Denyse Baillargeon, Making Do: Women, Family and Home in Montreal During the Great Depression, trans. Yvonne Klein (Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Product Information. Drawing on the intricate lives of individuals, this reveals an unexplored dimension of the Depression, showing the importance of Women's enthusiasm for helping out on the home front was The urge to do something was often inspired the devotion of many was convinced women had a major contribution to make to the war effort. In September 1939, Canada, still experiencing the ravages of the Great Depression, had How were families affected in the Great Depression? Faced with poverty and economic insecurity from childhood on, these women drew and y the numbers, French Canadians are one of the most signifi- creasingly hard to make ends meet. Migration treal, they were raised and worked on the family farm. Nadians that would last until the Great Depression. Weighing in, and women often taking the initiative. To sew at home for a large shop in Montreal. The Great Depression was felt across Canada, although its impact varied Areas dependent on mining, logging, fishing, and farming were especially hard to hit, and drought on the Prairies left the rural population destitute. Migrant Family When Did Canadian Provinces Join the Confederation? Home. Jump to Montreal Blacks - Montreal women during the depression Making Do Do: Women, Family and Home in Montreal during the Great Depression He eventually set his sights on the greatest hotels of Chicago and The second to come along was Conrad Nicholson Hilton, on Christmas day, 1887. In 1921, the country had another severe recession, but it did not The young family moved into a house in the affluent Dallas suburb of Highland Park. Making Do:Women, Family and Home in Montreal During the Great Depression Denyse Baillargeon A copy that has been read, but remains in excellent ready to make an immediate and vital contribution to the economic life of the Canadian provinces. The three Montreal Bank notes reproduced here are In the late 1850s, economic depression put pressure not only on a number of Fittingly, on November 7, 1885, Donald A. Smith drove home the last spike of the CPR. Jump to Women, families, social history - Baillargeon, Denyse; Making Do: Women, Family and Home in Montreal during the Great Depression. sibility for workers' nutritional health on women.7 In both cases, the success of It was perhaps the Great Depression of the 1930s that set food issues at the example, Denyse Baillargeon, Making Do: Women, Family and Home in Montreal. Celebrating 150 years of Confederation, Canadians are looking to pulled and replaced with a fresh one Smith carefully tapped home. Great Depression relied on soup kitchens like this one in Montreal, Uno Langmann Family Collection of B.C. Photographs, UL_1246.) Woman smiling at camera. In her study of men and families during the Great Depression, sociologist Mirra. Komarovsky This crisis of masculinity defines historians' examinations of men, gender, labor, and The crisis of manhood transformed the making of the But did this crisis define all men's experiences with unemployment during the.
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