are not plantine; anything here at all.

We just plaated

our tomatoes this morning, and I think that has a lot to do with it.

Also

you were greatly dependant on your gardens for a lot of your vegetables, because those old girls used to can stuff and you had root cellars and that.
If you had early frosts and frosts during the summer which are very prevalent
in this part of the country, in Eastern Ontario. So if your earden is damagQ.

ed to any extent .....
I remember reading about a pioneer and the first year everything was wiped out.

A.

It was all wiped out with frost.
problem.

Getting meals ready must have been a real

Take your potatoe crop, suppose you had an extremel~· ~,;ret fall and

you couldn ' t bet them picked up or harvested and you lost half of them. You
;-rere dependant upon your own potatoe crop because if yours was damaged with
some of those diseases, 9 times ou:t; of 10 your neighbors would have the same
problem.

If you were lucky enough and you always had to save potatoes from

last year's pla11ting for next year's seed in this part of the oountry because
shipping Has pretty grim in those days too.
one?
Q.
A.

Doctors - how would you eet to

A lot of children died uith diseases.

Did you know any mid-wives in this area?
Yes, Mrs. Watty was a midwife, and Joe's sister in the ' JO ' s. She was a
e:-raduate nurse in St. Joseph's and she used to work in with the Department

�of Agriculture - you've heard of their extension services - and she would
go around giving home nursin:; courses which is the "in" thing now.

Keep the

penple·home and go and take care of them there because the hospitals are
running on shortened money and the more severe cases go to the hospital.

In

those days, suppose you had a very ill child and you were living way back in
the ______ area where we lived for JO years and the roads Here blocked
in the winter, how would you get out?

You had to depend on yourself and

whatever medicines you had or old fashioned remedies.

That pulled a lot of

them through but a great many died too.
Q.

Do you think the women down here learned anythine; from the native women who

A.

had a lot of skills in living in this kind of "nvironment?
Dorion? Perhaps no, because it wasn't a real bic_; Indian area, not for a long •
time.

In Hurkett there were a lot of Indian people.

They interreacted in -

the smoking of fish, now a lot of people did smoke fish, especially the suckers
that ran heavily in spring and you could get loads of them.
Q.

for the winter.
People ate suckers?

That was fish

In Th1mder 13ay they don ' t eat suckers - they are wormy

fish.
A.

They are notaall wormy.
cake out of them.

I canned them too.

You can make a beautiful fish

And they learned a great many things about canning.

The

men were pretty fair hunters and even during the Depression in the offseason, there were loads of times that a moos or deer - that ' s where your
meat came from.
Q.

Do. you think women developed the skills as they lived or did they come here
with some kind of Imowledge of medicine etc?

A,

I think both of your suggestions are correct in some instances.

Also a

0

reat

many of the women did get their information from older women - learn things
from neighbors like cooking - recipes go from first to last.

In this area

not too many ethnic groups came in from Europe until after the First World
-rar so that a lot of those women wouldn't have too many of those skills unless they were rural women but rural women have always had a lot of these
types because it is learnt from mother to daughter etc.

I had an extremely

good neighbor - Mrs. Reno - they were very early settlers in 1910 and she had
slews of relatives left, sons and daughters and grandchildren.

But mentioning

the medical skills, in those days Mrs. Watty delivered several of Mrs. Reno's

1

�family.

My oldest son was very sick with diarrehea and I had him into see

a specialist in town and he gave this prescription but nothing worked so
Mrs. Reno came over one day - she said she could sive mef something for, that.
He was about 18 months and was he sick, he lost a lot of weight.

She sent

one of the daughters over with raspberry bushes - just the cane - and told
me to cut them up and boil them and simmer for about 10 minutes.

Strain it

carefully through several layers of material so none of the thorns came
through and bive it to him in a bottle or anyway he ' s going to drink it.

In

two days he was all cleared up. :She said her mother had told her that trick.
I remember telling that to a child specialist and he said he wouldn't doubt
it and that some of those old girls had marvellous treatments they think of.
Q.

Have you ever heard of lemon juice being used widely as a birth control method?

A.

You were talking to Bill, I ' ve got sheets of stuff that he sent me long ago.
How about mountain ash berries, have you ever tried them?

Q.

I hear they're poisonous.

A.

No, they aren't.

You've heard of Pete ____ from the Ministry of Natural

Resources, well his wife asked me if I had mad it and I said I had twice.
Jello from mountain ash because I read it was good. I don ' t doubt that it ' s
loaded with Vitamin C but, it ' s just like wild plums, can ' t get enough sugar
in to cut the sharpness out of it.

Q.
A.

What about baking soda?
Never.

Do you know if that was a good ...... .

Q.

Fill capsules up with baking soda and lemon juice.

A.

That sounds like a placebo.

Q.

Do you think there is a lot of co-operation between women in Dorion and the
Hurkett area?

A.
Q.

There is some interaction but not really.
Hhy didn't they mix?

A.

I don't know, I've often wondered.

I can remember seeing that done as a placebo.

They were always friendly and if anyone

got burned out, now I ' m thinking of a long time ago, you'll find there are
always more people in Dorion that settled as families than what there were
down there.

Old families as compared to what there is in Hurkett.

Because

a lot of people down there were ori,:inally, their families were from Dorion.
There was an institute but with a little interractiion.
Q.

I don't mean between women of Hurkett and Dorion, I mean the women in Dorion
itself.

�'

.
A.

Yes, there still 1s, to a great extent but a gr;eat extent of the people 1n

Dorion have gone to school together which gives you a sort of - a great many
of' the families are related through marriage. In fact i t took me three y8&amp;'C'S
to get it aJ.l strai~ened out when I first came. You didn't. say anything
about anybody because i t could be a sister-in==law, a cousin or an aunt or an
uncle etc., so you said nothing because after you'd get caught they'd say,
"Oh• yes, that's my brother's wife or she's my aunt on my father's side." Get
pretty leery about sqing anything.
Q.,

What about in the older ~s?

A.

Just the sams.. there was just as much. whan they were
Church that doesn •t stand anymore, the Anglican Church
and the Baptist Ohurch had something also and then the
'l'he Anglicans perhaps would h:.e a _ _ _ _ an Fricuey

building the Baptist
had an annual. picnic
Catholic Church too.
~ t and you could

Q.

depend on the same people being on that one as would be on the Catholic one
because they intemixed. a great deal, no never ulnd as far as religion was
concemed.
Do you think ·the relationships bet-ween women overcame etlmic and religious
boundaries?
You've heard of the Intemational Da.y that the Institu·t.es have? Well, we had
one ~t the haJ.l quite a f'ew years ago and i t made no nwer :nind he:re. I was
really surprised when I first came to Dorion. I had been brought up that
w~ m;rsel.£ because when I went to school we had the League of Nations. One
thing I rsaember the first year I started public sohool, I was going on 9
and I didJ1't even know what the poor tea.chllr was talking about. She toldus
we shollldn ~t eat garlic before we came to s~hool. Especially in the wint~
time when the roams would be just sick, these were first generation Canad1ana
like JI\YSelf' and theyt'J. have strings around their 11eck. On old woman lived
in Dorion and my sister-in-law, for the oldest boy, that was just what she
tol'- rJ.m to use - you couldn'•t. get, near the poor little guy. Garlic was a
cure all for everything even then, they used to put turpentine on brown paper
and .put i t on your chest £or a &lt;..~ or on the soles ot your
feet. What your
.
feet had to do with your chest I don~t Imow.
Was the Wamen•s Institute the only organizational format?
Yes and 1.t did a tremendous amount o£ good.
V e1.vy tiue of a lot of places.

A.

Almost ever.y-where.

Q.
A.

Q.

A.

�Why do. you think that was?
I

Q,
A.

Q.

A.

You're too young to realize there were not too many women's organizations.
Actually it is the largest one in the world ~th the grea.tes number of members,
at last count.....it was about 7 million. The ~icanadian Women's Club was an old
club but it was, ~trlct~y urban und th~ sam.e with the Canadian W(&gt;Dlen•s Press
Club but it •s called Median Club now. It is also old but- strictly urban. There
was .not~ in th~ rural areas - II183'be the famer•s Association and the _women
were invited especially a £aw times in Ea.stern Ontario.
You m..,an the United _F armers Part,y tha.t won the election?
l'lo. Mrs. Ho?d.less - Izvine Lee is the man I was thinking of. He was responsible for get.ting it started. He invited. her to go a..1:oim.d with him and do
the first speaking at this fa.1.111ar's meeting and ·t;he women had been invited.
I oan•·t remember what it was C"~cl. I've aJ.wqs heard va.n~e things about it
over t.ha yeaxs and nEJV'er could pin anyb~ dmmo There were the Junior Famers
and there was alweya the Woodlands ~ch groups. I don•t think there was a
Catholic Womens• Leac,~e but I think there is now in Hurkett, Dorion and
Pearl but that is very contampera.ry_.
Where do ~.QU think that 1 t wa..'3 the Women •s Institute that too!t off? Why is
it so extensive?
When i·t first stuted. in Ca..?lada. - and it is ver:, big 1n a ,l ot of oth~ countries where a lot of what we have leaJ;ned 1n t,he :N.rst 25 to 30 years of it ,s
being o:r6dnized. in Canada - food production and preparations and preserving
food etc. _,. -they are just wor~ on that in a lot or areas now. In the developing countries - and some develop but there is a very great dif;l'erence
between - beca.1.tse most of those countries don tt µave a midc!le cl~s such a~
t-1e .do,. They have the very rich or the very poor - there is .1 very thin line
of' in-between where t'1.e masses of Canada and t~e U.s, . and even J3%'1ta1n are
ma.de .up of the middle class. Fduca.tion had never ~een too big in some of
th, .. countries. Ou.r's was the one that ssid women should be educated and
they did the best to educating tlte women - maybe mor~ in the line of housekeeping skills, cleanliness and things people take for granted. no~. Pasteurizing milk,. public hea1th service, educattn~ women - if you read any of those
stories about the first woman doctor .. sh~ ~ ter.r:1ble times getting t:t,eough
tmiverei.;.y because they didn •t feel she wo~d have the a.bllity, the brains,
etc.. You were al.wB.¥S class.e a a.s a second-cl3Ss citizen 1t· not fourth-class

�,.

after the animals if they came off a farm.

I think that's what it was and

Q.

the women were aw:.i., of j t •
We looked at the Le~~~ b&lt;;'ok from ~
- Hymer's area 1·Jomen 's Institute and
it is really good. It gave outlines of some of the topics discussed at meet-

A.

ings.
Some of them are very interesting.
Laws pertaining to Ontario women - and that is a contemparary issue - was in

Q.

1913 discussed.
A.

It's like everything else you get - you oute;row things. But there have been
a ,ireat many things that have been brought into law as far as women and children are concerned.

One of the big deals here

is the family laws.

four years ago a_nd still is,

Some of the women had been cut off 1-:ithout

a dime.

The

husband diecl and left half of it to the church or J/4 of the women worked
Q.

like dogs.
Mrs. Hymers, my neighbor, considered herself to be a very independanrfi, strong
woman - do you think their husbands treated them as equals because they worked so hard on the farm and work in the bush etc., or do you think that even
though they had these skills they weren't ...

A.

It depends entirely on the man-woman relationship. My mother was a very
independant woman, she and dad got along very well. I think it depends on
the people themselves. Fith all the talk etc., it takes two if you're going
to be married - it takes a certain relationship but it depends on you as
much as your husband.

Q.
A.

What was the attitude of the men here, to the Women's Instutute?
I'm a fairly new member compared to others because it had been operating for
years before I ever heard of it, although my grandmother belonged in Manitoba.
I think they kind of made fun because you actually do get that attitude even
yet with a lot of women's groups.
so.

Chatter and stitch type of thing but not

I think women do a lot of talking but men do too, all you have to do is

go to conferences these days - they talk and talk.

Maybe not so much modern

vromen - the use of the husband in your family came first even though you
worked outside, and loads of them did, held down a full-time job.
interested in your family first and then the job.

You were

First you have to be an

individual yourself and an independa.nt type of person. You can't do a good
job on those two, I don't care Hho you are. If you can't carry on a good
relationship Hith yourself. If you can't be happy with yourself you won't be

LI

�happy with anybody.

I think a lot of pioneer women learned how to live with

themselves first ru1d then the rest comes easy.

I ' m thinking of all the women

I knew who had been active all their lives, have done.all those things, have
been married and are still married to the same person. I ' m not counting the
friends who have been divorced two or three times because they could be married 49 times and they ' d go and do the same thing everytime.

First you learn

about yourselves, I think that is something a lot of younger women aren ' t
aware of. This finding yourself that you're always talking about is not a
thin~ to talk about, it ' s a thing to do because no one can do it but you and
it comes from inside not from all the blah blah.

I don ' t care who you are .

. . . . . . Invariably you take lunch with them, so they served coffee and sandwiches.
Q.

But women never did the firefighting themselves.

A.

No, but some of the younger women now, because women have been incorporating
Hith some of the fire departments, especially the volunteer groups because
of the men beini:;; away all day.

I think i:aka beka - they had the first women

who actually drove the truck, they are trying to do that now here.

But there

is al Hays enough men around here that work right in within the community .
. . . . . . we didn ' t 3et any grants or anything - they did the whole thing themselves.

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                    <text>Mrs. Jacobson
Born in Scotland
Came to Canada in 1902 or 3
Lived in Dorion - came to work - knew a family - all bush
No roads - CPR wheat freight - once a week
Bishops Trail - went to a mine - train delivered groceries
Small cabin - little bit of timber
13 children - she was the oldest
Mother - Mrs. Whatie?
- was a midwife.
Men were not allowed to ~ring their wi~es up - her father was the
Justice of the Peace and convinced the authorities to let the women
come up.
Mother went to deliver a bab,. - would celebrate for about 48 hours
after.
Mother was not trained - read a doctor's book - used ca~bolic acid to
sterilize - imx~XENX«s - unpaid ~or task All we ever got was colds.
Who delivered your mother's children? My dad. Doctor for the last
one. She did not like it.
Many miles for a doctor to travel - came from Port Arthur.
Tasks as children - clear the bush, got to school for about 3 months.
Log school about a mile and three quarters away. Had to walk
Consolidated school came for her children.
Didn't h~ve any tea chers.
1920 or so worked for the YMCA, cooked, cleaned- mar~ied .round 1938.
Went to Schreiber.
Was working during the depression - remembers the reight trains
being loaded with men.
Aroi, nd Hurkett, nm money paid to men - reporter from T. o. Star did
story - refer to William Holder.
Hurkett and Dorion - active politically. Women attended meetings.
Pass on the railroad once a year for working in the Y. Went somewhere
each year. - Winnipeg,
, Victoria, Seatle, Travellea by herself.
Everything went well while travelling.
Tra velled alone. Went to Windsor.
Relates an incident once when she lost her suitcase on a train.
Started at $30. per month and board. Demanded higlier wages. Went
to $45. per month. No problem in holding dovvn her job. 0.K. for single
women to work. 7 days a week. 8:00 to 5:00
Second World War - not affected by it.
Very little communication. Mail regµ.l ~rly delivered. Had to be.
Different from today.
Mrs. Miller - did not know her. Got quite a chuckle out of her.
I cut pu~pwood. 4 foot wood. Used cross-cut saw, axe and chisel.
Hauled it to Lake Superior.. 80 chords, in one winter.
Summer - vegetable garden, gathered fruit (wild).
Went hungry one summer but managed to get a deer.
Discuss a friend of the family, - Harry Bxxim,Bryan\, organizer of some
labour unions.
Entertainment - dances once a week.
Dances usuaJjy at someone's house - fiddler - eventually got a tovvn hall.

�Mrs. Jacobson - page 2
~

■ II

House in Do~ion - 1-room log shack - shovel off snow on roof Relates story of Lynx coming to visit house.
Used to snare rabbits, fish for trout
Kept house warm by cook stove.
More and more children came - house did not expand - just the family.
Eventually built a bigger house.
She did not live in-.the biggeF house.
Small ravine with root nose - well wit~ surface waten - dug well.
Summer - water turned broyvnJ - mosquito larvae in summer - would
touch the water and the laryae would dive under - then they would
draw the water.
Baths - once a week - barrel cut in half would be bathtub.
Friendly community
No alcohol - too busy - trying to get a farm going
Ha d no cattle - chickens and pi~ they had
Hitched pigs up to a sleigh - made a bell for the pig but it did not
like it.
Pig would follow the kids like a dog.
Used to f ollow her to the trapline. Eventually had to slaughter the pig.
Indian f a milies - on across the tracks in Hurkett w man
had an Indian housekeeper with a wooden leg.
Indians were "down the line". Little contact with the whites.
Not many ethnic groups in Dorion - mostly from down east
Hurkett - Bulgarian population
Knew little about other people's backgrounds.
1933 CCF was organized - 1934 she joined Railroaders against the CCF
Wm1x~xEaxxxkx~xN~mxsx
She was attending the meetings so when she went to vote her name
was alrea,dy struck off the list
Nothing much you could do about it.
Active in the CCF - worked in Gommittee rooms - went to conventions.
(Tape is blank here)

�</text>
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Jacobson (1900-2007) lived along the North Shore for much of her life, working for the CPR's YMCA in Schreiber for a time, and raising a family. She was also very involved with the CCF/NDP. The interview speaks to her childhood in Dorion, time working, and involvement with the CCF. &#13;
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The recording consists of two sides of one cassette tape, available here as two MP3 files. (Click on the speaker logo to play each file.) The transcript is available by clicking on the image thumbnail.&#13;
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Please note that this tape includes discussion of settler-Indigenous relations, using language that would not be seen as sensitive or appropriate today.</text>
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'/
_,

Mrs. Stephenson:
Interviewer:

(exactly as transcribed in
handwritten form)

Murillo

Karen Dubinsky and Helen Lovekin

(Children count to 5--fore run)
K:

We're taling today to Mrs. Stephenson, from Murillo.
Could you tell me what year you were born in?

Mrs. S:
K:

Oh, 1904.

Yah, and how long have you lived here?

Mrs. S:

And I have lived in Murillo since I came here in
1924.

K:

Where from?

Mrs. S:
K:

Really?

Mrs. S:
K:

From England.
Did you come straight here?

And I came right to Murillo.

Yah?

Mrs. S:

Well I came, yiu know, I landed in Montreal, and
came to Fort William and came here.

K:

Did you come with your family?

Mrs. S: No, I came on my own.

Well, my mother brought me

to Montreal and then I came up here alone, and I
came to my Uncle (Lance)?
farm.
to.

And I came up to that

That's the picture of the farm that I came
----·------

Out on th~J i § : ~ And I lived there

from then until I moved to Murillo, here in this
little house, in about 9 years, about 9 years whenn
I moved out here to live when I lost my husband.
I couldn't live on the farm.

I had to seel it and

I moved to this little house.
H:

What did you arise on the farm?

Mrs. S:

Who me, I was orignially raised in England.

�-2H:

No, raise on the farm.

Mrs. S:
H:

Oh yes, I was raised in England on a farm.

No, I mean your livestock.

Mrs. S:

Oh yes, we had a dairy farm and sold milk to
the Co-op Dairy.

K:

What dinds of work did you do on the farm?

Mrs. S:

Oh, outdoors.

Well, I had to work outdoors and in,

but my, I came to my uncle when my un~le was sick.
He had asthma.

You know what that is.

you can work, some days you can't.

Some days

So I had to

practically do his work and let the easy work for
him to do because when you have asthma, on a muggy
day, you're just like a wind-broken horse.

You

know, you can't breathe so I did the hheavy work and
he had to j do what he could of the lighter jobs.

So

that's the way we managed.
K:

Is that unusual, then, for the woman to be doing the
heavy work on a farm?

Mrs. S:

Well, I was raised in England in the war so in
England in the war everybody worked.
all--that's how I lost my thumb.
on the farm at home.
the farm there.

And you did everythingo
were going to do next.
life.
H:

And there I worked

England home.

We all worked.

Mids and

I worked on

Everybody worked.

You didn't know what you
You was fighting for

That's all.

You didn't go into the cities at all to work?

Mrs. S:

No.

No.

No, it was practically, where I was raised,

�\

-3a farming district, and it was, it was, it was
a little seaside resort and the biggest town was
only four miles from where I lived and it was ...
People came there in the sunnner for their holidays.
H:

In (Borden?)

Mrs. S:

No, it was called (Gould)? but it was, like
(Bordnu-f)?

It was a place like that . where they

have people from London and oh the bigger cities
come there for their holidays.
H:

So you lived on a dairy farm in England and you came
here to work on your uncles's dairy farm as well?

Mrs. S:
H:

And when you were married?

Mrs. S:
H:

Yah.

I was married to ...

A dairy farmer?

Mrs. S:

No.
bush.

He wasn't a farmer.
You know.

He used to work in the

Everyone worked in the bush here.

Well, that's why werwere.

His parentskkept, what

is the Murillo Hotel now.

His mother kept that as

a boarding house and it was a big family and she
did all the cooking, and a daughter, her grown-up ,
daughter, they, each had their jobs and they kept
their roomers and they kept the schoolteacher and
in those days, in those days, they dispatched the
trains from Murillo Station instead of Fort William
and they had two operators, day operator and night
operator and they had .... There was about five men
that stayed at Mrs. Stephenson's boarding house

�-4-

that worked at the station.

And take different

shifts, you know, and that went on for years and
years, and they dispatched the trains from up
here and in those days--when I came here, there was
no--in the winter, you couldn't go to town with
cars, you see, the roads weren't open.

The roads

weren't kept open then.
H:

How did you go to town?

Mrs. S:

With a team and sleigh.

And the farmers would all

grow potatoes to sell in winter and when it got
cold, they would have to make loads.

They would

start off in the morning with a load of sixty bags
of potatoes on and they would build the sleigh so
that they would have a lantern or something in the
centre to keep the potatoes from freezing, and they
would cover them with a tarpolin and they would
drive like that from here to town all winter long.
Maybe three days a week, they'd do like that and,
uh, take fruit and vegetables--fruit! --vegetables
rather, potatoes mostly, into town.
H:

Was that ever one of your duties?

Mrs. S:

No.

Noo

for a mano

I never did that.

That was a day's work

It'd start about six in the morning and

it would take till about twelve to get there, you
know, with a team, and a load of potatoes, sixty
bags of potatoes on a load.
all heavy horses.

You see, and it was

They'd have to take their time.

And then they would put their horses in.

They'd

�-5always have a sale on potatoes.

They would take

them all to one place, to a score or somewhere,
and they would put away, they would take their
horses to rest and feed and they could unload their
load while the horses were feeding and resting.
You worked for your money then, you know.

I suppose

they got about 9Oj cents for the bag of potatoes,
after they'd got them in there.
K:

We have a question about the climate and the environment
of Northwestern Ontario.

How did you feel that that

that made your life particularly different.

I guess the

fact that you couldn't travel into town.
Mrs. S ':'

Well, we never knew the difference.

I mean, as you

got, as times in, as times got a little better, well,
you got some kind of a car, or you got a truck, and
you, the only thing.

You did the same work on the

farm, only you could get tinto town every day of
the week with your stuff with a car instead of
having to go in with horses.
K:

Did you feel that farming in Northwestern Ontario was
comparable to that in England?

Mrs. S:

Oh no.

There was no comparing.

sell things like that over there.

We didn't have to
Over there,

you---farming, you sold the one item and you grew
the feed and everything to produce it.

You know,

you didn't have to buy ..... Here ..... You didn't
have the winters to contend with over there, you
see, you had winter, but it wasn't like the

�-6Canaidan.
over there.

You didn't have snow or ice or that
We were too near the sea.

The sea

helped keep you warm and you could grow something
year round there.

And your -rops are much better,

you know.
H:
Mrs.

Did you find the winters a shock?
S:

No.

The funny thing was I ; dmdn't notice the

winter. I was here.

For quite a long time in that

winter I never even wore rubbers.

I wore leather

boots the first winter I was here .. And I wore
leather boots all winter the first winter I was
here.

I didn't notice the cold.

But the longer

you live here, yougget aclimatized to t this weather
and you get so used to doing like the rest do I su
suppose.

Wear the clothes and the things that you wear

here.

But the first winter you come you don't

notice the cold.

You can stand the cold better

than a Canadian the first winter.
H:

I notice it.

Mrs. S:

Hard to believe but that's the way it was with me
anyhow.

H:

And so because you didn't notice the cold, it wasn't
as difficult to do your daily chores?

Mrs. S:
H:

No.

No.

You just lived your life.

Mrs. S:

You just .... Well I remember the first winter that
I wore slacks, which I never did in England.

I

wore a pair of breeches the first winter, which in

�-7England we never wore slacks.
that when I left England.

It wasn't got to

You wore dresses.

But

the first winter here, I don't know why, but it
was about the time when people was going into
wearing breeches and that for winter.

And of

course I can knit because all English people can
knit.

So I could knit stockings for myself and

mitts and things like that which help too, you
know, help keep you warm.
H:

So it was first the effect of the climate on your
farming that you found different.

Mrs. S:
H:

No.

Not too much different.

No.

Not much.

Mrs. S:

Because farming is farming.
notice here.
out.

Only thing you

Over there you don't turn the cattle

You don't have to take them and break the

ice and wait for them to drink. and see they don't
fall and drown.

You first turn them out and they

can drink you see.

You don't have to have--you

don't have to have running water in the barns, and
things like that over there.

Here, you get up for

that you see, because you have to keep the water
from free~ing.
H:

Didn't you find that made your household work very
difficult?

Mws. S:

Oh no.

Because the water would freeze?
You'd get so used to it that you don't

notice it.

You know you have to do it and it

didn't seem to bother.

�-8-

H:

What did you do--have a large barrell of water and cut
a hole in it every day?

Mrs. S:

Every day yes.

We'd have to go to the cattle.

We

Had to go to the bush and we had--there was running
water in the bush and then in the winter you'd have
to go and chop the ice up and make holes so the
cows could drink.

And stay theEe and see one didn't

push the other in, you know, cause there's always
a bah in a herd of cows.

There's always some--like

kids-- some gonna be there before the others, you
know.

And then after a while, if we get a serious

winter, you might have to haul water for them or
then it got that we used to try and dig a well in
the bush and then we had to go and put a pump in
or dip it up for them, you see.

And you had to sa

stay with them to see that they all drank and came
home again.

Or they maybe get frightened and one

would push theo other in.

Something like that.

So

you was busy all the time.

And, I don't know.

You

got used to it.

And that was the thing to do and

you did it, I guess.
H:

Was Murillo a farm connnunity when you came here?

Mrs. S:

Well yes.
Yes.

There were mostly farmers here dear.

All around, everywhere,-the farms were all a

around the township you see and Oliver Township
was eight miles square or somebhing, quite a big
township, you see, and most of the farms was
a hundred and sixty acres.

�-9H:

That's quite large.

They wguilid

have to clear that

wouldn't they?
Mrs. S:

Oh yeso

They'd have to clear that and when my

uncle came, which was before I did, he saiddthey
used to clear land.

They'd burn over a peice of

land, cut the wood, and burn it over to kill the
stump and then, the next thing you know, they had
another pice of land then, the next thing you
know, they had another piece of land ready for
the plough.
K:

I want to talk about the sotial life.
stuff did you do?

What dind of

Maybe acitve community things with

your church? _ _ _ _ _ ?
Mrs. S:

Yes, ! ah, they seemed to have had a lot of fun.
When I came here their pass-time, they had a lot
of dancing.

Ah, you know, going from place to

place and going to somebody's house SatufdEi.Jy
night or something and have a bash.

And they

would load up a whole load and go somewhere to a
dance.

That was the thing to do.

And they didn't

mind staying up all night to dance.
K:

Did you go into town?

Mrs. S:

You couldn't go into town in the winter, dear.
You--if you went to town--but there was trains-there were locals, they called them locals and
there was a train went west to--where did they
go?--Ignace--up the line somewhere.
Fort William to ...

H:

Silver Mine?

From

�-10Mrs. S:

Oh no.

No.

The train would take them to a station

way up the line.

Was it Ignace?

Somewhere like

that--that was the division point--division point,
you see.

And then it would go up today--there was

a local that would go up today and then it would
come back tomorrow and there was an operator at the
station that you could buy a ticket, and get on the
train and it used to go up in the morning one day
and come back around noon or two o'clock or
sometming and go down to town.
into town like that.

So you could go

And then I think there was a

train at night, about e i even o'clock, that if you
got into town, you could catch thatt rain in town
and it would let you off at a little station.

So

I can remember if the men wanted to go to a hockey
game, they would get into town somehow and they
could come home on that ~leven o'clock train to the
station, you see, and they could get off, and
they'd have to get home from there the best way
they could.
H:

So the women stayed on the farms.

Mrs. S:

Well the women didn't go so much ehen as they do now.
But the men went chiefly because the women didn't
veem to want to go in the wintertime.

H:

Why do yout think they didn't want to go?

Mrs. S:

Well I think it was too cold, for one thing, dear,
and they wasn't that interested in sport as they
are today.

H:

Did the women do

much socializing between themselves
'

�-11-

co-operation on the farm and that?
Mrs. S:

Well the farm women helped on the farm of course,
and of course a lot of them had growing families
and the younger ones, as they grew up, they went to
town to work.

But I can remember when I came they

didn't go to highschool like they do today.

You

went to such a grade here, to about grade seven,
was it?

Here.

Akd if you wanted to go to high-

school, you went downtown and somebody would take
you and keep you and you'd help in the house, help
do the work, and help look after the children for
your board and you went to highschool.
what they did when I came here.
they go to school today.

But that's

It wasn't like

But I think they learned

more that way because that was the thing to do and
that was the only way they could get that much more
of an education, you see.
H:

They had to work for it.

That helps.

Mrs. S:

That helps, you see.

And I think they were better

for it because they knew if they wanted to get
ahead, that's what they had to do.

But today, this

is my opinion, that the kids get it pretty easy
today.

You know.

Then some of them did really well

because they wanted to, you see.

They wanted to go

ahead.
H:

Because of the efforto

Mrs. S:
K:

Yes.

They put the effort into it?

Was it connnon for girls to go on to highschool?

�-12Mrs.
K:

s:

Pardon?

Was it connnon for girls to go on to high school?

Mrs. S:

Oh, the girls used to go too.

T think there was

just as many girls used to go to highschool as
boys.

Some of them did

And they did very well.

real wello
it, you see.

But that was the way they had to do
There's one thing for sure, you

didn't have the money to do it dear, and then
after I came, then we had what we call "The
Hungry Thirties".

You didn't have very much then.

Only what you worked for.
K:

How did the depression affect you?

Mrs. S:

Well, I didn't know then, you see.
to it.

We was used

We was used to doing without for so long.

How can I explain it?

You see, we had gone through

the war and things were hard.
things you couldn't get.

There was alot of

You did with what you could

and you made made a lot of things for yourself.
know.

You

Everybody seemed to be able to sew or knit

so that you clothed yourself and .... But there was
a lot of things that you didn't have that you have
today and nobody seemed to mind.

You just had to

make your life around what you could afford.
K:

Do you think the depression made people more generous in
sharing what little they had?

Mrs. S:

Oh I think people were very good.
figured it out, everybody was good.
well.

The way I had
They got along

It was like a connnunity, you see, and every-

�-13-

body got along just fine with eash other because
that's all they had.

Their pleasures ... they make

their own pleasures and thei r little get-togethers
and that were kind of home-made.

But they enjoyed

themselves, I think.
K:

If a family was suffering more than another, would there
be cases where people would donate things?

Mrs. S:

Well they would get help.

Or somebody ... If there

was a case of sickness or something had happened,
a disaster or something ... Well everybody would dig
in and help.
I think.

Oh yes, people were good to each other,

That's the way I saw them.

You belonged

to the community so, of course, you helped each
other.
K:

How about the Wars, how did they affect the community?
Was there a big affect?

Mrs. S:
K:

The war?

Either the first or the second World War.

Mrs. S:

Well, the first .... ! always told them I didn't know
what war was.

I mean, here.

I didn't know what

war was.
H:

Because they had been in Europe?

Mrs. S:

They were that far away from it that they didn't
know what was was.
volunteered.

The men that went to war,

It was something new.

They didn't

know what they was going into.
H:

Did you ever try to talk any of the men out of going
to war?

�-14-

Mrs. S:

No. No.

It was no use to talk them ou of it.

If

they wanted to go they had to ... They had to learn
what war was.
of it.

Because you couldn't talk them out

Because it got to be in the second War they

had to go whether they wanted to go or not.
at first, yous see, it was the volunteers.

But
And in

war time one volunteer is worth, at the time that
that we thought to make go.
practically volunteers.
was going into.
about.
H:

So the first war was

They didnl t know what they

They didn't know what it was all

They had to learn that when they got there.

Did your husband go?

Mrs. S:

No.
old.

Yes.

He joined when he was seventeen years

And he was in the first waro

And he was in

France and he came home and he came back.

But

then thank goodness, he wasn't my husband then.
In the second war he was and he was too old to go.
But in the first war the youngsters that did join
at seventeen, they didn't know anything about war.
They didn't know what they were getting into.
K:

What were some of the women's activities during the
war as volunteer?

Mrs. S:

Well, they begun to take women int the services in
the war and they worked chiefly as cooks and things
like that.

They were in the Women's Army and they

would chiefly do women's jobs and that.
didn't go to the front.

Theyy

Not ... but there was alot

of things to do.
H:

How did the women manage to keep the farms with the men

�-15gone?
Mrs. S:
H:

Well the way I did I guess.

You just did it.

You just did it.

Mrs. S:

But, of cours~

on the farms around here, there

was the grandparents.

There was grandfathers and

there was children in the clan that could help,
you see.

That was one thmng,--that people did here--

they were great to--like at threshing time--they go
from one to the other and help each other.
didn't have to hire help.

You would come and help .

me and I would come and help you.
thing you know.

That kind of a

They did a lot of that.

saving wood and things l like that.
each other.

They

And

They helped

And got along like that.

They didn't

have to hire somebody to do the work.

They did it

themselves between themselves.

No the people were

good to work with each other and helped each other
out quite a bit and it wasn't like it is today, dear.
You wouldn't.
now from then.
H:

Life is a different thing altogether
Then everybody helped each other.

Now everybody's for themselves.

Mrs. S:

Now everybody's for themselves.

It's a different

idea altogether now.

And I don't know.

People get

along good together.

If you belonged to Murillo

or you belonged to Stanley 0r which ever place you
belonged to you were that groip.
together.
H:

So it was like a family.

You got along

�-16Mrs. S:

Yah, like ...

Side 2
Mrs. S:

I forget how many years before I had enough money
to go home.

H:

Oh yes to visit

Mrs. S:
H:

Back home.

But ____________ ?

But you had to come here from such a veautiful clean
part of the world into the bush.

Mrs

S:

Oh yeso

It was quite a difference you know.

I

can remember coming up here on the CN and I had to
stmp overnight at j Capriole and I didn't know
anybody but there's one hotel at Capriole and the
hotel manager was used to letting people having
them stay overnight, and catch a train the next
morning at eight or something like that.

And then

I can remember catching ahe train and coming on and
I suppose it was North Bay that I had to change
trains and that was in the middle of the night.
And I can remember as long as I live--! was only
young you know.

I suppose about nineteen.

And I

had to get off the train that I was on and go across
the bridge, the river, and get on to another tBain
to take the train to Fort William.

SYou travel

all day and all night and the next morning I got
into Fort William about eight o'clock in :the
morning.

Then I had to phone my incle that I was

in Fort William and had to wait at the station 'til
he drove into the station to get me.

But you see

�-17by the time I came from the time they came, he had
got a car and ... But when they came they had to come
right on to Murillo and then the train didn't put
them off at Murillo and they put them off at a
Kaministiqua.

And they walked back, they walked

the trac~, mmy uncle and I walked the track from
Kam to Murillo.
is.
H:

And you know what walking the track

I walked the track lots but it was no fun.

With all your bags and everything?

Mrs. S:

Oh they left their luggage.

They just walked back.

They just left their luggage in the station and
told the man at the station to send their luggage
back to Murillo, on a train that would come down.
K:

Was that quite an adventure for you, travelling here by
yourself when you were ... ?

Mrs. S:

Well, it was, yes, dear, because you didn't know
the country and you didn't know the people.

Bunt

I'm one of these ... I'm the one that should go to
Canada because I mix with everybody.
mind it.

I didn't

It was quite an adventure but then it

wasn't like it is today.

You had bunks--bunk up

here to sleep on--You didn't mind jt, though.

It

was something new--something you'd never done
beforeo
K:

We mentioned the Suffragist England.

Do you know anything

about the Suffrage movement in Canada?
Mrs. S:

No dear, I don't know very much about the Suffrage
movement at all.

I wasn't used to it at all.

�-18-

K:

How did you think about it then?

Did women discuss it,

do you remember?&gt; ?
Mrs. S:

We never seemed to.

I can't remember in my

raising we had nothing to do with the Suffrage.
Only thing I used to ... the men used to tease the
women about being Suffragettes, but they never
were.
H:

Not where I came from, they weren't.

From the country rather than the city?

Mrs. S:

From the country ... they ... no.

They might have

been in the city or in the bigger cities because,
you see, in England--England is a small country,
but their cities are big and its cities.
Fort William and Port Arthur.

It isn't

It's cities like

Birmingham and places like that where you're
really crowded.
K:

Do you think that, maybe the women in the country, in
rural areas had almost an equality with men, then, since
they were doing similar work?

Mrs. S:

There wasn't, as near as I can remember to
Murillo, there was nobody that really ... they
were just farm people ... They weren't business
people--you know what I mean--I'm not slighting
them or anything--they were just farm people.

H:

Everyone was valuable.

Mrs. S:
H:

Yes. Yes.

They weren't ...

Yes, I understand.

Mrs. S:

They weren't beeter than somebody else or
anythingo

They were a nicely closely-knit

�-19connnunity.

You know, everybody was friends with

everybody else.

And they grew up together and I

think it was an awful nice way to live.

So they

seemed to get along good together and the kids went
to school together and they did everything.
H;

Together.

Mrs. S:

Together.

It was quite a togetherness.

That's the way I figured it anyhow.

Yes.

I thought it

was nice what they used to do.
K:

So women were happy with their lives.

Mrs. S:

Yes.

They were quite happy dear.

They were quite

happy to live the life that they were living.

And

they seemed to have a good time together, and
nobody suffered I don't thmnk.

Nobody suffered.

If they didn't work for it, they didn't have it,
that's all.
H:

And that would be a whole family's fault.

And not

just one member of the family.
Mrs. S:

No I don't think so.

I think they got along quite

well.
K:

You think a life of a woman an a farm has changed alot?

M~s. S:
K:

Oh yes.

In what ways?

Mrs. S:

It's different altogether dear.
know nothing, you see.

The women don't

They got machinery and most

of the women don't have to go out to work.
then they got milking machines.

And

Some women that

really want to get along, well of course they help

�-20outside.

But it isn't like it used to be where

everybody had their jobs to do.
to or not.
it.

Whether you wanted

If you didn't do it, you didn't have

That's all.

But now, you see, they all have

machinery to work with, and they have cars.

Nowg

instead of the women staying home and raising the
family, the women are out to work and they've got
somebody to babysit.
K:

How do you feel about that?

Mrs. S:

I don't like it.

I think that I wouldn't do it if

I had to start out tomorrow.
my own family.

I would want to raise

But now I know there's young people

like you girls who get married and they're in town
doing a job and they've got a hired girl to Jlook
after the house and raise the kids.
not right.

That's not making a home.

has to be home.

Well that's
A mother

If you want a home it's got to be

mother at the head of it.
H:

The mother's the head of the family?

Mrs. S:

The mother is the one that keeps the thing together.
That's my opinion.
young tomorrow.

That's what I would do if I was

If I was young, no matter.

husband was working,

J

If my

would be home, looking after

the house, and his meals would be ready for him
when he got home from work.

If he didn't get home

to have his meal when it was ready, that would be
his fault.

Yes because the trouble today--I'm not

slighting anybody--but the trouble today with them

�-21all, you see, if they go.

The trouble is alot

of them work in town, come in, and instead of
coming home, they have to go and have beer before
coming home.

A beer gets to two or three and

they might come to supper at six o·' clock or they
might not get home 'til all hours of the night.
Well that would be their fault.

If I was keeping

house, they'd come home to supper at six o'clock,
and the supper would be put away and if he come
after, well, that would be ...
H:

Too bad.

Mrs. S:

Too bad.

They'd have to eat wherever they was

visiting, or ... because I don't hold to that.

I

don't hold to these .... There's kids here in the
villages ... I've seen them raised from little.
seen them raised from this high.

I've

Well, now they're

old enough that they're married and they're working
in town.

Well they've got a hired girl to run

the house and they're working a computer in town~
and the maid is raising the children and getting
the supper and all this crap.

Well that's not

being a mother, I don't think.
H:

One thing that always interested me, was that when you
live onaa farm, you have a lot of jobs to do.

Mrs. S:
H:

You have a lot of jobs.

You have a lot of chores and, how do you manage the
children and do your chores at the same time?

Mrs. S:

Well, of course, I haven't got any kids, but the

�-22ones that had them--they take the kids with them-well of course they'll ... And now they don!t do like
they used to because, you see, theyhhave machinery
to milk the cows.
that.

The men can do the milking and

And the mother can stay in and get the

breakfast and get the kids ready for school and
things like that--Where the mother used to go out
and help some too, you see.

But now with the

machinery to work with and that, the men could do
that without the mother helping.
by, they used to go out.

But in days gone

I can remember when I

came, my aunt and my uncle went to out to milk.
Then I got that I could go out ando .. When I got
used to the cows, in a few days, well I could go
and milk.

And she could take a little longer to

get up and have the breakfast ready when we came in
from milking and I took over her place in that
business but when I came here it was a little
different than I was used to but I was used to
working on a farm in the old country for wages, for
working for somebody else and being paid for it.
But all that I had to do outside was help milk
and feed the cows.

And usually the boss's wife

she would help too and she would look after the
chickens and pick up the eggs and all that.
H:

So on your own farm though, if there was just you and
your husband?

Mrs. S:

You helped each other, yes.

�-23H:

You split up the work ...

Mrs. S:

Yes.

We each had our chores to do and helped each

other, you see.

And when it was like planting

potataes or digging potatoes, well I was out
helping with him.

We helped each other.

The more

you helped each other, the more you got for your-you know--you got more of a something together for
yourself.

You did that.

That's the way you live.
other.

I r:nnean that is
Isn't it?

life.

Helping each

When you get married, well, you help each

other and that's the way it was with us on the
farm.

And I used to love to go to the bush and

get wood together.

He would cut it down and I

could help him bring it up and put it in piles
and I'd go and help haul it home with him and
things like that.

Well it was something to do you

see, because you didn't want to be sitting in the
house and your husband out working alone all day
long.
K:

You could go and help him.

Do you think that made for a happier marriage?

Mrs. S:

I think so, Yes.

You were helping each other.

You was doing it for your own good and the more
you did the more you got for yourself.
the way we used to do.

That was

And then your friends and

neighbours, you'd get up a big pile of wood, and
you, d go ... I wouldn't go but the man would go and
help your neighbours haul wood and three or four
neighbours together, they would be, say at our

�-24place this morning, and one

• or the other

neighbours this afternoon or maybe two or three
places in a day.

It all depended on the size of

the piles of wood.

And they get their wood all

cut upa and then the woman would stay home.

If

she wanted tojshe could split a little wood or do
something just to pass the time.

Or you could sit

in the house and read if you wanted to.
have to do all the work.

You didn't

So that's the way we got

along in those days.
H:

You were happy y~ ou were doing it.

Mrs. S:

We were happy, yes and then you'd go to a
neighbours and visit or have a game of cards.
was great.
a big thing.

It

In my younger days here, cards played
You know, everybody played cards.

So

you never was lonesome.
H:

Most people around (to see)?

Mrs. S:

Yes, say I lived here and you could have lived two
or three miles from here--we had a car--and you
dould go there and you'd sit and talk for a few
minutes, and out would come the cards and you'd
play cards, and have a good cime together and
tease each other and have a lunch and come home.
And that's what we used to do for pass-tmme, and
they used to have lots of dances and always they'd
go somewhere every Saturday night and danced all
night.

I used to have a good time years ago.

think far better than they do now.

The young

I

�-25people now--You don't see them!

Of course, the

young people, now, they get on t the bus in the
morning here at seven thirty, they go into town and
some go to this school, and some go to that,
wherever they go to school, and then they're in
town all day.

You don't know whether they're at

school or where they are.
school.

H:

Half of them aren't at

They're sunning the street.

You talked about every winter, your water being frozen,
How did you manage your wash?

Mrs. S:

Oh, we used to melt snow many years ago and
sometimes it would snow and maybe it would pour
and you'd save the soft water, and wash that day.
I still do it.

I can't get over saving myself

water.
K:

It sounds like ...

Mrs. S:
H:

And is it ever beautiful to have a bath ...

In soft water.

Mrs. 3

In soft water.
I know.

And does it feel different.

It's beautiful dear.

difference in soft water.
winter

There's so much

I always- .. and even in the

when I wash my hair, if I haven't got soft

water, I melt snow.

I melt snow for to wash my

hair and things like that.
H:

And

I still do it.

It's good for her hair.

Mrs. S:

Oh yes, beautiful.

But, on the whole, I suppose

we've had our hard times but it was hard in the

�-26hungry thirties.
H:

It was hard in the thirties.

In what way?

Mrs. S:

Well, in the thirties, yous see, my uncle had died
and my aunt and I was alone.

I think for about

eight years my aunt and I farmed alone and I got
somebody to--I got a neighbour to help to do my
ploughing and the seeding in the spring and I did ..
I could cut the hay and everything and I used to
cut hay and coil it and then I would get two or
three of the neighbours would come one day and
help haul it.

I had a thing to unload it with and

I could build my own stack.

I got all kinds of

pictures --I don't know where they are now but I
always had pictures of eveeything I did.
used to build my stack.
lightbulb myself.

And I

Now I can't put up a

But then I used to finish up

the stack and ride down ... come down the hayfork.
H:

That's a bit of hard work.

Mrs. S:

It takes time to do that.

Well, it's talent, yes, you have to know how.
But I used to do that and I could build my own
haystack better than ... I could build it.
you see,

L,.r,.k

I got thekknack.

unload a bale of hay.

But,

You know, you ,

You build your load so

that you can take off a big forkfull here and
you take off a big for~full there, and so on and
then when the hay gets up on the stack, whenever
you're driving out the team, you say, woe, and
r

you stick your fork in that hay and the stack

o

�-27might be from here to over thereo

If I want to

put it over there, I push it there and then I say
''Trip up.''
H:

~lfXXXHXX-i:moqI~~

I see.

Mrs. S:

And they trip ito

And you trip it you see, and

you don;t fork lift trip it, you just buildi it.H:

Oh, yah.

Mrs. S:

And the next forful comes up and you put i it over
there.

If you want to make your corners, you just

push your big for~ful.

It was up in the air.

You could do anything with ito
much hard work.

There wasn't that

You just pushed it.

f\11.d then you

yelled to them to trip.
H:

That's a good idea.

Mrs. S:

That's how you did it.
stack of hay.

It was nothing to build a

It was as easy to make it in a

stack as it was to put it in the barn.
H:

That's a good idea.

Mrso S:

And then, she bails it, you brought it right up
to the }Ast forkful and then I'd have to ride the
fork downo

I didn't mind.

I was young then.

I was so j used to it.

I don't suppose I could unloose

the .................... ?

That's the kids you know.

I ...... .

H:

Did you find that .... did you feel freer in Canada than
in England?

Mrs. S:

Oh no.
England.

I don't know that I was freer than In
We were free there.

But I was free in

�-28Canada.

You were free in Canada.

with the crowd, you're oKay.
H:

If you get along

You're one of the gang.

You didn't have to fit mn anywhere?

Mrs.S: -&gt; No.

And if ... Well people weren't stm.ck up then,

like they are now.

They got ... you see--going to

town to school--going to town--and they've got to
go to town--and they've got to dress.

They've

got to go to town to go to the show or to go to
for
dinner or something or they have to dress ~k the
eveningo

Where--when you would go out together

you only had one dress.
H:

For going out?

Mrs. S:

So that didn't make me different.

That's all you

had so you didn't have to be better than Mrs. J llones.
I think years ago, they was much happier than they
are boday.

That's what I notice.

It's got to be

a little too above themselves.

You see in England,

you have the different classes.

There's the upper

class people, the wealthy people and they treat
the people that work for them real well.

You are

treated real well if you work for somebody else
because they're born to the gentry.

If you're not

born in that class, you're not in that class, in
England, j you know.

I don't know dear, but this

is one thing I will always be proud of--that-when the Queen came to Old Fort William, I had a
friend of mine, he used to teach school.
might--What school did you go to?

You

�-29H:

I didn't go to highschool here.

Mrs. S:
H:

Oh.

But Karen did.

Mrs. S: Hid you go to Fort William?
Mrs. S: Mr. Love--he's a highschool teacher.
• ?
h 1.In.

Do you know

Well he's a great friend of mine.

friends.

We're

We've been friends for over twenty years.

He used to come to our place out on the farm.
loved to come there.
tracks with him.

He

And I used to walk the

I said I don't know how he ever

wanted to be a schoolteacher, because he loved
trains.

And I walked miles and miles of tracks

with Bob.

He hated bricks and mortar.

Ref came

from--he was s born in the States and New York and
Philadelphia and Boston and all those places and

- - - - - - - - - - -and he was quite happy here-out on the farm--he used to be--I used to--whenever
he wanted to go up the tarack I'd go with him-and Lazzy used ... I'd say to Laz, do you want to go
with us?

No.

My husband.
track.

He used to work on the track.

Laz.

No, he didn't want to go on the

He'd walked all the track he'd wanted to.

So I used to go with Bob and we used to go on the
track and he comes here yet.

He comes here for

his holidays and he comes here for Christmas.
And everythmng.
you know.
H:

We're just likeoone of the family,

And he has house down in Vickers Heights.

Were you able to meet the queen?

Did he man~ge

�-30something so you could go and see her when she came
to Old Fort William1
Mrs. S.
H:

Who, Bot?

Yah.

Mrs. S:

Oh, well, he comes.
wants to.

He comes here and stays if he

John, next door, I didn't know John.

He was from Nottingham and

his mother wanted me

to come over and visit her because I was so good
to John so I went to Nottingham--you know
Nottingham forest--it's like it was in Robin Hood's
day.
H:

Smaller maybe, but it's still there.

Mrs. S:

Yes, and another day I had a birthday and the first
phone call.

I answered the phone and that was

John, from home.

And he said, what was it now?

He

said something and then he said, could I talk to
Mr. Brown?

And I said, John, where areyyou?

knew his voice.

Oh, he said, I'm home.

I

I thought

maybe he'd come back to Canada
and he was ringing for to come here.
well wait a minute.
knows your voiceo

So I said,

I'll get Charlie see if he
So I got the cat from sleeping

and put him up to the phone and I said this is
your pa.

And he couldn't understand.

He couldn't

think that that was John on the phone, you know.
He cou ldn't realize it was John.

He couldn't

realize it was his voice over the phone, you see.
But I knew his voice right away.

He said that

�-31he wanted to talk to Mr. Brown.
voice.

It was John's

He didn't say it was John.

He said could

I talk to Mr. Brown and I sai4, John, where are
you?
H:

I was hoping he was back in Canada.

Do you feel that England is still your home, or have
you be ..... .

Mrs. S:

Oh, England is home.

Eng! and will always be

home, dear.
H:

That's your home?

Mrs. S:

Oh, yeso

Because when you was raised there for

twenty years that's home.

I mean you went

through a lot with England.
H:

Well you did the first world war.

Mrs. S:

Yes.

Oh, yes.

And, ~h9 I don't know.

English

people are.o.they're a wonderful gang too.
wonderful.

And what they went through.

They're

Nobody

knows what they went through.

I mean, we lived

right on the coast, you see.

We looked out, from

where I j lived, we looked out onto the Atlantic
Ocean like looking out over Lake Superior here.
And you see, we wasn't a bit afraid of the
Germans.

We wasn't afraid.

We wasn't afraid of

anything because there was the naby--so far apart.
We were surrounded with ships out as far as you co
could--you saw them and we as cocky as heck.

We

wasn't afraid of anything because the Rgyal Navy
was guarding us.

And sometimes you'd be in bed at

night and you're bed would shake under yj ou and

�-32you'd hear the guns.

Well, that's all right.

The Ger .... we, where I lived there was small
ships brought food into" • •

- - - - - - - - - - -and

the Germans you see, they wanted all the
supplies.

They didn't want the people.

didn't want to kill us.

They

They wanted the supplies

and they would catch our little ships coming in
with a load of flour or whatever they was coming
with and they put ... there was about three men on
a motor ship, you know, and they put them in their
guns and take their supplies and they didn't want
the men, nor the shipo

They wanted them to keep

bringing supplies to England so they could steal
them.
H:

Do you think that experience of being not afraid and a
little cocky, because that was a dangerous place to be ....

Mrso S.
H:

It was but we weren't afraid.

I know.

Do you think that helped you when you came up

here?
Mrs. S:
H:

I think so.

Not being afraid?

Mrs. S:

Because.

But you see.

We got that.

H:

We got that in us, too.

It's born in us.

We can't help it.

You're fighting foro

It's yours and you're not

going to give i it up.

That's the way we're made.

So you took

that attitude to Canada and made a good

life.
Tape tw8
Mrs. S:

And there was an Englishman
~

,

ate

h
acer that he

�-33taught with--a teacher that was English born.

H:

(question inaudible)
Do you think that you grew anymore, spiritually, after
you came to Canada?

Mrs. S:

Oh, I don't know, dear.

I think by the time you're

twenty years old, you have grown to what you're
going to be.
H:

Don't you?

Personally I agree with you.

Mrs. S:

I mean, we will always be English because we were
English.

We were born English.

You're English and that's it.

There ! s something.
You see, if somebody

says something about England ... I don't know about
you ... But to me, if anybody says something about
England, I'm right up there.

Right away.

England

comes first.
H:

So you always kept that with you, here?

Mrs. S:

Oh, yes.

Well I was born an Englishman.

I was

raised an Englishman, and I'm still English.
always be English.

English people, there's s

something in them that's there.

It's there.

You can't help it ... I don't know.
thing about them.
war.

I'll

Yes.

There's some-

We went through so much in the

I can remember when I was only going to

school in the first war, when Germany, when they
really butchered the Belgians.

And one of the

head--the head men of Belgiam was shipped out to
where we lived,

- - - - - - - , he was sent there

�-34-

for him to be safe.

And us kids, we put on a

program, you know, put on a real concert, and the
money we made was for the Belgians.

And I

remember--! was thinking about that poor old man
last night--! forget his name--but he was only a
little man.

He still wore his badg--honours, you

know, and ... but he was dressed as a gent~ ema.n.
And he thanked us kids ... we were only kids and he
thankeduus for doing it for his country.
eried like a baby, and I never forgot him.

And he
He was

an oldish man, but you see, he was just as true to
his country as we were to ours.
proud of us kids.
his country.
H:

And he was so

We were only kids doing this for

I'll never forget him.

Well, you came down here, shortly, ahy, not too many
years after the war ended.

There's people from all

different countries here, that might have been fighting
each other in Europe.

Was there tension between these

different groups?
Mrs. S:

No, I still, I got very good friends that are
German.

And I treat them as friends.

I mean I

wasn't fighting 'them--they weren't fighting me.
They couldn't help ito
H:

So people find themselves caught in these situations.

Mrs. S:

Yah, but you don't let it bother you.
friends.

Just be

They didn't want to fight any more than

we wanted to fight.
were told, you know.

The just had to ~do as they
I still got lots of German

�-35friends.

And some of them are real good, you

know, well raised people, too.

They're well raised

some of them.
H:

So, in Murillo itself, there wasn't any conflict
between people from different nationalities?

Mrs. S:

No.

The only thing, if you said something to them,

you know, oh, you bloody Englishman or something
like that, well, you just let that slide by.
know.

You never let that upset you.

English.
here.

You

You're still

I remember there was an English boy out

He married a girl from overseas.

He married

her and they came over here and they had some kids
and then she went home and s~e took the kids home
and then she shipped two bask here and she kept
two at home.

Well, now the one come back here from

London when he was a young man and he when he come
in the door one day and he didn't even talk like
himself.

Oh, I s said, oh, for gosh sake, we got a

cockney!

And he looked at me and he had a good

grin and we've been friends ever since.

I said, oh,

gosh, we've got a cockney and, you know, he talked
like a cockney.
H:

?

K:

We've been learning about something called
Women's Institute5 that were big in the rural areas.
Were you involved ... was there a Murillo Women's Institute?

Mrs. S:

No, dear, I wasn't.
when I came.

The Institute was about done

I can remember when I came there

�-36was an Institute but it was about dying out.
K:

Do you remember what kind of things they did?

Mrs. S:

Oh, yes.

They did a lot of work for ... you know,

they did a lot of sewing and things like when the
war was on and they had--ane thing they did have-they had a nice library and Mrs. Merkly kept it-up where our store is now.

She had a rooming house

there and one little place about like that; she
had for a library for the Women's Institute and you
could go there and borrow bookso

She used to

keep account of the books you got and then she put
them in and kept track of who had what, you know.
But the Institute died out about the time I came.
Well, it's like everything else, the old ones got
too old and the younger ones wouldn't carry on.
Not like it is in our church; I'm an Anglican.

And

we had a WA, and a WA mid the--the WA in the church,
they do all the work that the men won't do.
H:

Yes, basically.

Mrs. S:

And you see, we used to put on big meals,--dinners
and things like that and make the money and I was
the secretary--! was the treasurer.
money.

They used to say we give her the money and

boy she hangs on to it.
money.

I handled the

She knows how to handle

So they would put me in the treasurer.

There was the president and the secretary and the
treasurer.

But the money all come to me, you see.

I was the treasurer.

And I knew how to put it away

�-37-

im the bank and keep it.
H:

Keep hold of it.

Mrs. S:

Yah.

Keep hold of it.

earn more, you see.

I didn't ... and make them

Not because you had a few

dollars in the bank that you would make.

You had

to keep on making more.
H:

You ran your household that way as well?

Mrs. S:
K:

Yah.

I ran the household that way too.

Was it special for you to have the opportunity to work
with other women in associations like that?

Mrs. S:

Well, I can get along with people, you see.
don't care what I say.

I

I think this is where I get

along and if I want to swear, I swear.

Now we've

got a minister and I think we're going to like him.
He said to me the other day--he came to the church,
they had the special service when he came.
four or five churches under him you see.
a minister yet.

He has to be ordained.

He has
He isn't

But he

said to me--I think we're going to like him because
he's one of these mixers.
soon as I can.

He says, "I'll be out as

Have you got lots of children?" On

our street, you've got everything.

There are kids

and cats and dogs and bicycles and I said you name
it and we've got it.
all right with us.

So he's going to get along
So the kids they all come here.

They all come here, you know.

All the neighbours'

kids come here and I trust them.
them.

I buy candies for

I go to town and I geep them, and they can

�-38have two each.

And they help themselves.

know where the can is.

They

They go and get the can

and they bring it up and put it on the table and
"I want that one" and "I want that one".
say "two each".

I'll

And they take the two each,

however many there is there, and they put the
can back and put it away.

I don't give them to

them, they help themselves and I trust them.
trust them to take two each.
to town with them.

I

And sometimes I go

I got a bus to go to town, too.

It's a school bus that takes the kids to school
and then it picks us up at twenty minutes to ten.
It goes into town to the bus stop outside of
Eaton's, and Eaton's are very good to us.

We're

allowed, j f we are tired, we can sit on those
chairs where they try on shoes and that, they let
us do that.
you.

And I said, "Well that's very nice of

You're doing that for us.

eat up at the dining room.
we have a meal in town.

I said, we will

So we go there, and

We go away, you see, about

twenty to ten and they pick us up again.
picks us up again at two in the afternoon.
come there to the hbs stop.
body laughs at us.

The bus
So she

And of course, every-

You see, and they'll say, "Oh,

here comes Murillo bus',' you know,, " There's lots of
them, there's about seven of them come all one
after the other.

And we'll be in between sometimes.

"Oh, here comes the Murillo bus".

We don't care.

�-39We answer them back, that's all.
H:

As a woman, you never thought of yourself as a specific
interest group.

You never set yourself apart from what

the men were doing. __________________You
talked about how you helped each other·
Mrs. S:

Oh, we helped each other, yes.

And we always--

when the boys played ball, it was always as long as
I can remember, you know, you went to the ballgame.
And the Kakabeka ladies would be behind their team
and we would be behind ours and we used to fight
like tom cats.

Don't you remember going to

ballgames?
H&amp;K:

Yes.

Mrs. S:

Oh, my godo

But you know I've lost interest in

the younger generation.

They don't play ball

like the old ones usedx to.

But we had a hockey

team and we had a ball team.

Every village had

a ball team, and of course theirs was the best,
you know that.
each other.

That's how wef got along with

And then we always had a dinner or

something at the end of the year, the
and everybody turned out to that, and everybody
gave to it and cooked for the dinner, you know,
and you bought your dinner just the same.
was the community as a whole.

THat

It was much better

then than it is now.
H:

You think it's gone down.

Mrs. S:

It's gone down.

The younger people, you see,

�-40they get on the bus and go to town to school.
They mix with eigy kids.

In high school they mix

them with a different type of individual and it
got to be that our kids have left us. You know,
from
they're marrying people away where they used to
marry, into the families here, and now they've
gone to town and they're marrying into people
that we don't know and we don't know none of the-of the woman t
There waa one of the boys that--Tommy--thatkkeeps
the post office.

One of her boys was married

Saturday night.

Well he's married to somebody

from town that we don't know.
to know her.

You know.

We've got to get

And the boy next door,

he's going to marry a girl from town.

Well she

was out cutting the grass for him yesterday, and
she's going to be all right.
her working.

So I said ... I seen

I knew who she was.

So I'm out and

I said, "Well, you know, this is a funny thing",
I said, "When I'm cutting my lawn, there's never
nobody that comes to help".

But I said, "Allan,

he's got a girl to help him''.
laughed.

And she just

I knew who she was, you know.

But I

said that never happens to me.
H:

You think she'll fit in better because she's ...

Mrs. S:
H:

Oh, she'll fit in because she's a good worker.

She's a good worker.

Mrs. S:

Yes.

She was out and they cut all the grass

yesterday.

So they're not going to lookaany

�-41-

worse than the rest of us.

Oh, no.

And over

there, in that house, the boy that lives over
there--he drives one of these tractor-trailers.
And in· the winter, there was only once in the
winter, that it snowed and then it rained and
it was all frozen and I couldn't do a thing with
the snow, you know.

And I thought I heard a

tractor closer to me than over on the other side-or there--and I went out to see what he was
doing and he got me ploughed out.

And I said,

"are you Danny?", and he said "no, I'm David".
So I said "well, that's good of you to plough me
out".

I said, "let my pay you for doing it."

He said "no.

The pleasure is mine".

He wouldn't

let me pay him for doing it.
H: ?

Mrs. S:

So, you know.

This is young people.

people are good.
H:

They're still good.

But there ...

They're changing.

Mrs. S:

His wife is from town.

Her name is Margo.

the lady down there is Sandra.
all friends.

belong to us.
Mrs. Brown.

Then

You know, you're

And the Mias up here is our kids.

The Rias on our street is our kids.

H:

The young

They all

The don't belong to Mrs. Jones and
They belong to us.

They're our kids.

When they were growing up, before Murillo had more
transportation, ah, people weren't living on their
farms and just making what they cgumd from it.

Were all

�-42the kids able to go from farmhouse to farmhouse?
Mrs. S:

Oh, yes.

They used to be friends just the same.

And kkate.

And they walked miles to get from one

place to the other.

They had to walk then.

They

watlldn't do it now, but they did then because that

was the only way they could get there you see.
H:

So if the family was busy--if a baby was being born-or some thing ...

Mrs. S:
H:

Oh_ yes, well somebody would look after them.

The ki.ds.

Mrs. S:

Oh sure, yes.

It didn't make no difference if

there was six in the bed, as long as they got that
sleep.

Oh, no--the people in the village--you

were a connnunity.

I noticed that if you belonged

to Murillo, you belonged to Murillo.
H:

And Murillo belongs to you.

Mrs. S:

Yah, but if you go to town, you don't know your
next-door-neighbour.

Well here you know everybody.

And you expect to be friends with everybody.

And

when people come here to live I get a whole bunch
of new neighbours.

Well, I'm not one to go

snooping around to know what their name is, you
know, just to be friends . with them.

I don't want

to bore into their house or anything, but wlll, I
let them know to come on up sometime and have a
cup of tea, and that's it, and then you're friends.
That's what we do in these communities like this.
We're all friends and it used to be the same at

�-43-

home, and where I lived at home, we had three
churches, and each church, if one church was
having something special, the other two churches
closed their doors so that everybody could go
to the church that was having the--that's what
we used to do and there was Anglican and United
Methodist and Weslian Methodist.

And when there

was something special like there was in war time,
there was always something special, it was nothing
for all three ministers to be in the pulp8t together.
That's the way we got along.
H:

This is the best way to live.

Mrs. S:

Well I think that's the way to live.
is just as good as another.

Because one

It's the same--just--

you know, you're all going to the same place one
way or the other, aren't you?
H:

?

Mrs. S:

That's what I think.

Oh, you girls, would you

like a cup of tea?
K:

Yes please.

I meant to ask you a question, your

opinion on something that recently happened.

You may

have read about it in the newspapers, where a woman and
man had a farm--a married woman, you know, a couple,
had a farm together and they both worked it but I
believe he had another job where he put the money down
for the farm so it was in his name and then they
divorced and they decided that, because even though the
woman had worked, probably just as hard as the man on

�-44-

it, that she wasn't entitled to i it because she
didn't put the money in.

Did you feel, when you

and your husband had the farm, that it was
eqally yours together?
Mrs. S:

Well, I never knowed about it dear, because I came
here to live with my uncle and my aunt and I
worked, you see, because I had to do a lot of
outside work because when he was really sick-you know what asthma is like--you can't breathe and
so he had to do the running around jobs that he
could drive a car to do, and I used to do his
work.

But we worked together and we got along

together, you see.

And then of course when he

died, my aunt and I stayed on the farm and we run
it, for, I guess, eight or nine years.

Then I

got married after all that time, you know.
K:

And it was your farm.

Mrs. S:

And it more or less fell back to me.
just feel back to me.

I never--it

There was no, well, done by

law--it just came to me.
K:

You think,

!m

general though, that if a man and woman

purchase a farm together or the man happens to pay for
it, that it is theirs, do you think?
Mrs.~

Well, yes, if the man and the woman wasn't related.
If they weren't of the same relatives, relations,
I think they should have some agreement, yes.

We

always got along because you see I was young and
they were old.

I was young enough to do the work

�-45and I mean I didn't grow up with ihe young people
of my age here.
school with them.

So it wasn't the same as I went to
Was it?

We were friends but ...

It wasn't as if it was people that was born and we
were raised together.

( end of tape)

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&#13;
During the interview, Mrs. Lange recalls growing up, going to school, and starting a family in Northwestern Ontario. She discusses the kinds of work she did throughout the years, working as wood hauler, in restaurants, and on her family’s land. She also talks about various other aspects of life in the earlier twentieth century, specifically around illness, war, the depression years, and the Finnish community in Nipigon. &#13;
&#13;
The recording consists of three sides of two cassette tapes, available as three MP3 files. (Click on the speaker logo to play each file.)&#13;
During the interview, Mrs. Lange recalls growing up, going to school,  and starting a family in Northwestern Ontario. She discusses the kinds of work she did throughout the years, working as wood hauler, in restaurants, and on her family’s land. She also talks about various other aspects of life in the earlier twentieth century, specifically around illness, war, and the depression years. &#13;
&#13;
The recording consists of three sides of two cassette tapes, available as three MP3 files. (Click on the speaker logo to play each file.)</text>
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                    <text>Mrs. Stepanik, Kenora
Interviewers:

'

H.:
Mrs.
H.:
Mrs.
H.:
Mr s .
H.:
Mrs.

I

Helen Lovekin and Karen Dubinsky.

When were you born?
S.: 1905 in the old country, in a village.
In the Ukraine?
S.: Yes, I'm Ukrainian.
What year did you come to _can.u.iadu..ca,1,-;?~ - - - - - - - - - - - - S. : 1924
---·
Did you come by yourself?
S.: By myself. Yes, I come to Canada. I was 17 years old when
I came to Canada.
H.: Why?
Mrs. S.: Because my brother. I walted to. Everybody said that's good
to Canada. I come too.
H.: What did you think when you came?
Mrs. S.: I was not used to it. Not much people come yet who can
talk Ukrainian.
H.: You couldn't speak English.
Mrs. S. English and I go to work to Jew's place. I stay one winter to
Winnipeg, and I just have $15. In a month.
H.: Where did you live?
Mrs. S.: I 1ive to Winnipeg. I have a sister and I 1ike to ~linnipeg.
I stay that place where I work.
H.: What kind of work did you do?
Mrs. X (neighbour): Housework.
Mrs. S.: Yah, housework. I make it dinner, and supper and cleaned house
and she had the kinds. I think I did not stay too long in Canada. After
winter, I come to Kenora. ,ije (the boss) is moved to Kenora because he
was working on a supply trade and I come to Kenora. I go to working in a
hotel, commercial hotel. ~It's now the Kenwood. After I found more
Ukrainian people here down at the Ukrainian -~_ig_s_Sn.d.e.t-y .
-·----------H.: Did you enjoy it?
'
Mrs. S.: I enjoy it. I go to sing there.
Karen: Was there a Ukrainian Hall here?
Mrs. S.: Yah, an or~anization.
I played in plays there. You know at that time, there was not television
not radio . .
Neighbour: But plays in other words. Concerts and plays, comicals, of
all sorts, you know.
K: There's a lot of research in Thunder Bay about the Ukrainian Labour
Temple there.
Neighbour: Ukrainian Labour Temple is not associated at all with the
Ukrainian Labour Society. At all. Temple is a Communist group. Labour
Society is all Ukrainians, Catholics, say Greek orthodox, but they're
religious. Labour temple does not recognize no churches.
K.: But as far as the activities, they'd be similar. There'd be plays
and dances.
Neighbour: Labour Temple would be more in the Russian style and say they
would have meetings which they would bring from Winnipeg that's propagandaLet's put it that you. You know. Instead of the real thing.
H.: Tell me what part did you play in the Ukrainian Ladies Society. Did
you act in the plays? Did you sing?
Mrs. S.: Yes.
H.: Can you tell me about it? Did you enjoy it?

�Page 2
Mrs. S. Yes. Yes. I was in plays and I was President.
N.: She was a president. For how many years? For how many years
were you a president?
Mrs. S.: 12 years in the Ukrainian Women's Association.
H.: Did it make a difference to you? Were you very lonely until this
Association. You had friends?
Mrs. S.: You know I had small kids and my kids I teach Ukrainian school.
Ukrainian school, there and Ladies society. I teached my kids there the
Ukrainian. I talk to my kids Ukrainian, because I want to know that
my kids talk Ukrainian. My kids told me lots of time, my daughter,
you talk to me English and I'll teach you and say to you English. You
no talk Ukrainian. You know I was interested. I know I like how eve;Jything 90. I like Ukrainian. Did you see this here?
K.: So It was important to you to that your family kept their Ukrainian
culture and the society helped you in that.
Neighbour: She also is the Senior Citizen president at the moment at the
hall too.
Mrs . S. : Ya h.
N.: And that's the part she takes. She has all her life.
Mrs. S.: I like it. And I like people. I like to go out. I like to
workin~ for organisationyou know. I like it, miss and I enjoy it.
Because I'm not lasted. I have my people.
N.: You have your heritage in other words.
H.: When you first came out·here, you were single. Not married. (No)
and you married in Canada. (In Canada)
Mrs. S. : 1926.
H.: That's only two years after you came, isn't it? (Yah)
And he was a Ukrainian as well?
Mrs. S.: My husband, yah, he's Ukrainian. William Stepanik. I meet
him in the Hall, Ukrainian Society.
H.: In the Hall?
Mrs. S.: I meet him there.
H.: What was it like then for you to be able to associate with young men?
Were you allowed to talk to them openly? How did you see each other?
Dancing, or what?
Mrs. S.: Yah, -we dancing. This time we have a, you know he was playing
in a (how do you say that)
Neighbour: He was playing in the plays, in the plays, you know.
Mrs. S.: In the same play.
H.: In the play. So you were both in the play. I see.
Mrs. S.: We believe to there.
H.: So you shared a lot of ideas. (Yah)
Mrs. S.: 1925 - We, not married yet, and believed (belonged) to that
organization.
H.: How many children did you have?
Mrs. S.: Three - two girls, one boy. One, my daughter, down in ~lindsor,
my son in Kenora, L&amp;K grocery. (He have there two blocks from here) (Oh,yes)
And my daughter die. You know. She's married and she stay next door. We
builded house here and after she's sick. She have some sickness.
N.:Hodgkin disease.
Mrs. S.:Hodgktn disease.
H. : We 11 .
Mrs. S. : And she leave two boys, two kids.
Helen.: So you have grandchildren as well.
Mrs. S.: Yah, I have ten grandchildren.
H.: And so. Ten? That keeps you busy, uh.

�Page 3
Mrs. S.: No, he is not Kenora here. He is Winnipeg now. That kid's (of)
my daughter. He come to see me. (Oh) Yes.
Neighbour: He's a doctor of Science in Denmark now.
Mrs. S.:WEll, my grandson, -my son's son, he's a teacher, some doctor. He
go to Denmark.
H.: Did you have your children in Kenora at home.
Mrs. S.: Yah, and my son, Billy, and Lascia.
Neighbour: But she's asking you if your children were
Mrs. S.: Yah, yah. At home. That's right.
H.: Not in a hospital.
Mrs. S.: Not in a hospital. That's right. Because I'm scared - go in a
hospital.
H.: You're probably right.
Mrs. S.: Maybe might change my babies.
K.: Did a lot of women have their children at home?
Neighbour: Oh yes. All the time. I had mine at home too.
Mrs. S.: It's at home. And ... I live here past 51 years the same
place. This house. Just I go married and I stay the same place.
That's 51, will be 52 January 26, - I just get married, moving here
and stay here and my husband have a mother and father. I stay with
mother and father.
H.: Did you like that?
----......
Mrs. S.: Yah, I like it.
H.: You liked his parents.
\
Mrs. S.: Yah, I like it. Mother very good to me because I'm not going
to the hospital she's look at (after) me.
'
H.: So your mother-in-law delivered your baby. Is that how it worked
\
in most families? Did most mother-in-laws help their daughters with
the babies?
Neighbour: There's mid-wives. There was mid-wives.
H.: YQu had the mid-wives as well.
But it's better to have it within the family.
Mrs. S.: Yah. She looked to me. This time I got to stay eight days in
bed. Don't get up. This time just I have a baby.
K.: Can you tell us, when you moved to Kenora, you met some Ukrainian
people.
N.: Two yearsafter she was here.
-----Mrs. S.: Just one wintertime stay to Winnipeg. In the summertime,
I think June 6th, I moved to Kenora.
K.:
And did you find when you came here that the Ukrainian people
would have much to do with the English people and with the Swedish
people and whatever, or did you stay in your own little groups?
Mrs. S.: Oh no, you mixed. I meeted. I meeted. Lots of people.
I have lots of people in my village from old country. From Kenora.
N.: But you mixed with the English people as well.
Mrs. S.: Oh yes, I wanted to meet.
N.:Sure you did.
Mrs. S.: And they are friends. Girls. They are Swedish girls. Zena.
I liked that.
N.: And worked with her as well.
Mrs. S.: And one Czechoslovakian, one Ann. I working and talking and
eat. I have lots of fun because I teach myself I want to talk little
bit to English and that boss Jew. You know. Katz he's called. A Jew.
And he's very good. He's just like father to us. Night time he come
to look at that there be not boy in our room, that we sleeping, that
_.,,,,
we goo some place.

\

�Page 4
Neighbour: Guardian in other words.
Mrs. S.: Yah. (Laughter) He worried to us.
H.: Tell me, can you remember about the depression?
In the 30 s? 1930? Can you tell about how it was for you then?
Were all your children born then?
Mrs. S.: Yah, my one born 1927, and boy, 1928, in the fall time, my
boy now, and daughter, 1933, Susie born.
Neighbour: That's when I came here. Yah. ~Je came to this house. - - -.. . .
And that's when I knew her.
H.: So can you recall anything about the depression?
Mrs. S.: Yah, I know.
My husband working at that time in the mill.
Yah. Fl our mi 11 .
H.: Did it get closed down?
Mrs. S.: No, not closed down, just not much work.
N.: (Three days a week)
Mrs. S.: You know what I do! I haven't got for kids (how you call it)
diapers - yah - and I haven't got so I do with small bag.
N.: Sugar and rice.
Mrs. S.: Small one, with the flour. You know, we have the small bags.
N.: Sugar bags.
Mrs. S.: And with sugar bag, I make it for me diapers.
H.: I see. I understand. The sugar bags for the babies.
And so you had it pretty rough. That's hard not to find diapers.
N.: She had cows and she had pigs ...
H.: You kept animals.
N.: I remember all these things you know ...
Mrs. S.: I keeped cows. I keeped chickens. Because this road not road.
Just bush, here. And I selled milk for 10¢ a quart and I haved milk for
kids, and eggs for kids.
H.: So you never had to worry about eating.
Mrs. S.: No. Just not money.
H.: Just no money. (Yah) But as long as you had a house, then you
had this house. And you had food. It wasn't as bad with no money.
I
K.: Did you ... you never had to go on relief then in the derpession.
Mrs.S.: Oh, yah, relief. We had some relief.
~
N.: But did you have to go.
Mrs. S.: Not long. (Not long.) Not long.
K.: And that would just help you out buying things.
Mrs. S.: Just he have the slip to the grocery store.
H.: Winter would be very difficult though because the vegetables are not
growing then.
N.: She had her own. You had your own vegetables from the garden.
Mrs. S.: Potatoes. I had some yeah.
H.: So for you the depression wasn't as bad as for some people.
Mrs. S.: No not so bad because I haved something from garden, milk
and eggs.
H.: And your husband didn't have to work on the highway. He could work
in the mill.
Mrs. S.: No he not working that mill. He work in flour mill.
Then we go to married.
We not go for honeymoon because no money, no time.
H.: Stay in the house.
Mrs. S.: Stay in the house because next day he had to go to work.
H.: Did you like staying in the house all the time.
Mrs. S.: Oh no. I like daughter now. The style changed. I don't want
it that my kids have the same as just I had. You know.
H.: What do you want?
Mrs. S.: This better now. My kids had school, grandchild, and he's had money.
And he's go for honeymoon when he get married.
1

�Page 5
H.: So he can enjoy his life a little bit.
Mrs. S.: Yes. It's better now. (UH HUH) It's better now for me too.
H.: How?
Mrs. S.:Because.
N.: Is it ....
Mrs. S. I have a pension now. I am a widow. My husband die.
H.: So you have a pension ...
Mrs. S.: He made a house for me, you know, my husband. I have a pension
I have a little bit money in the bank, you know. Just have to eat and paid
everything to my expenses. And just have kids, not too far, and kids
come to see me. And go to Windsor to my daughter. (Good) And my daughter
married. I am there. And I go to wedding.to my daughter's son to
Winnipeg. He just married. He stay to Winnipeg.
H.: Well, when you were young, you had to stay in the house. You had
your babies very close didn't you?
(yah) One right after another?
Mrs. S.: Yah, I stay in the house.
H.:
Did sometimes you feel you couldn't stand staying in the house
any more? You had to go out.
Mrs. S.: My mother stay. My mother-in-law stay with the baby.
H.: Ah, so she was very good with you. And when you went out,
would you go and do work with the Ukrainian Ladies Association.(uh, huh)
Was this your recreation?
Mrs. S.: I leaved my husband with the kids. Sometime the kids.
H.: You left your kids with the husband. Good for you.
That's good.
Mrs. S.: After, he was working in the sheds and they pay better. You
know we had money. He wanted to save money for the kids so kids go to
school. And he give the music to kids, you know. My daughter, piano.
My daughter have it. We keep it here. Piano. You know he go to piano
lessons.
H.: Did you ever go back to the old country?
Mrs. S.: Me? (UH HUH)
Mrs. S.: No. Never.
H.: Would you ever waat to? If somebody said, ...
Mrs. S.: Nah, I just want to go to visit there.
H.: Not to live there. Just to visit. But you'd like to go back and
see your family.
Neighboar:But she couldn't go see her family because I applied .....
Mrs. S.: In my village, Just I born there.
N.: But they won't let you.
Mrs. S.: And he don't let me go there.
N.: You just have to go to the city and they would meet you for three
days ...
Mrs. S.: Yah, I like to go.
H.: Because what I would like to know is how happy have you been in
Canada.You think it's been a good place for you .
. Mrs. S.: Yah, Canada, good place for me. I am free here. Free country.
I like Canada.
H.: You like Kenora.
Mrs. S.: Yah, and my kids born in Canada. I have my family here you know
kids, and grandchild, and I never go stay there.
H.: Nevergo back to live.
K.: Can I ask you why in the first place you wanted to come to Canada?
Was it, you ~eard it was better ...
Mrs. S.: Better in Canada, yah
K.: As far as you could get a job, that kind of stuff like that?

�Page 6
N.: Living was better. Living was better.
K.: Did you come here with the intention of staying here or you just
wanted to come and visit?
Mrs. S.: No I thinking to stay here. This is better than old country.
Old country you know, that time, people not have it very good because
you had to go work. If you had not got much land, you had to go work
for somebody.
N.: For 50¢ a day.
Mrs. S.: Yah, and here, was better.
K.: And when you got here did you think it was better.? Did you like it here,
Mrs. S.: I like it here Canada.
Canada?
K.:When you first got here though.
Mrs . S. : Yah, I 1i ke it. I 1i ke it.
K.: What did you think of the country?
Mrs. S.: What did you think of the country?
{Neighbour translates in Ukrainian What did you think of the country)
i
Mrs. S.: Oh. I think is better in Canada. Just not old country.
Better here. Better here.
K.: In the winter? I 1 m thinking of stuff like the weather and things
like that.
Mrs. S.: Weather. Oh, I'll tell you. Weather nice there. And you
I
have apple trees, prunes, everything, everything, fruit you have it
I
there. I have it fruit there in old country.
I
K.: What did you think of the first winter you spent here? That must
have been pretty ....
I
Mrs. S. : Ah, I don I t 1i ke it.
Too cold.
K.: I guess you got used to it now.
Mrs. S.: I'm used to it now. I'm used to it.
H.: We've talked a bit about the depression. Can we move on to the
second World War? Do you remember the Second World War. Did you have
sons that would be old enough to enlist?
Mrs. S. : No.
H.: NO? Not old enough?yet? 1920's. Oh yes that's right.
Mrs. S.: I am ... just war started.
N. : Her son is younger than her .jb 1des t daughter.
H.: It started in 1939.
Mrs. S.: No. No. Nothing. Nothing in Canada.
K.: But did you, did, say the Ukrainian Women's Group,
I
did they do volunteer work in the war?
N.: Yes.Yes. Yes.
I
K. What kind of stuff did you do? Do you remember?
I
N.: Oh they knitted.
and you know ..
Mrs. S. : Sewing.
N.: Sewing. Gloves and mitts and scarves and stuff like that.
Mrs. S.: Look at how many cushions I have.
H.: They're beautiful. {I like it.) They really are.
N.: During the depression, they had some kitchen set up in the hall.
I
Yes. For the people who didn't have anything to eat.
Mrs. S.: Yah, we had. We had ... You know one time I go to Red Cross
and bringed some stuff and we signed pajamas for the kids and the shorts.
K.: So there was a lot of {sewing) ... co-operation
Mrs. S.: Yah co-operation for everybody.
K.: Did you, I guess, through the women's group, you had a lot of
co-operation between other women.

-i

-----

'

I

I

/

�Page 7
Mrs. S.: Yah, yah, we do.
K.: Did you appreciate that?
Mrs. S.: I'm appreciate. I am like---=--=-----,,-· Everybody listen to
me and you I am president, she vice-president and secretary and cashier
and we do. We do fine. We do good co-operation. Just go to like it.
H. : Good. Do ....
Mrs. S.: Are you opened ...
N.: Yes, you're on.
H.: Yah, we're talking
Mrs. S.: Holy Cow.
K.: That just helps us remember what you've said.
H.: We can't write ...
Mrs. S.: You can't write everything. That's O.K. He no talking bad.
K.: We'll shut it off if you want to say something juicy.
Mrs. S.: That's O.K.
H.: And we'll take away her pen. Can you remember though, did you hear
anything about the second World War? I Mean like what kind of information
were you getting? Can you remember how you felt about it?
Mrs. S.: I think was bad.
H.: Yes. Well. I bet you a lot of people would agree.
Mrs. S.: And uh, and uh, that war started in old country there. You know.
I go to the Russia. And German coming. We lived in we village and
we go back where is not shooted.
N.: But she's talking about Canada.
H.: Well, also you know, that would be her village and you'd have
feelings about that.
Mrs. S.: I'm cry this time. I just small yet. You know. (Oh Yes)
We taked clothes and we moved, oh maybe, two villages back, because,
You know Zbruch,
H.: NO.
Mrs. S.: You know that, what you call it, just a minute, ....... .
River Zbruch, we not too far from there. And Russia, there. You know
where Russia started. I live in a , not far from there, (Near Russia
in other words) in my village, you know.
H.: So that's close.
Mrs. S.: And that shooted from there Russia, my village. And my
village shooted back.
H.: Oh, so you're shooting back ..
Mrs. S.: Yah.
N.: You protect yourself
Mrs. S.: I know.
H.: Did you lose family? They would be involved. They're so close.
Mrs. S.: I have my mother and sister. After I'm go to Canada.
N.: But not during the war.
H. : NO.
MRs. S.: Not in the war. Just mine sister to move to Russia.
And the other one? Other same I think.
N. : ....... .

Mrs. S.: You know, is moved to Russia. My sister, my sister and my
sister's
N.: But did they have to, or were they forced to?
Or did they want to go themselves ...
Mrs . S. : NO. No. No.
N.: They went on their own?
Mrs. S.: No we believe to some organization and we moved there, my sister
and my sister's son and daughter.
N. : Oh I see.
Mrs. S.: You know that time, just War started and my father, he is gone

�Page 8
-to the other village, maked flour there. We had to (in Ukrainian, she
said he went to grind flour) and starts laughing. Ha. Ha. Ha. I can't
talked. I explain to you.
N. : Fl our mi 11 . Fl our mi 11 .
Mrs. S.: Flour mill and my father go there and my father did not come back.
Russia take it to him the other ... the other ...
N.: He never returned
Mrs. S.: He never come back. I never see him again.
H.: Your father was gone. Your two sisters had moved to Russia.
So there's just your mother and your other sister left in the old
country.
Mrs. S.: No I haved more sisters. I have in the family seven sisters
andthree brothers.
H.: Big family. Did your mother teach you anything that
you think helped you? In your new life in Canada?
Mrs. S.: No. She no teach me in Canada. She teach me in old country.
H.: Yes. But what do you think she taught you?
N.: Translates question.
Mrs. S.: Oh yah, she taught me watch yourself. Don't go nobody.
With nobody if you don't know nobody. Yah, yah, my mother teach me
that.
K.: How did she feel about you moving here.?
I guess she was said to see you go.
Mrs. S.: She know our brother's here.
We stay with our brother's.
K.: I ... She figured you'd be safe with your brothers.
Mrs. S.: Yah. Yah. My older brothers.
K.: What about the voyage across. That must have been pretty
terrifying. I would think so.
Mrs. S.: Oh well. Lots of people there. I not scared.
K.: Did you land in Montreal and take a train ...
Mrs. S.: In Montreal yah,
K.: And take a train.
Mrs. S.: Not land. Goes boat.
K.: Oh yes. Boat. Boat. And from there you go on a train.
Mrs. S.: After on the train. I had company. Lots of company.
Two girls and kept company with those girls.
H.: So the three of you, all single girls, no husbands,
Mrs. S.: No, no husbands,
H.: So the three of you were all going to Winnipeg and you went
together.
Mrs . S. : Ya h.
H.: That was good.
Mrs. S.: Yah, that's good.
H.: So you think there's ... That's a lot of co-operation again.
Mrs. S.: I come to Winnipeg and I stay at a station at ......... (Gabaraith?)
because my brother worked in a section at .......... and some lady
coming and she see that I stay there and I don't know what I had to do
--just stay there to Winnipeg in the station and she come to me and
talked to me.

�Page 9
N.: She's thinking of women ..... and you're thinking of women's
liberation and all that ...
K.: Well, women that are working outside their homes
N.: Outside the home and not looking after their children like if
you had children, you worked, and they get a baby sitter or take
it to a ....
H.: Well no that's not exactly it. Right now, a lot of people have
to work.
K.: I just mean in general, I mean women are more active now in public
things like yourself.
Mrs. S.: Yah.
N.: She was always active so I ... you know.
Mrs. S.:
I know that time, I looked more for kids and now look at
the young people ..
H.: Good.
Mrs. S.: Because I never leaved my kids home and go someplace. I leaved
my kids, I know, I leaved with somebody good for them. (In good hands)
In good hands. You know and now I hear that lots of mothers leave the
kids or give for adoption. I be never give it adoption my kids.
I be heared how there's some accident, you know some give, but they
never get it. I don't b.elieve that.
H.: You see a lot of women, right now, a lot of mothers, them and their
husbands, and it's not because they want too much, it's just that they
can't afford it.Things cost too much. Both of them have to work.
You know, especially the young couples.
Mrs. S.: Yah, and spended lots and drink lots and go to the show
lots and have a good time lots
H.: I can think of people who can't afford to do that, that are friends
of mine.
Mrs. S.: Why?
H.: Because they have children and they can't afford it ..
N.: How would you like to live on $160/mo ...... .
H.: At any rate, at any rate

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                  <text>Northwestern Ontario Women's Decade Council Herstory Project</text>
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                <text>Herstory: Michalena Stepanik </text>
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                <text>An oral history interview with Mrs. Michalena Stepanik in Kenora, Ontario. The interview was performed by Helen Lovekin and Karen Dubinsky as part of the Women's Decade Council Herstory project.&#13;
&#13;
During the interview, Mrs. Stepanik recalls her experience immigrating to Canada from Ukraine during the war, life during the depression, her experiences as a mother, and participating with the Ukrainian Labour Society and Ukrainian Women’s Association, where she served as president for 12 years. &#13;
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The recording consists of two sides of a cassette tape, available as two MP3 files. (Click on the speaker logo to play each file.) The transcript is available by clicking on the image thumbnail.&#13;
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                <text>[197?]-06-16</text>
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