“We are not here to beg
for a favour but to obtain simple justice. Have we not the brains to think?
Hands to work? Hearts to feel? And lives to live?” (Nellie McClung)
I was in university during
the Burn the Bra era and soon the Status of Women Action Committee was formed.
It was a time of wanting equality in all aspects of life and work. It was a
time to claim ownership of our own bodies. It was a time when we were thinking
we could change the world.
At that time I had no
concept of the brave and tenacious women ahead of me. My own grandmother
graduated from Carroll College in Waukesha, Wisconsin in 1909 with a Bachelor
of Arts.
My grandmother
has always intrigued me more than any other person in my family. Perhaps it was
the mystery of having known her only through her university and teaching
pictures and her personal scrapbook of poems and clippings that captured me. She died when my father was only 20
years old.
Writing this
article has made me aware of how little effort I spent getting to know her. Now
it is very difficult for me to piece together the puzzle of why she was so
fortunate to attend university. Was it, as my father thinks, because she wanted
to? Her family was not wealthy but was devout. Akin to the Ivy League colleges of the east established by
the Puritans, Carroll College was begun by the Presbyterians. What was her mother like? Was her
father a feminist in his time?
She was a teacher
in both Canada and the U.S. After marrying, she was very active in the church,
community and loved the arts. For 9 years she was the local correspondent to
the Regina Leader Post. I wonder how an active and intelligent woman like this
would be reacting to what was happening in the women’s movement of the time.
Voting but Still not a
Person
Women’s suffrage is not
unique to Canada and the United States. Rather each country has its own story.
The isolation and lack of opportunities for women are almost universal. With
Canada being a colony, women came from their own countries and brought
experiences hoping to improve life in their new world.
The suffragette movement
struggled in Canada and other countries. Then with the outbreak of World War I
in 1914, and the enlistment of men in the armed forces, women had entered the
work force in unprecedented numbers and their role in the country’s economy
could no longer be ignored.
On 28 January 1916,
Manitoba became the first province in Canada to extend the right to women to be
elected to a seat in the provincial house. A series of measures between 1917-19
declared the women of Manitoba are now citizens, persons, human beings, who
have stepped politically out of the class of criminals, children, idiots and lunatics.
By 1925 women could vote
provincially everywhere except Quebec, where fifteen more years would pass
before the right was granted.
Finally Women are Persons
Much work was done by many
women through a range of organizations as the Temperance Union, several women’s
suffrage groups, and lobbying husbands and colleagues with mock parliaments,
skits and plays and the like.
On 18 October 1928 the
Privy Council of Britain declared, “Women are Persons”. Until now a British ruling of 1876
declared that women were held to be persons in matters of pain and penalties
but not persons in matters of rights and privileges.
In 1929, after two years of
legal debate, Canada’s highest court of appeal declared that the word ‘person’
included both women and men. Five Alberta women who became known as the Famous
Five had brought the case before the courts in 1927. The case became known as
the Persons Case.
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