Fonds - Hillcrest Women’s Institute fonds

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Hillcrest Women’s Institute fonds

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    Date(s)

    • 1923-1991 (Creation)

    Physical description area

    Physical description

    20 v. of textual records and graphic material

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    Administrative history

    The Hillcrest Women’s Institute formed on June 6, 1923 at a meeting in Sebringville, Ontario with Mrs. J.A. Thistle, President and Mrs. A.F. Lupton, Secretary-Treasurer. Membership was drawn from the Gore of Downie and Harmony area in Perth County, Ontario, focussing in early years on those whose children attended School Section No. 4 in the former Downie Township of Perth County, Ontario. The Institute voted to disband at its final meeting on December 11, 1991. The first Women’s Institute in Ontario was established in 1897 by Adelaide Hunter Hoodless in Stoney Creek. Farmers’ Institutes had been established in Ontario in the 1890s to educate men about agricultural practices. The Women’s Institutes focussed on home economics and cultural activities. In 1919, the Federated Women’s Institutes of Canada was formed at a meeting of provincial representatives as a co-ordinating body. The Federated Women’s Institutes of Ontario was founded the same year. The Ontario government created an Institutes Branch in the Department of Agriculture in 1894 to supervise and regulate the Farmers Institutes. By 1920, the Farmers’ Institutes had disbanded and the branch concerned itself with directing Women’s Institutes. It was called the Women’s Institute branch, the Home Economics Branch and the Rural Organizations and Services Branch at different periods in its history. The Branch offered course in home economics in partnership with the institutes. It also supported the activities of the Federated Women’s Institutes of Ontario. In 1925, the Federated Women’s Institutes of Ontario established a standing committee for historical research and current events. In the mid-1930s, the wife of Lord Tweedsmuir, Governor General of Canada from 1935-1940, suggested that all Women’s Institutes create local history books. These became known as the Tweedsmuir histories.

    Custodial history

    The records of the Hillcrest Women’s Institute were generally in the possession of the secretary of the Institute until they were donated to the Stratford-Perth Archives.

    Scope and content

    Fonds consists of records of the Hillcrest Women’s Institute including minute books and scrapbooks. Material in the scrapbooks includes meeting programmes, photographs and newspaper clippings. Fonds also includes the Hillcrest Women’s Institute Tweedsmuir Histories.

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        Open

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        Copyright held by creator. These materials cannot be published without permission of the copyright holder.

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        None

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