|
ABETTER AND HAPPIER MEN AND WOMEN@: THE AGRICULTURAL INSTRUCTION ACT,
1913-1924[1]
Linda M. Ambrose
In 1913, the Canadian government introduced
The Agricultural Instruction Act, a measure which granted ten million
dollars to the provinces over ten years to aid agriculture. The Conservatives
predicted that the Act would help in Aaiding and advancing the farming industry
by instruction in agriculture@ but this paper argues that, ironically, the funding actually served to
heighten rural discontent, not assuage it. By examining public documents and
the rural press, the paper explores the rationale, rhetoric, and politics of
this initiative. The funding designated for women=s groups is closely examined to determine
its impact on the growth of groups like the Women=s Institutes.
En 1913, le gouvernement canadien adopta la Loi de l=Instruction agricole, une mesure qui octroyait
10 millions de dollars aux provinces sur une période de dix ans afin d=aider l=agriculture. D=après les Conservateurs, cette loi permettrait de
soutenir et de faire progresser l=industrie agricole en misant sur l=enseignement dans ce domaine. On soutient ici,
cependant, que, ironiquement, la subvention intensifia de fait le mécontentement
du monde rural plutôt que de l=apaiser. S=appuyant
sur des documents publics et la presse rurale, l=auteure de l=article explore le raisonnement, la rhétorique
et les politiques de cette initiative. Les fonds attribués aux groupes de
femmes sont minutieusement examinés afin d=établir leur effet sur la croissance de
groupes tels que les Instituts féminins.
In January 1913, the Borden Conservatives
introduced a bill in the Canadian House of Commons in which they proposed to
grant ten million dollars to the provinces over a ten-year period as a form of
aid to agriculture. While federal aid measures for farmers have since become
an all-too-familiar necessity to help rural Canadians cope with crop failures
or other natural disasters, this 1913 measure was different. It did not come
in response to economic depression, or to a crop failure, flood, or other natural
disaster. Indeed, just eighteen months into the new Conservative Government=s mandate, agricultural production had
never been higher and farming was regarded as one of the mainstays of the
burgeoning Canadian economy. This money was not targeted toward farmers= hardships, then, but on the contrary, it was said to be a means for
the federal authorities to share the wealth with their agrarian partners. It
was not directed at individual producers, and yet the Government hoped that
this money would achieve certain educational ends for a particular group of
people.[2]
When the Honourable Martin Burrell, the federal Minister of
Agriculture, introduced The Agricultural Instruction Act to the Commons
for first reading on January 24, 1913, he explained it was aimed at Aaiding and advancing the farming industry
by instruction in agriculture...@[3] Public opinion was somewhat divided because, as one journalist
writing for the Farmer=s Advocate
remarked, the Act was not defined precisely. AIt is interesting to note that instead of the word
Education, the framers of this bill have used the word Instruction to suggest
their purposes. Now I find that this word has a very wide meaning...If they
had in mind the full significance of the term they used, they have >a charter as wide as the wind.=@[4]
The introduction of the Act
coincided with a high level of rural political and social activism in Canada.
For example, the United Farmers of Ontario, founded in 1914, would come to
power in Ontario in 1919.[5] At
the same time, rural women=s organizations were particularly strong,
as evidenced by the Ontario Women=s
Institutes, which were experiencing unprecedented growth in membership and
could boast of having almost 25,000 members by 1914.[6] Indeed, with activism running high among
rural people, the introduction of a bill granting a large sum of public money
to agricultural education garnered much public attention and stirred heated
debates about potential outcomes.
What did the government of Canada hope to
accomplish with this debatable proposal that was intended to provide such
generous funds to farmers? Evidently the Conservatives were suggesting that
rural education needed improvement. However, education in Canada is clearly a
provincial matter; so exactly what kind of education was being proposed in this
bill and why did it come before Parliament when it did? By examining public
documents and the rural press, namely the Farmer=s Advocate and the Weekly Sun,[7] we can explore the rationale, rhetoric,
and politics of this public funding initiative for rural education projects.
This article examines the rhetoric that accompanied the introduction of The
Agricultural Instruction Act and argues that the Borden government=s funding for agricultural education
actually served to heighten rural discontent rather than to assuage it.
It is important to note that in such
public documents, the voices of women seem muted because most of those who
spoke out about the Act were men: they were either members of parliament
or journalists who critiqued their parliamentary deliberations.[8] Yet this paper pays particular
attention to women in two ways. First, it explores the assumptions about rural
women that were implicit in the Act, such as the rhetoric about how
women were viewed as agents of moral suasion. Secondly, this article seeks to
analyze the level of financial assistance the Act provided directly to
women in an effort to keep them happy on the farm. The Agricultural
Instruction Act made provision for a variety of rural education initiatives
including assistance for agricultural colleges, direct instruction for farm
producers, and activities for rural youth and for school children. In
addition, some of the money was also targeted toward rural women=s clubs like the Women=s Institutes (WIs) and Homemakers= Clubs.[9]
Historiographic debate about twentieth-century rural women=s organizations has centred on the
question of whether these groups were government strategies for exercising
social control over rural women, or whether they were actually woman-centred
sites for the celebration of women=s
culture and even feminist activity. Margaret Kechnie has argued that the
Ontario provincial government, anxious to curb the trend of rural depopulation
that was occurring in the years leading up to World War One, colluded with
agricultural educators and rural and small-town elites to channel farm women
into conservative programs like the Women=s Institutes. She argues further that there were
substantial problems with the way the groups were organized, and points out
that one 1918 critic believed that Athe
WI should be >scrapped to the junk heap= because of the controlYthe government exerted over it.@[10] The other side of this debate points out
that while provincial governments did attempt to exert social control over
rural women, the women defied government directives and refused to remain
apolitical. Instead, women found these clubs provided a useful venue not only
to lobby the government but also to organize on a local level for a variety of
reform efforts.[11] While
this dichotomy is useful for the purpose of argument, the reality is that the
two viewpoints are not mutually exclusive.[12]
Governments hoped to channel women in a certain way through providing such
organizations, but the women themselves were selective about which aspects of
the organization they actually welcomed.
The rising popularity of the Women=s Institutes and related women=s clubs just prior to World War One is
striking. In virtually every province, some form of rural women=s organization was in place by 1914.
While official histories of the provincial associations explain this popularity
as a happy coincidence and a sure sign that good ideas have a way of catching
on, one cannot deny that the seemingly Aspontaneous@
popularity actually coincides directly with the creation of The Agricultural
Instruction Act. When I became aware of this Act, then, I began to
question previous conclusions about women and agency because it seemed that
without the funding boost provided by The Agricultural Instruction Act,
rural women=s organizations might never have emerged
when they did and with the strength that they did. I undertook this study of
the Act in part to test those earlier conclusions about the Women=s Institutes being a popular grassroots
movement against this newfound information about federal funding as an explanation
for the Women=s Institutes= growth.
Moreover, there are striking parallels
between Canadian Women=s Institutes and the United States= rural women=s club experiences that were emerging around the
same time because of the American legislation known as The Smith-Lever Act
(1914).[13]
That American Act created educational services in each state for work
among the rural populations. In particular, the funding was used to create the
United States Department of Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service, which Atransmitted the research expertise of
federal agricultural experiment stations, the Bureau of Home Economics, and
university agriculture and home economics departments into rural communities
through a legion of county agents.@[14 Assuming that the Canadian and American cases might very well be a
close parallel, I expected that my research might prove how funding from The
Agricultural Instruction Act was largely responsible for the emergence of
groups that emphasized education for rural women in Canada.
Historians have written very little about
the Act with the exception of David C. Jones, whose 1978 doctoral
thesis, AAgriculture, The Land and Education in
British Columbia, 1914-1929,@ examined how it was applied to
schoolchildren=s education in British Columbia. Jones
focused on the work of James Wesley Gibson, who served as Director of
Elementary Agricultural Instruction for British Columbia from 1914 to1929. Through
the lens of Gibson=s bureaucratic career, Jones analyzed the
schemes for rural elementary education that arose during the period of The
Agricultural Instruction Act, concluding that after fifteen years, it Amost decidedly had not solved the rural problem.@[15]
In Canadian social history, studies of
the early part of the twentieth century have often ignored that Arural problem,@ concentrating instead on its corollary: the rapid
urbanization and industrialization that was transforming central Canadian
society. Far less attention is given to rural affairs during that same period
and less still to rural people=s own point of view.[16] But apart from immigration, the second
explanation for rapid urban growth was, of course, rural depopulation. That
trend was particularly pronounced in rural Ontario, where the population was
draining to rapidly growing cities and to the West. Population statistics show
that by 1911, Ontario=s rural population dipped below 50 per
cent of the total population for the first time, a trend that would continue
rapidly downward throughout the century.[17]
Meanwhile in Athe Canadian prairie westYpopulation jumped from 419,512 in 1901 to
1,956,082 in 1921.@[18] But even in the West, urban population
growth was significant as compared to rural.
Schemes to curb the trend of farmers and
their children flocking to the cities were very much under discussion at the
turn of the twentieth century. Some people Awere not so sure that the drain to the cities was
not gathering up some of that best blood as well, and transfusing it into the
urban economy which supposedly offered more to the enterprising farmer than did
country life.@[19] Indeed, when Burrell introduced his
bill to the House of Commons, he confessed that it was driven by two social
problems: Athe ever-increasing cost of living, with
its heavy burdens, and the increase of urban as against rural population.@ With this new legislation to promote
agricultural instruction, the Minister hoped to curb both of these persistent
problems. As he explained,
The two things are intimately related.
Congestion in cities is both an economic and a social menace. The swelling of
urban population with a diminution in the ranks of the producers has its
sequence [sic] in the added cost of living, in the increase of squalor, hunger
and crime, and B in a country to which thousands of
immigrants come B in the concentration of large masses of
the foreign born, who, when unassimilated and unrelated to our national life,
constitute both a political and social difficulty.@[20]
The Minister of
Agriculture falsely concluded that better rural education would have the twin
effects of keeping farmers on the land and increasing their productivity, which
would at the same time lower the cost of living for urban consumers.
Canada was not alone in the rural
depopulation trend, nor was it the first country to propose a scheme of funding
for agricultural instruction as a solution to the phenomenon and its related
problems. Burrell admitted that there were precedents to be found in several
countries but in particular he cited Germany, Great Britain, Denmark, Belgium,
and France. Of Belgium, he reported Adepletion
of soil and emigration of rural population became so serious that the
Government in 1885 decided to appoint agricultural supervisors or district
agricultural instructors. What has been the result? Briefly it may be summed
up thus B increased values of farm lands,
remarkable improvement in crop production and a steadying of the rural
population.@[21] The secret to all that success rested
in the fact that agricultural instruction had resulted in Belgian farms
producing ten million pounds more each year than they had twenty-five years
before. In France the results were equally impressive, and the Minister of
Agriculture challenged his sceptics by quoting the Canadian Weekly Sun: AIf anyone doubts the value of
agricultural education when carried directly to the home, the barn and the
field of the farmer, he should consider the case of France. Since that country
established a practical system of agricultural education fifteen years ago the
value of the annual crops has increased by five hundred million dollars.@[22]
But some surely did doubt the scheme that
Parliament was proposing. The most vocal opponents were the rural press,
including the Weekly Sun, the very newspaper that Burrell had quoted.
Indeed, the Sun=s objections were repeatedly made clear:
education was a provincial matter, not a federal one, and the real solution to
farmers= economic troubles would be to reinstate
reciprocity with the United States. Indeed, the front page of the 22 January
1913 edition of the paper did not mince words: AIt is not so much more agencies of education that we
need as a real Minister of Agriculture, who will vitalize the agencies already
in existence.@[23] Cynicism about Burrell=s proposal was echoed in a letter to the
editor in the Farmer=s Advocate that suggested that farmers needed more than ten
million dollars in aid. What was really necessary, according to one writer,
was exemption from taxes, raw materials duty-free, and cash handouts to pay
employees. A tall order perhaps, but no more than the industrialists of
central Canada were enjoying. ASure these aids have made the others
millionaires B now let the farmers have them,@ the editorialist quipped.[24]
Like the cynical editorialist, Liberal
members of parliament were not convinced that Burrell=s proposed bill was really in the farmers= best interest. Indeed, the Opposition
questioned the logic that suggested that increased production would either
solve Canada=s urban social problems or do much for
the farmer himself. Michael Clark, the MP for Red Deer, Alberta, tried to
follow the government=s argument to its logical conclusion. AIf you educate the farmer to a better
production, you naturally make every farmer produce more,@ he began. Referring to the statistics
that Burrell had cited from successful farm education programs in other
countries, Clark continued, AIf you could educate your farmers,
spending ten millions [sic] in the process, to produce thirty-two bushels where
they now produce seventeen, what will be the result? I believe there are one
hundred million bushels of unmarketed grain in western Canada at the present
time, of last year=s crop, and if you double your production
that means that in the spring you will have two hundred million bushels of
unmarketed grain.@[25] Clark continued his argument from the
farmers= point of view, suggesting that the best
solution was not to increase production but to decrease it so that the market
price would rise.
An editorialist in the Farmer=s Advocate concurred with Clark=s view. Increasing agricultural production would
serve only Ato reduce prices for most classes of farm
products and to curtail profits. Is it much of a kindness to the farmer to
accomplish that?@ Indeed, the rural press was convinced
that the Act was not really drafted with farmers in mind at all. ABut do we not wish to see the farmer more
highly educated, and have him produce larger crops? Most assuredly we do, so
long as it is going to benefit him individuallyY.But the motive behind all the propaganda work [of
the Act]Yis a selfish one, and conceived not in
the farmer=s interest, but in the interest of city
people.@[26]
Of course, by suggesting that the
government should take responsibility for finding markets for the excess grain
already produced by western farmers, Liberal MPs were playing partisan
politics. Their arguments made direct reference to the issues of reciprocity
and the fact that western farmers were not happy with the outcome of the 1911
general election and the defeat of the Laurier Liberals= platform of free trade with the United States.
During that election campaign, Conservative leader Robert Borden had promised
that he would Aprovide for the liberal assistance to the
provinces for the purpose of supplementing and extending the work of
agricultural education and for the improvement of agriculture.@ As Borden=s Minister of Agriculture, Burrell
explained that the bill Awas intended to be a prompt and complete
fulfillment of that promise.@[27] This was the Conservatives= attempt to heal the election rift
between Central Canada=s interests and those of the West.
Yet the agricultural press made very
clear their view that the proposed Act would not suffice. In an article
entitled AHon. Mr. Burrell=s Agricultural Policy,@ the Weekly Sun did not dismiss the idea of
federal involvement in agriculture. On the contrary, the writer argued, AThere is room for real service by the
Federal Administration. The opening of the American market to the natural
products of the soil, which may even yet be secured by acceptance of the
American offer of Reciprocity, would do more for the prosperity of the
agricultural interest than the best educational scheme the wit of man could
devise.@[28] According to economic historian Vernon
C. Fowke, The Agricultural Instruction Act Awas but slight compensation to western farmers for
the rejection of their demands for reciprocity with the United States.@[29] Slight compensation indeed, considering
how little the western provinces received compared to Ontario and Quebec. The
funding formula for the Act was based on total provincial population,
not percentage of rural population, and as a result it did not help the West as
much as it helped the more populous provinces of central Canada, specifically
Ontario and Quebec. For example, in 1915-16, while Ontario received $266,014
and Quebec $215,311, Alberta and Saskatchewan received $56,529 and $68,011
respectively.[30]
Beyond the politics of all this, the
rhetoric about farmers that surfaced during the debates on the bill is
fascinating. Not surprisingly, each party claimed to know what was best for
the farmers of the country. Meanwhile, farmers were suspicious about how well
they were actually being represented in parliament. AFarmers, hard-working men, compose seven-tenths of
the population, and produce seven-tenths of the wealth of the country but when
it comes to being represented in parliament where they could have a say in how
the wealth they produce should be spent, they tell me you can count the real
farmers on the fingers of one hand or five out of a total of two hundred and
twenty.@[31] Concern over the profile of members of
parliament would only serve to fuel the fire of rural political movements like
the United Farmers as agriculturalists sought direct representation of their
views in parliament.
The shortage of farmers equipped to serve
as MPs could be explained in part by the fact that the agricultural colleges
were failing to attract students from the farm the way promoters had hoped they
would. The MP from the North Oxford riding in Ontario pointed out that Athe young fellows who go there [to
agricultural colleges] do not come back to the farm for some reason; perhaps
they take up the teaching profession. A great many of them are town fellows
[not farmers].@[32] What seemed to be happening was that
these formal education facilities were actually attracting more town than
country folk, and to make matters worse, the graduates of these institutions
did not usually return to the farm.[33]
More were destined for the professions, whether that meant teaching in the
colleges or schools, or working as agriculture bureaucrats in government
positions. Those in this category could be called the Aelite@
of the agricultural community, though practicing farmers were more likely to
refer to them as Abook farmers.@
At the opposite end of the spectrum were
farmers who refused to learn how to improve their practices. This group was
described variously in terms of their struggles, both economic and
psychological. Rural reformers, who loved to escape to the country to
appreciate the beauty of nature, were frustrated by the fact that farmers
failed to appreciate the beauty around them. Country-life ideology was clearly
at work in the midst of the rural depopulation crisis.[34] As David Jones has argued, AIt is the nature of societies to attempt
to identify and define themselvesYIf
contrary ideals are perceived as threats, it is not unusual for spokespersons
of the emerging culture to construct an elaborate ideology which justifies the
preferred ideals. Such ideology of course is simultaneously defensive and
highly positive.@[35] MacDougall=s 1913 book on rural life in Canada was typical of
that positivist thought. He remarked that Awith some who dwell in the country, all nature is so
intimately blent with associations of toil that it cannot be looked upon with
pleasure.@[36] The problem was economic, but coupled
with it was the mental toll. MacDougall and like-minded reformers were
convinced that this could change, not by changing the economic circumstances
necessarily, but by awakening a Alatent
sensibility@ of Anature-love.@ This idealism carried over to policy-makers who
believed that education for rural living would lead to greater fulfilment among
Canadian farmers. As the Conservative members argued during debates about The
Agricultural Instruction Act, AWe
want to make better farmers and better and happier men and women.@ This powerful positivist country-life
ideology must be recognized as a driving force behind policy-making.[37]
Ensuring the happiness of rural women was
a particularly important piece of the solution to the rural depopulation
puzzle, according to commentators on rural life. MacDougall, in Rural Life
in Canada, described his encounter with a woman who resented her difficult
economic circumstances. AOne day a few of us were off for a tramp
over the hills,@ he recounted. AComing across some berry pickers we bought a few
berries. As we paid a woman for them I said, >What a glorious view you have from these hills!= With mild profanity but with strong
feeling she replied: >You wouldn=t think so darn much of it if you had to make a
living here picking blueberries.=@[38] MacDougall interpreted that woman=s pent-up resentment as symptomatic of
the plight of poor farmers. Reflecting on that conversation in the blueberry
patch, one can see that producers and the so-called Aexperts@
who prescribed idealistic remedies for curing rural frustration perceived rural
problems very differently.
In the same context, MacDougall
continued his lament of the fact that farmers did not appreciate their idyllic
settings by citing the English writer Henry Ryecroft, who claimed that Ain days gone by the peasantry found life
more than endurableYThe fact that flowers and birds are
well-nigh forgotten, together with the songs of the elves, shows how advanced
is this process of rural disintegration.@[39] As the blueberry picker probably would have wanted
to point out to these gentlemen strolling through the hills, solving rural
discontent would take much more than their idealistic proposals. The idealism
they spouted was part of what David Jones has called the Arural myth.@ According to Jones, Athis myth was essentially positive and optimistic;
those who believed felt generally that the land being occupied was livable,
that man with the aid of science could subdue nature and pave the way for an
era of agrarian splendour.@[40] In some cases, farmers themselves
subscribed to the myth because it Areassured
them of their place in society and, once they felt they knew their role, they
were able to formulate a critique of their society.@[41]
While there were the romanticists, other
rural experts such as Professor J.B. Reynolds of the Ontario Agricultural
College took a very different approach. When Reynolds spoke to a series of
farmers= meetings in March 1913, he asked, AWhat makes farm life attractive?@ His conclusions stood in stark contrast
to the rural myth that MacDougall promoted: AAll the talk of the beauties of nature and the charm
of farm life he called >poppycock.= People cannot live on it, and until our living is
certain there is no use of talking >fresh
air,= >nature,=
and >independence.=@[42] Reynolds suggested that the answer to
stirring up greater interest in farming lay in making it Aan intelligent occupation@ based on scientific and business
principles, not poetry.
If men needed more science and business
to make farm life attractive, the Farmer=s Advocate argued that women also needed more than poetry.
Reprinting a lecture delivered in Washington, D.C. by W.J. Kennedy, the Director
of Agricultural Extension at Iowa State College, the newspaper identified five Afundamental reasons as to why the country
woman, the country boy and the country girl become dissatisfied with farm life.@ The reasons included: the drudgery of
the work; the lack of social outlets; the inadequacy and misdirection of
educational facilities; the decadent condition of country churches; and the
poor roads that were seasonally impassable. Kennedy had suggested a list of
solutions to these problems, laying out a program for extension workers. AWhat farm families wanted,@ according to the Farmer=s Advocate, was less rhetoric about education, and some basic
community organization. That opportunity for rural community organization is
precisely what groups like the Women=s
Institutes provided.[43] Clubs
for rural women, like the Women=s Institutes, were stepping up to fill
that void but in order to do so, they needed farm people who would take the
initiative as leaders and organizers within their communities, rather than
relying on the expertise of outsiders. Expertise from within would arise,
according to Kennedy, if the education system began Ato dignify the two greatest of our industries:
agriculture and homemaking.@[44]
But at least one Canadian Senator
maintained that while Aclass@ divisions among farmers would continue to exist,
the Old Country model did hold the solution to Canada=s agricultural crisis. In fact, Senator George Ross
proposed a system that would create and systematize these class divisions more
formally. Specifically, he proposed that a system of farm labourers= cottages should be built so workers
could take up residence on their bosses= land as tenant farmers. This should be encouraged,
he argued, because it would solve the farm labour shortage, provide rural
domestic help, and free the farm owner to develop his mind and intellect.[45 No matter where one stood on the idea
of emulating the English model, there was something in the Senator=s argument upon which everyone could
agree: namely, that farming in Canada was by no means a classless sector.
While politicians disagreed about whether farmers needed to produce more or
have better access to markets, both parties agreed that the category of Afarmer@ was not homogeneous. They indicated that there
were different sectors or what they called Aclasses@
of farmers. There were prosperous farmers who got that way because of their
willingness to receive instruction, and there were the so-called Aordinary@ farmers who were of a somewhat lower class and were
reticent to receive advice.
As Charles Johnston has argued, farm
leaders made an assumption that for those who aspired to take up a career in
farming, Athere would be an orderly progression up
a clearly-runged rural ladder.@ Indeed, students at the agricultural
colleges were told stories Aof how intelligent high school graduates
made such a speedy profit out of their rented farms that they were soon in the
happy position of being able to buy their own.@[46] But as Johnston pointed out, the
majority of rural youth did not possess a high school education, and without
it, their chances of climbing the agricultural ladder were seriously
diminished. Although academic analyses of class structure have concluded that
farming seems to Adefy any known code of stratification,@[47] it was clearly not a level playing field
for all participants. In short, farmers were not a homogeneous social group.
As the debates about the proposed Agricultural
Instruction Act continued, Opposition MPs cautioned the Government members
that farmers in their constituencies would take offence at some of the
descriptions being tossed around during the debates. Their argument was not
that it was offensive to consider less prosperous farmers simple-minded.
Rather, as one Liberal member argued, the well-to-do farmers in his riding
would be offended at the suggestion that they needed government aid at all.[48] In his mind, farmers were an
independent, proud, hard-working lot who were only being held back by
government decisions that hampered their prosperity.
Yet politicians from both parties who
favoured the instruction act scheme agreed about the type of education that was
necessary for farmers. Spurning the idealism of country-life advocates who
thought that poetry and theory would inspire or challenge the farming
community, they called instead for practical, applied, vocational education.
In particular, they were convinced that demonstration methods were the most
likely to succeed. James Wilson, the U.S. Secretary of State for Agriculture
from 1897 to 1913, explained in 1910 that Ademonstration work simply means showing people who
are not as good farmers as they might be what good farmers throughout the world
have known for some time.@[49] In Canada, legislators and senators
focused mainly on one particular method of demonstration: the experimental
farm. The purpose of experimental farms was to showcase recent innovations in
agricultural research, both in horticulture and livestock.[50]
In a cost-cutting argument, some
suggested that one national farm (like the one in Ottawa) would suffice, and
that results from tests conducted there could be communicated throughout the
country through printed information or travelling lecturers. Of course that
argument did not sit well with MPs whose ridings already contained an
experimental farm, or with those who hoped soon to acquire one for their
constituents. Even among those who accepted that the country needed more than
a few of these farms, the same fiscally conservative thinking surfaced when
they argued that experimental farms should not be duplicated across the
country. Senator Ross from Middlesex County in Ontario questioned whether
duplication was not a waste of precious resources. He was convinced that
raising hogs in one place would be sufficient, while other farms should do
other experiments. The resulting information could be shared, he thought,
through publications and lectures.[51]
But those who claimed to know farmers
best vehemently disagreed with the idea of centralized farms or dedicated
projects or more publications and lectures. Their opposition was only partly
politically driven by self-interest in their own ridings. The argument centred
more on the type of education that was most appropriate for farm people. It
had to be practical. It had to be visual. And it had to be local. According
to the Honourable Mr. Robert Watson, a Senator from Portage la Prairie,
Manitoba, AIt would be a good thing for Canada to
have a demonstration farm every twenty-five miles, where people could see for
themselves what is being done.@[52] Watson was convinced that farm folks
were not readers, but doers. Similarly, Charles Johnston discusses the disdain
that some farmers held for higher education, noting that Athere would be many a farmer, affluent or
otherwise, who would recoil from the teachings and refuse to follow the example
of their supposed betters who had received the dubious benefits of higher
education.@[53]
To facilitate the kind of applied
instruction that the Act=s creators proposed, setting up
experimental farms was only one of the most obvious methods. Even more promising,
some argued, were actual visits to individual farms where consultation, advice,
and instruction could take place one-on-one. That of course, would involve
even more personnel. In 1913, John R. MacDougall reported that such
instructors, or Aagricultural representatives,@ were firmly established in Ontario: AOntario alone employs over a hundred
trained, skilled, competent agriculturalists, teaching, and traveling over the
Province furnishing information and advice upon farm conditions and
possibilitiesY[one expert comments that]: >In those regards Canada is in the front
rank among all the nations of which I have any knowledge.=@[54] This was a close parallel to the
American model where the goal of the United States Department of Agriculture
Extension Service, funded by The Smith-Lever Act, was to place
one agricultural representative in every county of every state. As Louis
Ferleger has noted, ATen years after the passage of The
Smith-Lever Act, there were 2,500 county agents in the United States spread
out over about three-quarters of the agricultural counties in the nation. Not
only did information flow back and forth between extension agents and farmers,
the county agents played a central role in organizing farmers on the local
level for purposes of education and sharing information.@[55]
But the creation of all these new
positions for agricultural representatives only served to reinforce doubts
among farmers about the federal funding program and its effectiveness. An
editorial in the Weekly Sun, entitled AHow Farmers May be Helped,@ questioned how the money was being spent. AWe doubt not that the greater portion of
this $10,000,000 will be spent in salaries and general management of the fund,
and that a very small fraction will benefit but a small fraction of the farmers
of Canada.@ Instead of more agricultural
representatives, the editorialist suggested something that he considered much
more cost-effective: Areduce the duties on farm implements for
ten years. This would benefit every farmer and cost nothing to administer the
fund.@[56]
While reducing tariffs was not part of
the plan, hiring additional agricultural educators was one of the centrepieces
of the proposal. For the most part, in both the U.S. and Canada, these
agricultural representatives were younger than the farmers they advised, and
this highlighted the fact that even while the Canadian bill was being
considered in the Legislature and Senate, discussion about farmers centred on
the age of the farmer. The problem of rural depopulation, after all, was
largely about the migration of young people away from the farms and into the
cities. The result, it seemed, was that the potential for change in the
countryside left when the youth departed. Critics viewed older producers as
too Aset in their ways@ though not completely unteachable if the right
approach was taken. That approach would inevitably involve reaching the farm
youth.[57]
To train youth, post-secondary
institutions seemed an obvious choice of venue, with agricultural and
veterinary colleges a principal target; but the majority of the graduates from
those institutions did not take up farming directly.[58] What better target, then, than those
who were younger still? School-aged children became a prime focus of programs
established under The Agricultural Instruction Act because, as Danbom
has argued about the United States, Athe
schools dealt with children, who were more pliable than adults. To truly
endure, changes in rural society had to begin with children.@[59] The Act became synonymous with
three different kinds of instruction for children: gardening, both at school
and at home; school agricultural fairs; and boys= and girls=
clubs.[60] David
Jones has pointed out the implicit philosophy behind these child education
schemes. In British Columbia, educators insisted that planting a garden was
not as much about planting a garden as it was about shaping character. The
line between vocational and cultural/moral education was blurred. Funding
programs for children and youth were clearly attempts to curb the rural
depopulation trend by helping children find stimulation in rural life, so that
they would be less likely to leave for the city when the opportunity arose.[61] It was also an attempt to prepare
farmers= children for life-long learning that
would make them more receptive to instruction from rural experts when they
reached adulthood.[62]
But meanwhile, proponents of agricultural education for children also hoped
that the biblical principle would hold true: Aa little child shall lead them.@ In other words, instructors of children
hoped that their parents would become curious enough, through their children=s activities, to seek out better means to
increase adult production on the farm.
In this exercise in cultural
reproduction, women were to play a key role in nurturing children into a love
of the land. In all of these initiatives with children, the involvement of
rural women was assumed. Indeed, most of the provinces counted on the formal
and informal support of women to make the schemes work, particularly school
fairs, home gardening, and clubs for boys and girls sponsored through the
Departments of Agriculture. Given the emphasis on women as nurturers, and even
as nation-builders, this is not surprising. In her 1978 study of imperialism
and motherhood, Anna Davin highlighted the important role of women=s voluntary societies for the
proliferation and inculcation of specific moral values, and historians of
Canadian women have amply demonstrated that the same phenomenon was at work in
this country as well.[63]
Women who were active in rural
organizations such as the Women=s Institutes and Homemaker Clubs were
critical of the fact that government support for farmers most often ignored the
needs of women. One vocal critic was Mary Urie Watson, Principal of the
Macdonald Institute in Guelph, a domestic science education facility for rural
women. After ten frustrating years of low enrolment in her institution, Watson
could have offered a variety of explanations about why rural girls and women
were not flocking to her school, including the fact that most females from
rural communities could not meet the admissions requirement of a secondary
school diploma. But the chief reason she gave had to do with the existing
distribution system of government funds. In 1913 the Macdonald Institute
launched a series of domestic science education courses by extension, an
important new initiative in conjunction with the Ontario Women=s Institutes.[64] Just one year earlier, Principal
Watson had overtly criticized the Ontario Government for discriminating against
women in the distribution of its rural education dollars. AWhy should the women not claim some of
Ontario=s wealth from the government?@ she demanded. Speaking before the
Annual Convention of the Women=s Institutes, she challenged her
listeners to ensure that women received their fair share of government funds.
She referred to the provincial government=s investment in male agricultural representatives
when she asked, ADo you know what the work in each county
cost for salaries and traveling expenses and maintenance? $2100. Do you know
the average amount per county the Women=s Institute work costs? An average of $125.00. The
disparity is too great when the relative importance of the two branches of work
is considered.@[65]
Watson was aware of the fact that
agricultural experts were meeting with some resistance from male farmers who
did not welcome government intervention in their farming practices, and she
argued that women were much more open to instruction and therefore a better
investment of public monies. A[The] Department [of Agriculture] might
leave those indifferent farmers to ripen a bit and transfer their attention to
harvesting a crop of extension classes amongst the women who are hungry for
more instruction about their special work. We can assure them of enthusiastic
support.@[66] While there is no evidence that they
were doing so in direct response to Watson=s criticisms, several Canadian provinces did use
some portion of their funds from The Agricultural Instruction Act to
make direct provisions for instructing rural women themselves, not just their
children. In March 1920, The Agricultural Gazette, a newsletter
published to report on the Act=s
expenditures, included a special report on AWomen=s
Institutes.@ The report made it clear that Athe work of these organizations in all
the provinces except British Columbia is assisted, to some extent, by funds
under The Agricultural Instruction Act.@[67] Table 1 (on page 284) shows the
provincial allotments of those funds that went to rural women=s organizations in each province in 1920.
The bulk of the funding designated for
women went into the coffers of rural women=s organizations such as Women=s Institutes or Homemakers= Clubs. Begun in 1897, domestic science
clubs for women took hold throughout Ontario and across Canada, and the movement
experienced tremendous growth over the next fifteen years.[68] By 1913 when The Agricultural
Instruction Act funds began to be distributed, Women=s Institute members were already
considering the need for some national organization to tie the provincial clubs
together. Hopes for federal funding ran high when representatives from various
Women=s Institute groups met together in
Winnipeg in February 1913. Feminist leader and prolific Canadian author
Emily Murphy, also known as AJaney Canuck,@ hoped to persuade the authorities in Ottawa that it would be a
legitimate use of the Act funds for the Government of Canada
to pay to establish a national federation of Women=s Institutes. Of course, under the terms of the Act,
monies were transferred to the provinces, not directed to the creation of
national bodies. The attempt to find funding through this Act in order
to establish a national federation of rural women=s clubs failed.[69]
However, some money from The
Agricultural Instruction Act was designated for women, particularly through
women=s clubs. In some provinces, such as
Quebec and Manitoba, the money was directed toward providing instruction in
household science rather than directly to the Women=s Institutes or Homemakers= Clubs. As a percentage of the total grants going
to each province, women=s work in 1920 only accounted for 3.44
per cent of the total expenditures. In some individual provinces, the money
earmarked for women=s work was sometimes as high as 14 per
cent (New Brunswick and Alberta), but in others, it was consistently kept very
low. For example, Ontario only directed 1.49 per cent of the total money
toward Women=s Institutes.
In straight dollar amounts, the sums allotted to the Women=s Institutes ranged from nothing at all (British Columbia) to
between $2,566 (Prince Edward Island) and $9,500 (Alberta) in the budget year
1920-21. Ontario received more than $335,000 per year in the final years of
the program and the amounts given over to women=s
organizations ranged from less than 1 per cent up to 3.32 per cent of the total
grant monies. Provinces that were much smaller in terms of their total
population (and therefore total grant received) managed to set aside a much
more respectable sum for women=s work. For example, Prince Edward Island, which only received
about one-tenth the amount of money given to Ontario, consistently put aside an
average of 11 per cent for the work of Women=s
Institutes.
No wonder Principal Watson and her contemporaries felt that the
Government of Ontario was short-changing its rural women by holding back funds
under the Act from women. Adelaide Hoodless, when she was advocating
organizations for rural women in the 1890s, had accused men of being more
concerned with the science of raising livestock than the science of raising
their children.[70] Her
rhetoric about investing in families rather than pigs and cattle was still
popular among Women=s Institutes leaders almost twenty years later, and it proved useful
for women to plead for more funding for their clubs. Of course women=s organizers would argue that the money was never enough. Yet,
given the context of early-twentieth-century rural society, the fact that women=s club work was funded at all is noteworthy.
It seems logical to assume that this
funding would serve to explain why rural women=s groups flourished in the period leading up to
1920. Grassroots explanations cite women=s interest in these organizations and their agency
in calling for the establishment of Women=s Institutes and Homemakers= Clubs. Yet the fact remains that to organize these
clubs took money, and for the ten years of The Agricultural Instruction Act,
money was available to local women=s
clubs through the provincial allotments under the Act. Like the funds
directed to elevating rural schoolchildren, the direction of funds toward women=s club work was in part based on the
country-life idealism that asserted that wives were a major factor in men=s decisions to abandon farming for city
life. The rationale was that if the women could be more content with rural
living, then the trend toward rural depopulation might begin to be reversed.
Therefore, a portion of The Agricultural Instruction Act funds was
directed to women=s work.
My hypothesis when I began this research
was that such funds might help to explain the rapid expansion of rural women=s groups across the country. But a
closer analysis of the funding channelled toward women casts doubt on that
idea. The case of Ontario illustrates this point. As the most populous
province, Ontario received $336,303.26 from The Agricultural Instruction Act
in 1920. As the birthplace of Women=s
Institutes, Ontario also boasted the highest Women=s Institutes membership in the country, with 30,000
women that year. One would expect, therefore, that Ontario Women=s Institutes branches were the most
highly funded in the country. However, as the provincial government chose to
direct only 1.49 per cent of that money ($5,000) toward Women=s Institutes activity, Ontario=s WI members were among the lowest funded
in the country, as Table 2 (page 285) illustrates.[71] There was no cause-and-effect
relationship between The Agricultural Instruction Act funding and club
participation rates in 1920. Women=s
Institutes clubs were popular among Ontario=s rural women, and they were supported financially
by the provincial Department of Agriculture, but they were not generously
funded by the proceeds of the Act. Indeed, although that funding was
welcome and significant, it alone does not account for the growth of the Women=s Institutes.
Despite the popularity of Women=s Institutes and their relatively low
cost, politicians were still concerned about rural depopulation. And they
remained convinced that female contentment with rural living was a key to reversing
that problem. But how could women be made more content? How could they be made
Abetter and happier@ women? The commonly held assumption was
that by alleviating her sense of isolation in the country, and by introducing
her to the amenities of city living, the urge of the rural woman to abandon
country living would be assuaged. The Farmers= Advocate reported on a list of some of the suggested
amenities to which farmwomen should have access. According to American
extension worker W.J. Kennedy of Iowa State College, women wanted and needed
labour-saving devices in the kitchen; the use of mechanical power for washing,
ironing, churning, and sweeping; the installation of a modern water and sewage
system; the installation of a modern heating and lighting system; the
presentation of carefully worked-out plans for a comfortable and practicable
farm home; sensible suggestions on the decorating and furnishing of the farm
home; and helpful hints on the planning and adorning of the farm lawn.[72]
These were the very things that Women=s Institutes and Homemakers= Clubs took up across the country.[73] The Federated Women=s Institutes of Ontario created a series
of sub-committees to promote various aspects of their club work. One of these
committees, dedicated to AHome Economics,@ tried to provide a forum for discussion on a whole
range of issues. These included the question of substandard rural housing. AHow to remodel and make more convenient
the old house is one of the leading problems, since building is very expensive,@ one publication conceded. At the same
time, the Women=s Institutes took up Athe study of labour-saving devices,
equipment and methodsYmaking for greater efficiency in rural
homes.@[74] The demonstrations of new appliances
and techniques were entertaining to women, but with access to rural hydro still
decades off in many parts of the country, the idea of modernized farm homes was
little more than a dream.[75]
This logic was commonly offered as a strategy to resolve rural depopulation:
when farmwomen were exposed to these conveniences, they would decide to stay on
the farm. In fact the opposite was often true. When rural women realized how
primitive their living conditions were compared with those in urban places,
some were even more determined either to leave themselves, or certainly to
encourage their daughters to do so.
The irony of the instruction strategy
embedded in The Agricultural Instruction Act ran very deep. Introducing
farmwomen to standards of living that they could not hope to achieve often
served to strengthen their resolve to escape the farm. This was certainly not
the end that the framers of the Act had envisioned when they created
funding to educate farm people and to inspire them to achieve higher standards
of living through farm improvement. Dwayne Cox argues in the case of Alabama
that Awhile agents believed rural life imparted
distinctive virtues, they also wanted life on the farm to be more like life in
the city. In this respect they held contradictory assumptions and promoted
contradictory goals.@[76]
One can also speculate that another
unintended outcome of this well-intended Act was to strengthen the
resolve of rural people, both men and women, to support the farm parties that
promised to address the needs of the farm community more directly. It is more
than simply a coincidence that support for third parties such as the United Farmers
and the Progressives grew during the years that the much-criticized Agricultural
Instruction Act was in place. As Kerry Badgley points out, AIn the 1919 [Ontario] provincial election
the UFO received 21.7 percent of the popular vote. In 1921 the Progressives
received 27.7 percent of the popular vote in the province: there was evidence
of momentum at that point.@[77]
In 1924, Liberal Prime Minister William
Lyon Mackenzie King cancelled The Agricultural Instruction Act despite
the fact that various provincial administrators campaigned vigorously to have
the funding extended. David Jones offers at least four explanations for that
cancellation, including poor results, poor administration on the part of the
provinces, tremendous federal indebtedness after the First World War, and
partisan politics. The fact that this grant was a Conservative initiative
resulting from an election promise in 1911 meant that Liberal Prime Minister
Mackenzie King did not feel bound to extend it.[78
What kind of impact did The Agricultural
Instruction Act have on rural women? Certainly not the kinds of outcomes
that Martin Burrell and the country-life idealists had hoped for. Statistics
show that the Act did not help to curb rural depopulation nor did it
help to make women any happier in their rural settings. An examination of the
funding directed toward Women=s Institutes and Homemakers= Clubs shows that women=s work only represented a small
percentage of provincial expenditures. Indeed it seems that the larger the
province, the smaller the proportion of funding earmarked for women=s clubs. Ontario, the most populous
province, was also the least generous toward women=s work, as we have seen.
Moreover, the kind of instruction offered
to women did little to encourage them to remain on the farm, let alone remain
there happily. Ironically, through The Agricultural Instruction Act,
women learned a great deal. But the lessons they took away were not the ones
their funding providers hoped to pass along. Politicians and country-life
idealists were convinced that if farmwomen could only learn to enjoy rural
living then the problems of the countryside would be solved. Through groups
like the Women=s Institutes and Homemakers= Clubs, rural women learned about the
latest details of consumer products, convenient appliances, and comfortable
homes. Women flocked to these clubs funded by The Agricultural
Instruction Act. And they did learn. But no one could have predicted the
outcome of this program of instruction. It is not that women learned how to be
happy and make a better living off the farm. Rather they learned that to be
happy, the living just might be better B OFF the farm.
|
Table 1: 1920 Women's Groups
Funding as % of Total Grant
|
|
Province
|
The Agricultural Instruction Act grant
|
Amount of Grant Given to Women's Groups*
|
Percentage of total
|
|
PEI
|
$31,749.22
|
$2,566.00
|
8.08
|
|
Nova Scotia
|
$81,716.69
|
$4,000.00
|
4.89
|
|
New Brunswick
|
$64,110.80
|
$9,300.00
|
14.51
|
|
Quebec**
|
$271,113.76
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
|
Ontario
|
$336,303.26
|
$5,000.00
|
1.49
|
|
Manitoba**
|
$77,113.11
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
|
Saskatchewan
|
$81,728.48
|
$7,500.00
|
9.18
|
|
Alberta
|
$66,965.62
|
$9,500.00
|
14.19
|
|
British Columbia***
|
$69,199.06
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
|
Total
|
$1,080,000.00
|
$37,866.00
|
3.51
|
Source: Compiled from The Agricultural Gazette 7, 9 (Sept. 1920): 729-33.
* While all provinces were required
to report their budgets of The Agricultural Instruction Act money, they
were not required to do so in a regulated format. Thus I have decided to
include all budget lines referring to "Women's Institutes,"
"Women's Clubs," and AWomen=s Work@ in AWomen=s Groups.@ Also, certain provinces included
budget lines for Adomestic science,@ Ahousehold science,@ and Ahome economics.@ However, I have not
included this money in my calculations because these funds were primarily
directed to programs for schoolchildren and the wages of instructors who taught
domestic science courses rather than to the activities of women=s clubs directly.
*** Women=s
Groups in British Columbia were not funded by money from The Agricultural
Instruction Act, 1920-21.
|
Table 2: 1920 Membership &
Provincial Funding of Rural Women=s Groups
|
|
Province
|
Members
|
Branches
|
$ per member
|
$ per branch
|
|
PEI
|
750
|
34
|
$3.42
|
$75.47
|
|
Nova
Scotia
|
17000
|
55
|
$0.24
|
$72.73
|
|
New
Brunswick
|
5000
|
134
|
$1.86
|
$69.40
|
|
Quebec*
|
1090
|
50
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
|
Ontario
|
30000
|
900
|
$0.17
|
$5.56
|
|
Manitoba*
|
2600
|
127
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
|
Saskatchewan
|
5000
|
180
|
$1.50
|
$41.67
|
|
Alberta
|
12000
|
265
|
$0.79
|
$35.85
|
|
British
Columbia**
|
3000
|
68
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
|
Total
|
76440
|
1813
|
$0.50
|
$20.89
|
**Women=s Groups in British Columbia were
not funded by money from The Agricultural Instruction Act, 1920-21.
1 The author wishes to acknowledge funding from the Social
Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and the Laurentian
University Research Fund. Julie Dion, Kristin Ireland, and Lee-Ann Spooner
Fielding provided very capable research assistance and sound advice. An
earlier version of this paper was presented at the meeting of the Canadian
History of Education Association in Quebec City in October 2002. The author
wishes to thank HSE=s readers for their helpful suggestions.
29 Fowke, Canadian Agricultural Policy, 246-47.
[xxxix] Ibid., 141-42. For other examples of this
idealist rhetoric, see Jones,
AThere is Some Power About the Land,@ 98, 99.
|