South Macaulay WI Tweedsmuir Community History, Volume 4, [1984] - [1992], page 1

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_ ’. -- . i _ ,i _-------", ,4 i'"-----------------, _ " _ _ ( r ((" . 97% . l /j,I /iChi v, / " /j(eser,eauiir-- vi)""' 3/ a (7/ ear/77 rdr'"1?'<7 'ir'y'c/ f r ' A: _ Sic, 107%”. E c, - p b J (u-rcicyvte-d) A, rr-ers-iles/s, 1ej / _. “ t . V, " -- 12A. A we we 414' [ 'loin-ix-lids-e iCi.cc,s,sa_i,'C/t., MK” _----""----------.,,--------------------- Lr----- m) , I: ' I f /0M¢f "f, cr1tdvs-/kv" b / (LAW J, if? fi)/ e ." m "a #516 its-dr, T Cr nefhécd sf.. 7/ 5” 4 T ,1 l /3 J a Woo/Lee tsf-ces, he? Js, We MM 0 two / Gi/p/duo DEPARTIJYEK‘TT OF AGRICULTURE AND FOOD HOME ECONOMICS HRflICH SOi'iE FACTS ABOUT ADELAIDE HCODLESS AND ERU'4 LEE Adelaide Hunter Hoodless was born on February 27, 1857 at what is now the Adelaide Headless Homestead, at St. George, Ontario. She attended school in St. George. On September 15, l881 she married John Hoodless, of Hamilton. Iir. Hoodless manufactured and sold furniture, so Mrs. Hoodlees’s home from the time of her marriage on was in a large, comfortable house called "Eastwood” in Hamilton. There were four children in the Hoodless home: Edna Clarkson, who married a Mr. Bostwiek; Joseph Bernard; burial Adelaide,- and John Harold, who died at; the age of eighteen months. Hrs. hoodlccs died on February 28, 19U) while making a speech in Toronto. Soon after her marriage, Mrs. Iioodless became interested in the Hamilton Young Womenls Christian Association and through it started classes for teaching Household _ Science for girls. She was active in helping to found the National Council of Women, the Victorian Ordcr of Nurses, :nd the Lillian Massey School for Home Economics at the University of Toronto. She persuaded Sir William liacdonald, a millionaire tobacco rl1an12- factLirer Prort Montreal, to give money for the erection of Icacdonald Institute at Guelph University. 121 Irt'y/, Hrs. Headless was invited by hr. Erland Lee, secretary of the South Vent-. worth Fermat‘s Institute, to speak at a Ladies' Night meeting of the Farmer‘s Institute at Stoney Creek. In the course of her address, hrs. Hoodless suggested that it would be wonderful for wot'ten to have an organization through which they could study things pep-. taining to honomaking. Ur. Lee was interested in this idea and a meeting was arranged for reeruarr 19, 1997. At this meeting, the First Women's Institute was organized. F HITS. Needless was brillicnt speaker and travelled widely, promoting the teaching '. of Tor-s Trtavrvics, not only in Canada but in the United States and Great Britain. _ lie. Erlattd let 17:: born Lay 3, 1864 and died June 29, 1926. He Irsed all of his life on the for: now Imam ce, the Lee Homestead, about two miles east of Stoney Creek. 1hr. Lee attended the Leo school which had been built on the Lee Sara, the Waterdown High School, slid the Hamilton Collegiate Institute. He made a living by fixing and was particularly interes";ed in a special line of Jersey cattle, fancy dairy butter, maple syrup and fruit. He was srccreeoitreasurer for Saltfleet Agricultural Society for twelve years and Clerk and Treasurer of SJj‘tl‘leet- Township for many years. is secretary of the Farmer-is Institute of Heath Wentworth County, he attended a meeting of the Experimental Union at the (Altario Agricultural College at Guelph. Here Hr. lee heard hrs. Hoodless of Hamilton address an almost entirely male audience. He was so impressed by lire. Hoodless and her plea for the teaching, of Household Science to girls in schools that he invited her to speak at the Ladies? Night of the Farmeer Institute at Stoney Creek. Erland lee married Janet Chisholm, a school teacher from Hamilton, and they had five child'en -iiaricrie, Hilda, Gordon, Frank, and Alice. October/70 A

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