|
AUnless she gives better satisfaction@:
Teachers, Protestant Education, and Community
in Rural Quebec, Lochaber and Gore District,
1863-1945[1]
Mary Anne Poutanen
This study explores the complex
relationships from 1863 to 1945 between the Board of School Trustees of
Lochaber and Gore, its teachers, and parents, to reveal how these different
parties influenced, resisted, and consented to changes in local schooling.
Thus, the analysis moves away from a social control model which has dominated
the literature on schooling in Quebec to reveal the local dynamics at work in
the community. The Protestants of Lochaber and Gore were a microcosm of the
larger Protestant community in Quebec. All of the problems associated with
rural education in poor regions across Quebec, such as teacher transiency,
widespread poverty and a modest tax base, the primitive nature of one-room
schoolhouses, and conflict between the seasonal demands of agriculture and
school time, existed here. This investigation is based on historical documents
from the Archives of the Western Quebec School Board in addition to newspaper
accounts and local histories.
Cette étude explore les relations complexes
existant entre les maîtres, les parents et les commissaires d=école des cantons de Lochaber et de Gore,
afin de montrer comment ces différents acteurs participèrent, résistèrent et
consentirent aux
changements scolaires dans leur localité. Ainsi, l=analyse
se dissocie du modèle de contrôle social qui a dominé l=historiographie de la
scolarisation au Québec pour mettre en lumière le jeu des dynamiques locales. Les
protestants de Lochaber et de Gore furent un microcosme de la communauté
protestante du Québec. Tous les problèmes reliés à l=éducation dans les régions
rurales pauvres de l=ensemble du Québec s=y retrouvaient : le
caractère éphémère des maîtres, la pauvreté généralisée et le bas taux de taxes
foncières, le caractère primitif des écoles à une seule classe et le conflit
entre les exigences saisonnières de l=agriculture et l=école.
Cette recherche, qui porte sur la période 1863-1945, s=appuie sur les documents tirés
des Archives du Western Quebec School Board ainsi que sur les journaux et les
monographies locales.
In November 1922, the parents of pupils who
attended the Lochaber Bay School complained to school board trustees that their
children were unruly at school. They held the teacher, Miss M, responsible for
their sons= and daughters= refractory behaviour, citing her inability to
keep the usual school hours, supervise her students, and carry out all of her
teaching obligations. After deliberating about this grievance at a regularly
scheduled school board meeting, the trustees authorized the secretary-treasurer
to notify Miss M that her services would no longer be required after December
31st Aunless she gives
better satisfaction than she has done in the past months.@ He instructed her to open the school at 9
a.m., give only two 15-minute recesses and a one-hour lunch break, keep the
children on the school grounds, prevent them from damaging property, follow the
curriculum, and supervise and correct her pupils= spelling mistakes.[2] From the school
board=s point of view, the
prospect of having to hire a suitable replacement before the new school term
began in January was a formidable task. We know nothing about what Miss M
thought about her teaching appointment since she, like so many who passed
briefly through the four Lochaber and Gore Protestant schools, left no
surviving written records.
The purpose of this study is to explore the
nature of the relationships of the
Anglo-Protestant community of Lochaber and Gore with its schools, school board,
teachers, and to a lesser extent with the provincial government, in order to understand their involvement in the
local education of children. It will show how these different parties B exemplified by Miss M, Lochaber Bay parents,
and school board trustees B influenced,
resisted, and consented to changes at the local schoolhouse. Such a focus will
also clarify what importance parents placed on educating their children, what
they understood constituted a good Protestant education, and their assessment
of local schooling. The Protestants of Lochaber and Gore were both a minority
who operated a dissentient school board and a microcosm of the larger
Protestant community in Quebec. Thus, the analysis moves from a social-control
model which has dominated the literature on schooling in Quebec to one that
reveals the local dynamics at work in the community.
Until recently, Quebec historians of education
have over- emphasized the role played by the state in the province=s system of schooling, resulting in research
that was periodized by government legislation and presented from the
perspective of state initiatives and its concomitant administration. These
scholars relied upon government-generated documents, such as superintendents= and inspectors= reports, but without a countervailing view they
have been predisposed to adopt similar critical attitudes as these education
officials toward poor rural communities and their school boards. Preoccupied
as they were with the development of the bureaucratic state, historians did not
challenge this Atop-down@ or social control model, which presupposed that
schooling was imposed on an unwilling population. Thus, the local community
and its contribution to schooling was disregarded.[3] In a 1997 review
of the historiography, Jean-Pierre Charland argued for a refocusing of
research on local reactions to public education in Quebec similar to the
academic work of historians of Ontario education.[4]
The social control model has also dominated the
scholarship of Ontario schooling. Alison
Prentice, a pioneer in the history of education, contends that a system of
schooling was imposed upon an unwilling and apathetic population who resisted
state education.[5]
In a later publication which she co-authored with Susan Houston, Prentice has
not modified her position. Both authors argue that a state system of education
did not usher in an era of popular education; school promoters were faced with Aa giant job of salesmanship@[6] to get a reluctant population on board. With fewer
alternatives open to them, communities were enticed by government funds to
establish state schools; parents were dragged into a system they did not value.
Similarly, Bruce Curtis maintains that a bourgeois system of education was
imposed on a population which had only two options, either to accept or resist
it.[7] That parents
influenced and supported aspects of the system of schooling while resisting
those parts with which they disagreed is not considered. In contrast, R.D.
Gidney, D.A. Lawr, and W.P.J. Millar=s studies reveal that communities influenced school policy by opposing
the efforts of state officials to enact policies they did not favour, thus
forcing bureaucrats to modify their decisions.[8]
A new generation of Quebec historians focuses on
schooling at the community level.[9]
Andrée Dufour explores the beginning of public education in Quebec and the
relationship between the state and local rural communities in developing a
system of schools and demonstrates that the rural population was strongly
implicated in education.[10]
To understand the contributions made by both the state and rural communities to
provide children with an education, she suggests that historians must study the
interaction between these two entities. I would add that a crucial subset of
interactions also occurred at the community level between the school board,
teachers, and parents. J.I. Little has written extensively on early local
education in the Eastern Townships. His exploration of the Scottish and
French-Canadian populations of Winslow, for example, shows how they initiated
and supported local education despite their difficulty in raising adequate
funds to pay for schooling and the government=s refusal to adequately finance education.[11] Similarly, Wendie
Nelson=s examination of the AGuerre des Eteignoirs@ reveals how the population of St-Grégoire
protested the growing burden of school taxes. The local elite, out of self
interest, did not want to support a public system of education in which its own
children did not participate; the habitants feared the loss of local control
over schooling and the growing influence and power of the village elite.[12]
This investigation, as part of a more
comprehensive history of Protestant education in Quebec, uses documents of the
Archives of the Western Quebec School Board B minutes of school board meetings, petitions,
correspondence, teachers= journals, trustees= reports, inspectors= comments, and school censuses B in conjunction with newspaper accounts, local
histories, superintendents= reports, and
petitions and letters sent to the superintendent of education in Quebec City.
The study is framed by the creation of the Lochaber and Gore dissentient school
board in 1863 and by the end of the second world war following the introduction
of compulsory education in 1943 but before education officials advocated for
school board consolidation in the post-war period. This periodization allows
the teasing out of the rather involved interactions between the community and
its local schools without adding complex regional issues which county boards
often engendered. The school municipality of Lochaber and Gore is an ideal
subject for analysis: all of the problems associated with rural education in
poor regions across Quebec (teacher transiency, widespread poverty of its
ratepayers with its concomitant modest tax base, and the primitive nature of
one-room schoolhouses) existed here; the Anglo-Protestant population was small,
which facilitates a more manageable study; and the minutes of the school board
meetings are complete. Therefore, this microstudy of Lochaber and Gore has
much broader implications for rural Quebec.
In the discussion that follows, I explore the
demographic, social, and economic developments which characterized Lochaber and
Gore over an eighty-year period. Next, I analyze the convoluted and sometimes
paradoxical associations between the school trustees, the teachers, and the
community. To do this, I examine how poverty affected the financing of local
schooling B by way of teachers= salaries, working and learning conditions at
Lochaber and Gore schools, teacher transiency, teachers= competence, and community support for its
schools B as well as the
relationships at the schoolhouse.
The Township of Lochaber and Gore
Lochaber and Gore was located on the north shore
of the Ottawa River 19 miles downstream from Hull and just east of
Petite-Nation, now St-André Avellin (see Figure 1). The township=s first settlers arrived here from Lochaber,
Scotland at the beginning of the nineteenth century to farm 110 square miles of
land acquired by popular native son, Archibald MacMillan, and his associates.[13] The timber trade,
originally conceived of as a means to support pioneer farming, provided the
motor for the region=s economic
development. From the onset, insufficient arable land thwarted whatever
aspirations of self-sufficiency Scottish settlers had, nor could it sustain the
level of agronomical success that some local farmers managed to squeeze out of
the soil.[14]
By necessity, inhabitants combined agriculture with work in the lumber trade,
usually spending winter months in shanties away from their families. The poor
soil and rocky terrain meant that many of the farmers converted their land to
rough pasture to raise livestock, rather than grow crops, and to keep dairy
farms which supplied milk to local butter and cheese factories. These
industries flourished in the southern part of the township, in Lochaber Bay, provisioning the local economy and logging camps.[15] The household
economy of this farming community depended upon all family members to ensure
economic survival. While the men worked in the lumbering trade, the women were
left to manage the farms; children were called upon to assist their mothers in
the heavy task of animal husbandry, just as they were expected to work with
their fathers during the planting season and at harvest.
Settlers, composed primarily of Scots and to a
lesser extent of English and Irish, established their own Protestant
institutions
B Presbyterian,
Baptist, Methodist, and Anglican churches, societies, and schools
B early on. Like their counterparts elsewhere,
local Scots, who valued the ability to read and discuss the bible, built
schoolhouses in the early decades following settlement.[16] By the 1840s,
settlers had erected a school in Lochaber Bay. Rev. John King reported
preaching at the school which he travelled to from his home in Clarence
village.[17]
Even the more remote area of the school district, Silver Creek, boasted a log
schoolhouse which had been built in the 1840s conveniently situated between two
main county roads where local women taught.[18]
While the entire populace of the township was never very large,[19] the
Anglo-Protestant population declined from 70 per cent of the total in 1851,
falling sharply after 1881, to 30 per cent by 1941. In the same year, in the
largest centre of the district, Thurso, the citizenry had burgeoned threefold
since the turn of the century. The town=s majority francophone population comprised 85
per cent of the total census of 1,295; the remaining 15 per cent included
English, Scottish, Irish (14 per cent), and German (1 per cent).[20] These changing
demographic characteristics paralleled economic transformations in the region.
By the late1920s, agriculture in the region was
in decline and farming eventually became a part-time occupation for many who
were transformed into factory and urban workers,[21] further afield in
industrial cities or close to home in Thurso at its Singer sewing-machine
factory.[22]
The town had historically serviced the rural population with its stores, post
office, sawmill, churches, and schools. The arrival of the railroad meant that
residents of the township could shop in Thurso for goods they had previously
sought elsewhere. In this way, Thurso replaced Ottawa, Hull, and Montreal as a
vital commercial centre for the local population.[23] It also became a
manufacturing hub which drew upon the lumber and agricultural products of the
hinterland and served the population as a marketplace.[24] With fewer local
job opportunities and to avoid the harsh life that indigenous farming practices
encompassed, young women formed the bulk of the population who chose to work as
maids and factory hands in Thurso and in nearby towns.[25] Many of the men
and women who left the region maintained links to the community by visiting
family and friends, attending Lochaber Bay=s Old Boy Reunions, and responding to appeals
made by church and cemetery committees for financial assistance. Others
returned to teach in the same schools where they had received their early
education.
School Trustees, Teachers, and Parents
The relationships between school trustees,
teachers, and parents were complex, ambiguous, and sometimes difficult. Their
lives intersected intimately, both at work and at leisure: they shared
households, attended local churches, joined a variety of social, cultural, and
agricultural associations which promoted community interests, and participated
in civic and social events. Because of the close proximity of their lives,
school trustees, parents, and teachers had to be sensitive to potential
flashpoints of conflict by responding effectively to reduce tensions and by
being open to the opinions of others. School trustees had to reconcile
contentious views about financing local schooling B from setting the mill rate, calculating the
school board budget, which had to be affordable to ratepayers, and paying
teachers= salaries, to
choosing textbooks B and about teaching
methods, community expectations, and implementing bureaucratic regulations.
Teachers were vulnerable to community politics. Their position required
ingenious skill in asserting themselves without alienating their students,
parents, and trustees and in emphasizing those characteristics which they held
in common, be it their rural origins or their Anglo-Protestant identity.
It was in their institutions, especially at
church and at school, where the Protestant identity was fortified. In the face
of a declining population, the Protestant community became more protective of
preserving its character. In 1863, a group of Protestant dissenters broke from
the existing school board, which had become increasingly Catholic and therefore
no longer reflected their interests. They formed a new school board, holding
its first meeting in Thurso at the home of timber baron John A. Cameron.[26] A year later,
trustees opened a school in Thurso Village in the old Presbyterian church.
Others followed. These newly established Protestant schools symbolized the
importance that the community placed on education, the determination and the
efforts it had made, and the generosity of individual farmers who consented to
or offered to have the schoolhouses built on a section of their farm land.
One was located on the farm of the late Mr.
William Lamb on the hill north of Lochaber CPR station and another on the farm
of Mr. Rory McLachlan, with the third school, known as AMacDonald=s School@ situated some distance west. The last school in
Lochaber was on the McEachern Farm.[27]
For many of these benefactors, their link to the
establishment of a local schoolhouse B two schools by Confederation and two more by1880 B and to the scholarly achievements of the
students was a source of enormous pride.
School Trustees
Elected by fellow citizens, school trustees
volunteered their time and energy to the education of local children and to
ensure that their schooling was grounded in the precepts of Protestantism;
thus, they played a key role in preserving community identity. Particular
class and religious affiliations characterized the men who were elected school
trustees. An examination of the Lochaber and Gore school board reveals that
trustees usually were members of the local elite: some were professionals, such
as Baptist minister Archibald Campbell or clerk George Edwards; many more were
merchants, such as George William Cameron and W.C. Edwards, both of whom were
involved in the timber trade, and Hugh McLean; a few were artisans, such as
tinsmith and tavern-keeper James L. Gray, who became a merchant years later;
but the majority were farmers. They came from farming families with
long-standing roots in the community and which contributed several generations
of trustees B Alexander and Hugh
McLean, Robert, Peter, and Adelbert MacLachlan,[28] and Duncan and
James McCallum, to name a few B over the period
under study. They derived status in the community in part as members of the
original Scottish settler families. They were, as historian Jean-Pierre
Charland points out, the most prosperous in the farming community given the
property requirements a trustee had to meet in order to qualify for the office.[29] Many of the
trustees were Baptists. Their various responsibilities at church forged
friendships and interest and involvement in local schooling. The first
chairman of the school board, Alexander McLean, embodied these characteristics:
he was a merchant, came from one of the founding farming families of Lochaber
and Gore, and was a Baptist. Many were involved in the executive of local
associations such as the Lochaber Bay Cemetery Committee,[30] the Agriculture
Society, and the local Cheese Farmers= Association which in 1904 elected P.M. McLachlan as one of its three
directors.[31]
Similarly, their wives served on the executive of associations which included
the Women=s Christian
Temperance Union, Red Cross, and Women=s Institute. Mrs. A.P. MacLachlan, for instance, was active in all three
clubs: she was elected first vice-president of the Red Cross in 1916;[32] hosted meetings of
the WCTU at her home;[33]
and presided over the 1937 election of the Women=s Institute executive, and was herself chosen
head of its immigration committee.[34]
As members of the local elite, trustees were well positioned to impose their
values and authority on the Anglo-Protestant citizens of Lochaber and Gore.
Yet, they negotiated this power with members of the community who exercised
their own pressure and influence. They were, according to Little, Aagents of state power and influence at the local
level@ on the one hand, and
Arepresented the interests and desires of their
electors@ on the other.[35]
School trustees are often portrayed in the
historiography as fiscally driven, conservative, and prominent men of the local
community, more interested in balancing the books than in bestowing a good
education upon local children. This view fails to take into consideration that
the school board had to harmonize the demands of the provincial government,
personified by the district school inspectors, of the teachers, who were
difficult to recruit and replace, and of the parents, who were their neighbours
and relatives and who pressured trustees to keep education costs down. The
trustees were responsible for the same four rural schoolhouses throughout the
period under study, which speaks to both the tenacity of the community to
remain in the region and to the intention of the school board to provide their
constituency with educational facilities close at hand. They rejected creating
a single township school and conveying pupils to it, opting for schooling which
reflected the local needs of its constituency. Schools in the south of the
township, in Lochaber Bay and Thurso, served a denser, more prosperous
population compared to those further north, in Gore of Lochaber and Silver
Creek, where the farms were poorer and more scattered. The disparities
notwithstanding, each family felt an affinity to its neighbourhood school.[36]
The school board=s primary responsibilities were to establish and
maintain its schools, hire teachers, provide basic tools such as textbooks,
blackboards, and maps needed in the classroom to promote teaching and learning,
and to set the mill rate to pay the cost of local schooling. These trustees,
like their counterparts elsewhere in the province, searched for creative
measures, as Little argues, to provide schooling to their constituency within
the parameters of deficient government funding and rural poverty.[37] The school board=s austere budget was derived from the community=s modest resources, which made up the largest
proportion B 80 per cent of the
budget came from school taxes and school fees B and the meagre government grants that
contributed the remainder.[38]
Since the government=s share was fixed,
the only way to augment the board=s budget was to increase the mill rate, which would have further
encumbered the poorer members of its constituency. Many eked out a humble
living on farms characterized by substandard soil suitable only for pasturage.
Veteran Outaouais school inspector Bolton
McGrath knew his district very well, having travelled its width and breadth for
thirty-five years. Yet, while acknowledging the relationship between
widespread poverty and inferior schools, contending that only prosperity could
raise the standards of local education,[39]
he failed to appreciate the antipathy of the school board to increasing the
burden of school taxes on impoverished ratepayers. McGrath and his colleagues
accused trustees of relying upon the government to bail them out through grants
rather than raise the mill rate. The trustees= caution was characteristic of poor rural
regions across Canada, as Jean Cochrane explains:
They were not remote politicians, meeting in
some downtown boardroom. They were neighbours and parents, who held their
meetings in the school, which many of them had attended...Every cent they spent
beyond their government grants came right out of their neighbours= pockets, and in cash-short rural areas, they
made sure it was necessary before they raised a tax.[40]
Similarly, when school taxes were in arrears, Lochaber and
Gore trustees were particularly reticent to force a member of the community to
sell his homestead in order to pay delinquent taxes. Minute books reveal that
derelict ratepayers were given additional time to pay their tax bills before
trustees initiated a series of warnings and interventions which culminated in
the odd threat or cajolery to induce them to settle their debts. Trustees
rarely served distress warrants against debtors= goods and chattels although in 1892 they did
act against Donald McLean in the Circuit Court to collect outstanding school
taxes.[41]
Since education in Quebec was not free, trustees charged parents an additional
monthly fee for each of their children B Protestant and Catholic alike B attending their schools. Parents struggled to
pay this added charge and when some of them fell behind in their monthly
payments, the secretary-treasurer pursued them to clear the debt or threatened
to ban their children from school until the arrears were paid. The school
board absolved families of this obligation under exceptional circumstances such
as extreme poverty, widowhood, when husbands and fathers were serving overseas
during the two world wars, and during the Great Depression.
Teachers= salaries made up a large part of the school
board budget. Trustees formally negotiated hiring contracts with teachers
around issues such as income, boarding, time off to attend professional
meetings and conferences, exemptions from school fees for their children, and
holidays. In an effort to keep these costs in check, trustees searched for and
hired teachers who were willing to work for lower wages than those offered by
urban and more affluent rural school boards, especially those close to Montreal
where salaries had to compete with an urban scale. While the school boards
ideally sought experienced, qualified teachers B those who held advanced elementary or model
school certificates, or normal school diplomas B by advertising in newspapers, consulting with
the district school inspector for his recommendations, and corresponding
directly with Macdonald College for recruits, they usually hired young,
inexperienced, and often unqualified female teachers. Since school boards paid
women teachers lower salaries than their male counterparts, the Lochaber and
Gore trustees hired few male teachers over the period under study, which served
as a cost-cutting measure. Moreover, like poor rural school boards around the
province, trustees regularly replaced teachers at the end of their contracts
with lower-paid teachers to avoid salary increases. Most of those offered
re-engagements refused to renew their contracts. Teachers often came from
outside the region and thus were unfamiliar either with teaching and living in
the countryside or with the specific township. A consequence of this high
teacher turnover was the school board=s difficulty in providing a coherent education to the community=s children. School inspector J.W. McOuat
understood the repercussions of repeated teacher changes in the classrooms:
The frequent change of teachers has gone against
the success of the school work as no less than four have been in charge since
September. The pupils are well-meaning and earnest and seem ready to do their
work but the grading has become badly mixed. I have advised the teacher, as to
the best way to improve these conditions and I expect that will be well in the
near future.[42]
The school board=s inability to offer teachers decent salaries served to rationalize
their dependence upon unqualified female teachers whom they could remunerate
with smaller wages.[43]
The percentage of qualified teachers working in Papineau County Protestant
schools never exceeded 58 per cent.[44]
Teacher shortages, social and economic changes
related to the depressions of the 1870s and 1930s, international political
events such as the two world wars, and growing pressure from teachers= organizations[45]
and the provincial government wreaked havoc with the school board=s budget and influenced how much the trustees
would remunerate their teachers. In its first decade of existence, the board
paid teachers between $20 and $30 per month, and by the 1870s and in the throes
of a depression, trustees could hire a teacher such as Miss Laura D for $15 a
month.[46]
At the start of the new term in 1889, the trustees set out their budget
regarding teacher salaries. They would offer the Thurso schoolteacher a
maximum of $40 a month for a ten-month term and the remaining three other
teachers not more than $18 a month. While the salary gap reflected in large
part the higher status that trustees accorded the Thurso school and thus the
need to hire a qualified teacher, it also spoke to the number of pupils each
teacher had in her classroom and the trustees= use of untrained teachers.[47] As I have already
pointed out, class differences paralleled the geographic stratification of the
township. For this reason, the trustees, themselves members of the local
elite, were inclined to place the qualified teachers in the south.
The board had to pay its teachers higher
salaries during province-wide teacher shortages such as in wartime. During
the Great War, trustees offered Miss Kerr $375 per annum to teach at the Gore
of Lochaber school. If she refused their offer, trustees were prepared to
increase it to $425 as well as give her charge of the more coveted Thurso
Village school.[48]
Throughout the Second World War, the board sought permission from the inspector
to advertise for teachers in Ontario, owing to a scarcity in Quebec.[49] The 1920s was
another period when school boards throughout Quebec scrambled to fill teaching
positions. Lochaber and Gore trustees refused to accept Miss Cleland=s resignation until they knew precisely why she
wanted to quit the school. If she was leaving on account of her salary, they
argued, then they were prepared to increase it from $600 to $650.[50] Not all of the
teachers were successful however when requesting a raise in salary, as the
following convoluted negotiations between another Miss C and the board
demonstrate. When she asked for an increase in her remuneration before the
expiration of her contract, the board responded by firing her and started to
search for another teacher who could begin work in January. A week later, they
rescinded this edict, reconsidered her request for a raise, and offered her $5
more a month. Three days later, they learned that a male teacher would accept
the teaching position if the trustees agreed to pay him a higher salary than
Miss C had demanded. The board accepted Miss C=s sought-after resignation and hired Mr. M.
Four months later, when Mr. M demanded an increase in his salary if he was to
stay for the next term, the trustees refused to renew his contract and
advertised for another teacher at the same salary they had originally offered
him.[51]
Even though they were willing to pay more for a male teacher, there was a limit
to the margin of manoeuvrability they had with respect to salary negotiations
and it would seem that Mr. M. had breached it along with the school board=s patience.
Under certain other circumstances, trustees
showed some flexibility by conceding higher wages or specific changes in hiring
contracts to teachers who were in a position to demand more remuneration or
personal preferences. For instance, immediately following the Protestant
community=s declaration of
dissent in 1863 and in the flush of idealized objectives to establish good
district schools, including a model school in Thurso, trustees granted Miss
Cairns= request not to teach
on Saturdays any longer.[52]
Five years later, Miss Frances Parker obtained a month of holidays in December.
Some teachers succeeded in negotiating changes to the school routine, as was
the case when the school board agreed to allow any teacher to dispense with
afternoon recess in December and January in order to end the school day at 3:30
p.m. instead of the usual 4:00 p.m. Aif it would not interfere with the school work.@[53] The board offered salary increases and
bonuses to some teachers in recognition of their teaching skills. For
instance, trustees offered Miss W $70 a month Aif she continues to give satisfaction@ until the end of her term in addition to paying
her another $5 for September and October.[54]
That it was also trying to avoid a staffing crisis goes without saying since
half the complement of teachers had submitted their resignations effective
December 31st 1927.[55]
Table 1 reveals the extent of the problem that
the school board confronted both in attracting teachers, as seen in the late
start or long holiday breaks of the school term, and in retaining
teachers, as seen in school terms when more than one teacher had to be employed. Over a twenty-five-year period, trustees had to
hire several teachers in the same term in school #1
B a quarter (24 per cent) of the time
B but few actual school days (8 per cent) were
lost because they succeeded in securing teachers before the new school term
started. In both schools #2 and #3, only a fifth (20 per cent) of the terms
were affected by resignations of teachers before the end of their contracts but
the trustees were less efficient in recruiting teachers to take these schools,
resulting in late starts and longer holiday periods in a quarter (24 per cent)
of the terms in school number #3 and more often (28 per cent) in school #2.
This same school #2 was closed periodically between 1916 and 1921 and the
children sent to the Lochaber Bay school. Rotating schools and shortening
school terms were just some of the measures school boards instituted, argues
Little, to deal with insufficient operating budgets[56] and, in the case
of Lochaber and Gore, to solve teacher shortages.[57] The Silver Creek
school was especially problematic. Trustees had to replace teachers in more
than a third (36 per cent) of the terms in addition to a fifth (20 per cent) of
them starting late or involving extended holiday breaks.
The challenge to school boards of hiring
suitable teachers was universal to rural and remote regions across Canada. In
Northern Ontario, for example, historian John Abbott found that school board
trustees and commissioners resorted to unqualified teachers during periods of
teacher shortages. They engaged teachers who came from more populated regions
of the province, in this case Southern Ontario, who were leaving home for the
first time to begin their teaching career.[58]
The transitory nature of teacher employment created what Abbott calls a gender
discourse which equated female teachers with transiency and unreliability and
male inspectors with management and a commitment to teaching as a
profession. Men were also seen as more capable of providing discipline and
advanced knowledge.[59]
Certainly, Outaouais inspector Bolton McGrath was imbued with this same ethos
when he argued against the feminization of teaching:
In this province we change too often, our common
schools are largely in charge of female teachers who naturally prefer a home to
the precarious calling of teaching, and, as a consequence, we have too many
novices in the charge of schools, who, I regret to say, in some cases are not
teachers.[60]
To counter rural teacher transiency, school
inspectors, who were critical of the decentralized power of the system of
education, proposed a number of measures which would ultimately strengthen the
authority of the department of education vis-à-vis the school boards. They
recommended that the government establish a minimum salary for all Quebec
teachers to help school boards in rural areas secure more competent teachers.
Inspectors also blamed school boards for being miserly at the expense of their
pupils by refusing to increase school taxes out of fear of alienating the more
prosperous residents in the municipality who were uninterested in local
schools. McGrath charged that Athe class in easy
circumstances are not interested in promoting the success of elementary schools
since they send their children to >superior educational institutions= in the cities nor are they receptive to paying
higher school taxes.@ He proposed that
the government be given the power to remove school board members and
secretary-treasurers who failed to fulfil their mandates effectively.[61] Lochaber and Gore
proved that McGrath was at least partially wrong. Children of the local elite
attended the same schools as their poorer neighbours. Take the example of Dr.
Peter MacLaughlan Jr. Born in Lochaber Bay, he attended elementary school
there, pursued secondary education at Rockland High School across the river in
Ontario and at Albert College in Belleville, and received his post-secondary
education at Queen=s University, where
he graduated with a medical degree.[62]
There was, however, tension between the ratepayers of the more affluent
districts and those of the poorest. Ironically, when the school board set the
mill rate in 1914, the two most affluent districts, Thurso and Lochaber Bay,
paid 5 mills and 32 mills respectively,
while the most impoverished, Gore of Lochaber, paid 3 mills and Silver Creek
paid 5 mills. Thus, the board levied the same mill rate for Thurso and Silver
Creek.[63]
School inspectors also recommended that school boards encourage local
students to become teachers. For instance, a number of rural school boards in
the Eastern Townships offered scholarships to local students who were accepted
into teacher training at Macdonald College or Bishops University. In the
Lochaber and Gore district, it would not be until the 1930s when trustees
courted two local women, the Misses Nesbitt and McLachlan, both
teachers-in-training at Macdonald College, for future teaching positions.
Trustees granted them permission to teach in any of the Lochaber schools the
first week of January.[64]
Budgetary constraints affected the physical
state of the schoolhouses, which only exaggerated staffing problems, especially
if the board wanted to rehire specific teachers. Since trustees had little
money to maintain and repair their schools, resulting in chronic neglect of
the buildings, they had an even greater job trying to convince teachers to
renew their contracts at the completion of the school term. Despite the
idealization of one-room schoolhouses in popular literature, the rudimentary
nature of the teacher=s work site was
demoralizing. All of the facilities operated without central heating,
electricity, or indoor plumbing. The teacher and her pupils hauled water from
either the nearest farmhouse or stream, carried and stacked wood each day,
taught and studied in drafty, cold school buildings heated with a single
wood-burning stove, and used an outdoor latrine. The pathway to the outhouse
at the Thurso school was in such poor condition that the school inspector
complained to the school board that it was impassable in wet weather. Five
months later, after the trail had been Arepaired,@ pupils were still getting their feet wet going
to and fro.[65]
Unlike some rural school boards such as those in the Eastern Townships with a
better tax base, able to attend promptly to repairs, the Lochaber and Gore
board=s primitive
structures deteriorated through neglect. These conditions drew the ire of the
community. Over the eighty years of this study, trustees, parents, inspectors,
and teachers regularly discussed the poor state of the school buildings and
urged each other to act. The school board itself was not immune to parental
criticism. In 1904, ratepayers at Lochaber Bay were so contemptuous of their
elected trustee that a citizen announced to the Buckingham Post that if
nothing was done to improve the community school and he did not do his job
better, a petition would be circulated asking for his resignation.[66]
To avoid raising the mill rate, Lochaber and
Gore trustees sought other ways to pay for school repairs. In 1928 they
decided to pool the resources of all four school districts in order to
refurbish school buildings.[67]
Thurso ratepayers, imbued with what Little designates Aentrenched localism,@[68] reacted strongly to this move. From their
perspective, they alone controlled the school and its revenues and for these
reasons objected to financing school repairs in the other three districts
precisely at a time when their own school was crumbling and needed to be
replaced. Fed up with the inequality of these arrangements, they petitioned
the Superintendent of Education for a separate school board in addition to a
new village schoolhouse. Petitioners pointed out that teachers refused to stay
beyond their ten-month term because of the chronic dilapidated state of the
school. ALast term we had an
excellent teacher but she found that the location and condition was not the
proper place to have children and would not sign for another year unless some
other arrangements were made.@[69] To reach the schoolhouse, the teacher and her
pupils walked along a trail through a wooded area before climbing a hill that
was more than thirty feet of sheer rock.[70]
The petition was ineffective. While Thurso ratepayers withdrew their request
for a separate school board, they continued to demand a new schoolhouse.
Thirteen years later, thirty students still attended the same seventy-year-old
Thurso Village schoolhouse even though a Department of Health sanitary engineer
had recently condemned it as unfit for habitation.
There is no cellar; the ground floor is only a
couple feet over the level of the ground, i.e. on a rock surface. There is no
current water in the school. The children have to carry water from a neighbour;
they use two outside dry privies set also on the rocky formation. The ground
floor of the present class-room and the attic floor have heaved; the stairs are
unsafe and it has been necessary to anchor at both ends 3 or 4 steel bars
through the two longitudinal walls in order to keep them from opening up.[71]
Whatever sense of entitlement the local elite
may have harboured about building a new school, the project failed to elicit
the support of the school trustees, whose responsibilities were broader. The
state of rural school buildings had been a subject of intense discussion
amongst education officials long before this. Inspectors were so acrimonious
toward rural school boards about the decrepit condition of their schools that
the Minister of Public Instruction extolled the benefits of more attractive
schoolhouses:
If now the schoolhouse be spacious and airy, if
the furniture, desks and seats are appropriate, if the garden be well kept, the
children will be delighted with school; instead of inventing excuses of
absence, they will love to attend regularly every day, and we shall witness, at
length, the disappearance of the grand complaint made by inspectors in all
their reports B irregular attendance
in the country schools.[72]
Notwithstanding his rather superficial correlation between
run-down schools and attendance, the conditions of the local schoolhouse were
not very different from those at home. The township of Lochaber and Gore was,
like other rural communities, poor. A survey by the federal government in 1931
reveals that the percentage of farms with running water and electricity in
Papineau County, which included Lochaber and Gore, was far below the average of
rural Quebec.[73]
The school board did apply to the Department of
Education for special grants to finance the much needed repairs. But even when
the department provided funding to replace a particular school, the Lochaber
and Gore board did not always act until officials threatened to cut off all
grants. In 1939, exasperated with the trustees who had not replaced the
sixty-five-year-old log schoolhouse at Silver Creek two years after they had
been authorized to do so, Dr. Percival, then director of Protestant education,
decided to withhold the provincial annual grant until a new school was
erected. Although the board argued that the district=s revenues were insufficient to support a new
school, Dr. Percival countered that Athis action is not in accordance with the principles of democracy or the
school law.@ He was prepared,
however, to consider new ways to reduce the costs, which included building a
cheaper school.[74]
The following year, the teacher and children moved into a newly constructed
schoolhouse.[75]
Teachers
Teachers confronted a host of problems when they
arrived at their schoolhouses for the first time: dilapidated buildings,
parents frustrated by the appearance of another new and inexperienced teacher,
and an unfamiliar environment marked by desolation and loneliness. Three of
the four Lochaber and Gore schoolhouses were situated on isolated rural roads
surrounded by fields or forest and distant from the closest farms. Teachers
also had to contend with sporadic school attendance. Without a district conveyance
system, children had difficulty getting to school because of winter storms, the
combination of spring rains and poor roads, and inadequate clothing. Lochaber
and Gore parents, like their counterparts in Winslow, were often too
impoverished to afford suitable winter clothing so that their children could
attend school.[76]
Similarly, farmers needed their children at home to work during the annual
planting and harvest seasons.[77]
Notwithstanding the very real conflict between what Bruce Curtis refers to as
the seasonal needs of agricultural production and school time,[78] Quebec=s education officials blamed poor school
attendance on parents= lack of interest in
their children=s education or in the
affairs of the school. Epidemics also played havoc with school attendance.
Sometimes the school was closed for weeks at a time when outbreaks of
influenza and childhood illnesses such as whooping cough ravaged the district.
Moreover, teachers were exposed to the same diseases as their students and just
as vulnerable to getting ill, as Miss P discovered. Trustees called a special
meeting to discuss why the Gore of Lochaber school had been closed and the
teacher went home without their permission. They ascertained that the
children, who had been ill with whooping cough, had been out of school beyond
the fourteen-day quarantine imposed by law for this disease. When the chairman
finally contacted Miss P, she told him that she too had come down with whooping
cough and could not return to the district until she was fit to travel.[79] Sporadic school
attendance meant that a teacher=s work was constantly
interrupted: some students were behind the others and needed more attention to
catch up; they required her to revise her daily lessons repeatedly; they had
difficulty following the curriculum. She faced criticism on these issues from
inspectors, trustees, and parents alike.
There is a growing Canadian literature about
rural schools which speaks to some of the problems that young, unmarried women
faced in isolated rural areas in Quebec and elsewhere, especially in Ontario.[80] Teachers are
often viewed as victims of the tyranny of both school board commissioners and
trustees who did not renew teaching contracts for flimsy excuses (if one was
even offered), and of communities which were suspicious of outsiders. An
examination of Lochaber and Gore=s Anglo-Protestant community reveals that its relations with teachers
varied, just as attitudes and personalities did. That so many teachers
remained a short period of time at the schools B so much so that parents had little opportunity
to get to know them B aggravated an
already difficult situation. Others were held in high esteem; a few even
stayed for a number of years. Parents sometimes petitioned the school board to
request that trustees engage a respected teacher. For example, Lochaber Bay
ratepayers sent a petition to the trustees asking that Miss Maggie McLean be
rehired to teach at their school and at the same salary.[81] In other cases, a
teacher=s resignation caused
considerable sadness. A case in point was Miss Grace Simpson. She taught at
the Lochaber Bay School for three years before moving to Ormstown to take care
of her ailing mother. A year later Miss Simpson accepted a position at the
Ormstown Academy and quickly rose up through the ranks. At the time of her
premature death from pneumonia, fifteen years after leaving Lochaber and Gore,
she was the French specialist at the school. Grace Simpson was a prototype of
the Alady teacher@ and her relationship with the school trustees
and parents represented an ideal partnership. While toiling under adverse
working conditions, she exemplified dedication, accommodation, and amicability
both in and outside the schoolhouse.
Teachers faced high expectations from the
communities where they taught. They had to be, according to J. Donald Wilson
and Paul Stortz, simultaneously role models, caretakers, leaders in the
community, representatives of the provincial education system, and educators.[82] Quebec rural
teachers usually had the added burden of collecting the monthly school fees.
In Lochaber and Gore, many were put in the impossible position of having to
meet unattainable goals established by the community without the resources to
succeed. Beyond this arduous task for one so young and inexperienced, a rural
teacher, especially if female, lived her personal and professional life in a
fish bowl, her teaching abilities and behaviour carefully scrutinized by those
around her. That the teacher boarded with a farming family chosen not by her
but by the community only added to public scrutiny. Whether the boarding house
was to her liking or not was inconsequential: she had to adjust even if it
meant a dramatic change in her accustomed living conditions. Since a teacher
was expected to be an example to her pupils and to the community at large, she
had to be careful about the friendships she established, taking care not to
become a subject of gossip. If she fitted in, she was accorded a degree of
respect and status which had a direct bearing on her classroom experience.
Establishing good relationships with the community served to reduce the
loneliness, promote acceptance, and maintain her authority in the classroom.
And above all, she had to be a skilled diplomat in her dealings with the
school board and parents.[83]
Hired without an interview but on the strength
of their application in conjunction with the needs of the school board,
teachers often had little idea what they were getting into when they accepted
the position. Even teachers who came from other rural areas of the province to
teach in Lochaber and Gore could not have anticipated some of the worst
conditions that awaited them, and that created a daunting task for the most
experienced and mature teacher. Some were simply unsuited to teach in rural
Quebec. Miss M, whom we met at the beginning of the article, had difficulty
organizing her daily teaching schedule, let alone dealing with a multi-graded
classroom of pupils. When Miss G allegedly had Ashown incapacity and negligence in the
performance of her duties,@[84] she was asked to resign her position at the
Gore of Lochaber school before the end of term. Trustees relented in all
likelihood only because they realized it would be too difficult to engage
another teacher for only a month. Without job security, it was difficult for
teachers to control their working conditions such as class size, or to be
remunerated adequately. They protested most often by resigning, sometimes
contesting the most frank disparities, and occasionally by marrying before the
end of their contract, which essentially ended their teaching careers. Six
teachers married before completing their contracts. Five of the six reported
marriages occurred during World War One, when it was customary for betrothed
couples to marry before soldiers went overseas or soon after they returned from
their tour of duty. While it is not known if Miss Ruby S who taught at the
Gore of Lochaber school actually wedded a soldier, she resigned six months into
her contract to get married.[85]
The school board records also show cases of women arranging their replacements
with the board before resigning to get married. When Mabel Liths left the
Silver Creek School after her wedding, her sister Lucy finished the school
term for her.[86]
Teachers objected to the worst features of their
workplace although the school board seldom acted on their grievances. A case
in point is Mrs. C, who taught at the Silver Creek school. When she requested
that certain repairs be made to her school, the trustees responded by refusing to
renew her contract unless the inspector gave her a favourable report and the
ratepayers of the district agreed to comply with her wishes to repair the
building.[87]
They did not and she left. Since it was the responsibility of each of the four
districts to maintain its own schoolhouse, the parents= refusal to comply may have also been a
consequence of the teacher=s assertiveness, which
was incongruent with the demeanour expected of her to be ladylike in all
matters, including coping with the wretched condition of her school; and it may
have been due as well to the added burden it placed on ratepayers to finance
the improvements.
Teachers resisted most often by resigning their
teaching position. Few teachers stayed for more than one term; most stayed
only for the duration of their engagement. Either they did not have their
contracts renewed or they resigned at the end of the school year. Some became
ill and unable to teach or were unwilling to stay, and terminated their
contracts prematurely. Others left during periods of teacher shortages knowing
that they could procure better positions elsewhere. As we have already noted
in Table I, the 1920s B with a province-wide
teachers= shortage B was a particularly difficult period. In the
Thurso Village school alone, trustees had to find a replacement three times
during the 1926-27 term. One of the substitutes, Miss McMahon, who had just
started her teaching career, faced a classroom of 55 pupils spread over seven
grades.[88]
That same year the board had to find replacements for teachers in two of its
other schools.
Most of the women left to take up teaching in
towns and cities, where boards offered better salaries as well as working and
living conditions. For many teachers, the experience they gained by working in
Lochaber and Gore schools meant that they could seek positions in nearby
Ontario with its higher salaries and better working conditions. Even as late
as the 1930s, teachers were in the extraordinary situation of having to teach
the Ontario, and not the Quebec, school curriculum. That school inspectors
were appalled at the presence of an imported course of study and accompanying
school books in these Quebec classrooms refutes any idea that the Quebec
Protestant school system was merely a subset of the Ontario structure.
Ratepayers, especially those who lived in Lochaber Bay, insisted that the
school board continue to use Ontario textbooks since Athey have given good satisfaction and no injury
done to any child.@[89] To purchase new ones would have burdened the
school board and ultimately the ratepayers with a large expense at a time when
a special tax had been applied for school repairs. With the support of
parents, trustees stubbornly clung to these texts, despite school inspectors= routine low grading of schools in Lochaber and
Gore because of their presence in the classrooms.
The peculiar situation is, that the grades all
use the Ontario course of study and also the textbooks of the course. This is
of course quite contrary to the law and regulations of the province and should
be changed as soon as possible.[90]
The irony of this situation seems to have been lost on the
trustees. The teachers= familiarity with the
Ontario curriculum held them in good stead when they applied for employment in
Ontario schools. Such was the case for Miss Georgia McEachern. She left the
Lochaber Bay school to teach in Ontario at Hammond, just across the Ottawa
River from the township, and later at Havelock, near Peterborough.[91]
Why, then, did teachers accept positions in
rural areas such as Lochaber and Gore? Rural school boards needed large
numbers of teachers to work in their schools and despite their preference for
experienced ones, they offered the best employment prospects to recent
graduates of teachers= education at the
McGill Normal School and later Macdonald=s College and to alumni of model schools and
academies. Teaching gave many of these young women the opportunity to leave
home for the first time, to be financially independent, and to work in a
respected profession. Kathleen Underwood=s study of teachers in the turn-of-the-century
American west has a certain resonance with Lochaber and Gore. These women
sought work as teachers for a variety of reasons: to contribute to the
household economy, to be independent, and to advance their own education.
Although they moved from job to job in search of better pay, longer teaching
terms, better living and working conditions, or to be closer or further from
home, teachers were committed to their profession.[92]
Parents
Teachers needed not only the collaboration of
the school board to teach effectively but that of the parents as well. This
study shows that parents were involved and interested in their children=s education. Individual grievances and district
petitions about the school board, teachers, and the conditions at particular
schools underscore parents= attentiveness to the
local schoolhouse. Until recently, historians have characterized parents as
apathetic about the quality of their children=s education, the suitability of the
schoolhouses, and the importance of regular classroom attendance. In Lochaber
and Gore, parents, teachers, trustees, and students participated together in
school traditions such as the annual Christmas concert and school closing
ceremonies. These formal activities provided those attending with an
opportunity to celebrate their Anglo-Protestant heritage B thus to reinforce identity and citizenship B as well as offering parents and trustees a
window onto the classroom whereby they could judge the teacher=s abilities and organizational skills, review
school work, and express appreciation to a respected and admired teacher.
Parents could also assess the effectiveness of the school board and how their
tax dollars were being spent.
They were especially interested in what and how
their children were learning at school. Like school trustees, parents often
held the teacher responsible for problems at the schoolhouse, whether deserved
or not. School board minutes, which serve as a window onto the process of
conflict resolution at a local level, indicate that trustees were attentive to
these complaints and dealt with most of them in a satisfactory manner. Few of
their grievances ended up in correspondence to the Superintendent of
Education. Trustees took their complaints seriously, by discussing them at
great length at regular school board meetings, by organizing special meetings
to review serious charges, and by establishing committees to investigate the
most onerous ones. When Silver Creek ratepayers petitioned the school board
about a rumour involving Aan indecent and
immoral act@ having occurred
between students at lunch time, the trustees acted immediately. Although
details of the incident are unclear, trustees responded to the petition by
quickly establishing a committee to look into the matter. Committee members
soon discovered that a mother had taken matters into her own hands by going to
the school to question the young girl who allegedly had been involved in the
incident in front of her peers. They demanded that both the teacher, Miss T,
for allowing the interrogation to take place, and the mother, for conducting
it, apologize to the girl=s father. The
incident was further exacerbated when it came to light that Miss T had in fact
punished the girl unjustly by expelling her from school even though she had
been telling the truth.[93]
The castigation of the teacher did not end here, for the board initially
refused to renew her contract at the end of the term. It is also apparent from
this particular incident that the board did not want parents to become
directly involved in what it considered its jurisdiction at the schools.
Trustees informed one mother with a penchant to interfere at the local
schoolhouse that if she planned to keep her children in any of the Lochaber and
Gore schools, she was to desist from going to the school to speak to the
teacher about her grievances. They insisted that she bring any complaints she
might have about the schoolteacher to the board.[94] This intervention
served, on the one hand, to protect the teacher from unjust parental criticism,
and on the other, to ensure the school board=s control over schoolhouse affairs.
Parents voiced other sorts of grievances.
Occasionally, they objected to the rehiring of a teacher, as several Silver
Creek ratepayers did in August 1906 when they petitioned the school board to
express their disappointment with its decision to retain the services of Miss
M, who had been teaching at the Silver Creek school. Because the petitioners
acted after a May 1st deadline, trustees argued that they could not
legally act upon such wishes.[95]
Parents had very definite ideas about what they expected from teachers
vis-à-vis skill and competency. In a 1915 petition, ratepayers criticized one
teacher=s method of
instruction and the amount of time she allocated to mathematics.
The board is unanimous [sic] of the opinion that
she shall give greater attention to the study of arithmetic and that she use
different methods in the way of correcting examples and in helping pupils with
difficult ones in the way of explaining them the different parts.[96]
While petitions were in themselves difficult to ignore,
individual complaints garnered similar attention. The trustees held a special
meeting in response to a written grievance by Henry Berndt regarding the
teacher=s competency at the
Gore of Lochaber school. After due consideration of the complaint and Berndt=s appearance at the meeting to proffer proof of
his complaint, the trustees decided to let Miss G go effective June 1st
because Ashe has shown
incapacity and negligence in the performance of her duties.@[97] Similarly, the board notified Miss H that it
had received two complaints: the first, regarding a lack of discipline in the
Thurso school, and the second, that required work was not being done by her
students. The trustees directed her to redress these problems.[98]
If teachers appeared to have unrealistic
expectations of their students, parents criticized them. Trustees notified
Miss B that she Acomply with the law
as to time given to pupils for recreation during the day and not give lessons
that are beyond the ability of the pupils to learn and retain@; at the same time they informed her that her
contract would not be renewed at the end of the school term.[99] Parents
complained about the treatment of their children at the hands of the local
teacher, as in the case of one father who requested that his son be moved to
another school in the municipality. The board granted his request and transferred
the student to a different school with the proviso that the new teacher be
instructed to pay more attention to the boy.[100]
Obviously parents were aware of what went on in the classroom! The close
proximity of their lives provided many opportunities for parents and teachers
to meet socially, allowing teachers to bring up specific disciplinary problems
with them. According to Silver Creek alumnus and teacher Willard Smith,
parents often responded to a teacher=s punishment of their children with, AYou probably deserved it!@[101] However, if parents considered the castigation
to be unreasonable, they complained to trustees. Similarly, the board
supported teachers who had difficulties with particular students whose
behaviour was usually well known in this tight-knit community. When Miss
Stewart complained about a pupil in the Lochaber Bay school, the trustees
counselled her to follow the pertinent regulations printed in the school
journal and to expel the child from school if necessary.[102]
Attuned to the scholastic needs of their
children, parents initiated changes at the schoolhouse. They asked the school
board to introduce higher grades, aware that it would result in added personal
costs, and often obtained the consent of the teacher beforehand. In 1926, for
instance, parents of children attending Lochaber Bay school asked the trustees
to have grade eight taught at the school; they buttressed their request by
having elicited the consent of the teacher to add the grade to her already heavy
workload. The board acquiesced on the following conditions: the extra class
would not interfere with the lessons of the other grades, the teacher was
willing, and the parents were amenable to augmenting the teacher=s salary for this added task and to purchasing
the necessary books. The board appointed trustee McCallum and the
secretary-treasurer to arrange a meeting of the parents and teacher to send the
petition to the Superintendent of Public Instruction for his formal consent.[103] This act speaks
directly to the parents= belief in the
importance of education and to their confidence in the local teacher.
While parents were swift to complain about
teachers, so too were they quick to express their gratitude to those they
appreciated and valued. As already noted, they petitioned the school board to
rehire certain teachers. Parents also praised teachers to whom they presented
a variety of gifts from food to jewellery at Christmas or when they left the
community. After Grace Simpson resigned from the Lochaber Bay school, having
taught there for Athree years in
succession,@she was given a
farewell banquet at the Lamb home attended by forty of the town=s citizens. They sang, played games, dined, and
made speeches attesting to her worthiness as a teacher and a friend. At the
end of the evening the chairman of the school board, A.P. MacLaughlan,
presented Miss Simpson with a gold ring set with pearls and a gold bracelet as
a token of the community=s esteem for her and
for her teaching efforts:
It serves to prove that you have won the respect
of your pupils and the confidence of their parents. After having rendered your
services for the past three years in the capacity of teacher, we do not hear
one word of adverse criticism, only expressed commendation and approval. It is
a record that you have every reason to be proud of. We know of no words which
could so eloquently portray your fitness for the high calling which you have
chosen in life.[104]
The report of her death in the Buckingham Post[105] fifteen years
after leaving Lochaber Bay shows the respect that the community still held for
her.
The complaint of parents about the quality of
education their children received, teacher competence, and the condition of the
schools, their requests for the inclusion of higher grades in the school
curriculum, and their warm relationships with certain teachers contradict the
criticism levelled at parents by inspectors who claimed that parental apathy in
education matters contributed to the poor progress of scholars. By the 1930s
the Women=s Institute was
firmly ensconced in Lochaber Bay; with its keen interest in local education, it
would serve as a precursor to the Home and School Association, established
twenty years later.
Conclusion
This microstudy of Gore and Lochaber reveals
that relationships between the school board, teachers, and parents were mired
in complexity and ambiguity. Constrained by a narrow tax base, the school
board operated the schools at the teachers= expense. By hiring young, inexperienced women,
paying low salaries, and resorting to unqualified female teachers to teach in
run-down schools, the boards simply reinforced teacher transiency, a problem
trustees never solved in the period under study. The contours of these
gendered relations were replicated over and over again. Handicapped by such a
narrow vision, the trustees repeatedly searched for new teachers at the end of
each term, and sometimes more often. In this way, stereotypes about women
teachers encouraged a gendered discourse equating women with a temporary status
in the profession and men with a commitment to it. Averse to increasing the
tax rate on an impoverished constituency, the school board simply made do.
Trustees consistently engaged a qualified teacher for the village school and
frequently for the Lochaber Bay school, but often resorted to unqualified
teachers in the Silver Creek and Gore of Lochaber schools. Class affiliations
influenced where they placed qualified teachers.
Parents and trustees often held teachers
responsible for whatever happened at the district schoolhouses. In part,
frustrated by the turnstile nature of new teaching personnel who were almost
always inexperienced and young, and the inconsistency in teaching that followed
with so many staff changes, parents questioned their teaching methods,
expectations, authority in the classroom, and organizational skills. They
valued and praised teachers who, despite the terrible conditions imposed upon
them, were able to meet and sometimes exceed parental expectations. Teachers
expressed dissatisfaction with their working conditions and salaries by
resigning at the end of the school term, by quitting before the completion of
their contract, and by complaining to inspectors and to trustees. Few teachers
stayed longer than a year. Many who took positions elsewhere continued to
pursue their teaching careers in other parts of the province and in other
regions of the country.
Notwithstanding the school board=s success by war=s end in hiring married women from the community
to teach, thus creating more constancy in the teaching staff, the board=s struggle to maintain their four schools close
to their constituency collapsed after the Second World War. To standardize
education and reduce costs, the Protestant Committee promoted the benefits of
county central boards in certain regions of rural Quebec. This directive
greatly affected Protestant school boards, like Lochaber and Gore, which had to
contend with a dwindling, scattered anglophone population due to out-migration
from the countryside to urban centres. Its protest against this centralization
notwithstanding, the dissentient school board lost its fight to maintain
control over Protestant education in Lochaber and Gore when it came under the
jurisdiction of the Papineau County School Board. By the1950s the four schools
had closed and the township=s children were
transported to the consolidated Thurso Intermediate School in Thurso village.
TABLE 1
Multiple Teachers and Late Starts in Lochaber Schools, 1903-45
|
TERM |
SCHOOL #1 (Thurso Village) |
SCHOOL #2 (Lochaber Bay) |
SCHOOL #3 (Gore of Lochaber) |
SCHOOL #4 (Silver Creek) |
|
1903-4 |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
2 teachers
no school in Oct & Jan |
|
1908-9 |
2 teachers |
2 teachers
long Easter break (teacher resigned) |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
|
1909-10 |
1 teacher |
school of 78 days 1st term |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
|
1910-11 |
2 teachers |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
|
1911-12 |
1 teacher |
term started 6 Nov and no school 20 Dec-22 Jan |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
|
1912-13 |
1 teacher |
term started 9 Dec |
1 teacher 4 mo. only 2 pupils |
1 teacher |
|
1913-14 |
3 teachers |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
|
1915-16 |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
2 teachers |
1 teacher |
|
1916-17 |
1 teacher |
term started 18 Sept |
school closed |
2 teachers |
|
1917-18 |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
2 teachers
no school in Jan & Feb (teacher ill) |
1 teacher who taught 9 ½ mo. |
|
1918-19 |
1 teacher |
no school 20 Dec-16 Jan influenza |
school closed from Sept-Dec |
1 teacher |
|
1919-20 |
2 teachers |
1 teacher |
school closed |
2 teachers |
|
1920-21 |
1 teacher |
2 teachers &term started 13 Sept |
school closed from Sept-Dec |
1 teacher |
|
1921-22 |
1 teacher |
no school 5 Dec-4 Jan scarlet fever |
school closed from Sept-Dec |
1 teacher |
|
1922-23 |
term started 1 Oct |
no school for 3 wk.
scarlet fever |
1 teacher |
2 teachers |
|
1923-24 |
1 teacher |
2 teachers |
1 teacher |
2 teachers |
|
1924-25 |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
school closed 31 May (teacher ill) |
|
1925-26 |
2 teachers |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
2 teachers |
|
1926-27 |
4 teachers |
2 teachers |
2 teachers |
1 teacher |
|
1928-29 |
1 teacher |
school reopened 21 Jan |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
|
1931-32 |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
term started 1 Nov |
2 teachers |
|
1932-33 |
no school Dec |
2 teachers |
2 teachers |
term started 3 Oct |
|
1940-41 |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
term started 19 Sept |
1 teacher |
|
1941-42 |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
2 teachers school closed 25 May whooping cough |
2 teachers & no school 18 Nov-2 Feb |
|
1945-46 |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
1 teacher |
term started 1 Oct |
Compiled from the Reports of the School Trustees, 1903-32, 1940-46; School Journals, 1932-46; Minutes of the School Board, 1903-45.
NOTES
1 This study is made possible
thanks to funding by the Foundation for the Advancement of Protestant
Education in Canada. I would like to thank the anonymous readers for
their astute comments and my colleague Roderick MacLeod for his critique of
this paper and for the map which he designed.
2 Archives of the Western
Quebec School Board (hereafter AWQSB), Box 6, File 6.9, Minutes of the Board of
School Trustees of Lochaber and Gore, 24 Nov. 1922.
3 Louis-Philippe Audet=s influential work on education is a
case in point. Based on records such as the superintendents= and inspectors= reports, minutes of the Council of
Public Instruction, Journal of Public Instruction, debates of the House
of Assembly, and commissioned reports on the status of education, his reading
of education tends to reflect the negative view of education officials.
Parents were perceived as lacking interest in their children=s education, teachers were deemed
unqualified, and school commissioners were criticized for being inept and
uneducated themselves or more interested in balancing their books than in local
education. See
for example, Le système scolaire de la Province de Québec, vol. 1-6
(Quebec: Les Éditions de l=Érable, 1950-1956); Educateurs:
parents, maîtres (Québec: Editions de l=action,1963); and Histoire du Conseil de l=instruction publique de
la province de Québec, 1856 -1964 (Montreal: Editions Leméac, 1964). Audet=Atop-down@ approach. The work by historians
Nadia Fahmy-Eid and Micheline Dumont in the 1980s concentrated on identifying
the strategies of the dominant classes to indoctrinate school systems with
their ideologies while not exploring popular resistance to those strategies and
the role of local communities in determining the form and content of education
in their schoolhouses. =école: femmes, famille et
éducation dans l=histoire du Québec (Montréal: Boréal,
1983); and Les couventines: l=éducation des filles au Québec dans
les congregations religieuses enseignantes, 1840-1860 (Montréal: Boréal, 1986).
4 Jean-Pierre
Charland, AL=Histoire de l=éducation au Québec
regard sur la production recente,@ RHAF 50, 4
(1997): 599-614.
5 Alison Prentice, The
School Promoters: Education and Social Class in Mid-Nineteenth Century Upper
Canada (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1977).
6 Susan Houston and Alison
Prentice, Schooling and Scholars in Nineteenth-Century Ontario
(Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1988): 338.
7 Bruce Curtis, Building the
Educational State: Canada West, 1836-1871 (London, Ont.: The Althouse
Press, 1988), 372.
8 D.A. Lawr and R.D. Gidney, AWho Ran the Schools? Local
Influence on Education Policy in Nineteenth-Century Ontario,@ Ontario History 72, 3
(1980): 131-43; and R.D. Gidney and W.P.J. Millar, AFrom Voluntarism to State Schooling:
The Creation of the Public School System in Ontario,@ Canadian Historical Review (CHR)
6, 4 (1985): 443-73.
9 See for example,
Jean-Pierre Charland, L=entreprise éducative au Québec,
1840-1900
(Ste-Foy: Presses de l=Université Laval, 2000).
While not directly
challenging the social control model, Charland makes the local community a
focus in a chapter wherein he analyzes the complex nature of the relationship
between communities and their school commissioners. He emphasizes the
democratic nature, at least in theory, of school board elections. Using
minutes of school board meetings, Charland details commissioners= responsibilities and how they dealt
with criticisms from their constituencies, but does not explore the complex
community inter-actions. Similarly, Robert Gagnon underscores the
democratization of teaching, the link between the social demands of education
and the workings of the school commission, but does not inquire into the relationships
between students, teachers, and parents; Robert Gagnon, Histoire de la
Commission des écoles catholiques de Montréal (Montreal: Boréal,1996).
10 Andrée
Dufour, Tous à l=école: Etat, communautés
rurales et scolarisation au Québec de 1826 à 1859 (Ville Lasalle: Hurtubise HMH,
1996), 22.
11 See AEducation and Local Government,@ in J.I. Little, Crofters and
Habitants: Settler Society, Economy, and Culture in a Quebec Township,
1848-1881 (Montreal: McGill-Queen=ASchool Reform and Community Control
in the 1840s: A Case Study from the Eastern Townships,@ Historical Studies in Education
9, 2 (1997); A>Labouring in a Great Cause=: Marcus Child as Pioneer School
Inspector in Lower Canada=s Eastern Townships, 1852-59,@ Historical Studies in Education
10, 1-2 (1998); and AThe Demise of Voluntarism: School
Reform to 1846,@ in J.I. Little, State and
Society in Transition: The Politics of Institutional Reform in the Eastern
Townships 1838-1852 (Montreal: McGill-Queen=s University Press, 1997), 171-201.
12 Wendie Nelson, A>Rage against the Dying of the Light=: Interpreting the Guerre des
Eteignoirs,@ CHR 81, 4 (2000): 551-81.
13 Chad
Gaffield et al., History of the Outaouais (Québec: Institut québécois de
recherche sur la culture, 1997), 126.
15 Farm values
uncover differentiation in Papineau County: the most highly valued farms were
located in the south of the county, where farms in 1941 averaged $6,775;
farms in the centre of the county were estimated at $4,964; and further north,
at $3,234 (ibid., 319).
16 See Little=s discussion of Winslow in the
Eastern Townships in Crofters and Habitants, 220. Kathleen H. Brown=s study of early-nineteenth-century
Stanstead schooling reveals the enormous efforts made by township settlers to
provide their children with a rudimentary education. Early on they erected
rough schoolhouses and hired teachers: Schooling in the Clearings:
Stanstead 1800-1850 (Stanstead: Stanstead Historical Society, 2001), 173.
17 Angus
Campbell MacLachlan, Lochaber Bay, My Well Loved Country Home (1999),
19.
18 Willard
Vandine Smith, Silver Creek: The Centre of the World (Wawa, Ont:
Friesens, 2001), 44; and AWQSB, School Journal, 1943-44.
19 The
population grew very slowly from a total
of 1,307 people in 1851, to 2,765 in 1881, and by 1941, 3,014 residents.
20 Enoch
Padolsky and Ian Pringle, A Historical Source Book for the Ottawa Valley (Ottawa:
Linguistic Survey of the Ottawa Valley, Carleton University, 1981), 376-79.
21 Harry Turay,
AThe Process of Settlement and Land
Clearance in Papineau County, Quebec, 1800-1967@= Association Centenary Display, History
of Education in the Gatineau Valley (1964), 35.
28 A.P.
MacLaughlan=s 250-acre farm, three-quarters of
which was tillable land and the remaining woods, was located close to the local
school, cheese factory, station, and church and only a mile from the highway
between Buckingham and Thurso. The barn could accommodate fifty head of dairy
cattle. The ten-room Amodern@ farmhouse boasted hardwood floors, furnace, toilet, and
lavatory: see Buckingham Post, 21 June 1930.
29 Charland,
L=entreprise éducative au
Québec,
184.
30 For
instance, J.C. MacCallum was elected vice-president of the committee in 1913
while serving as chairman of the school board: Buckingham Post, 5 Dec.
1913.
35 Little, ASchool Reform and Community Control,@ 163.
37 Little, Crofters
and Habitants, 235.
38 Paul-André
Linteau, René Durocher, and Jean-Claude Robert, Histoire du Québec
contemporaine: De la Confédération à la crise (1867-1929) (Montreal:
Boréal, 1979), 244.
39 Inspector=s Report to the Minister of Public
Instruction,
1878-79.
40 Jean
Cochrane, The One-Room School in Canada (Toronto: Fitzhenry &
Whiteside, 1981), 142.
41 AWQSB,
Box 6, File 6.8, Minutes, 16 July 1892.
42 AWQSB, Box
23, File 23.13, Lochaber & Gore
Permanent Record, Public Schools, Province of Quebec, 1920-1951, 25 Apr.
1937.
43 For
instance, in the late 1870s teachers= salaries in the Lochaber and Gore schools ranged from $12
to $23 a month. By the twentieth century, the gap narrowed. When a teacher
resigned suddenly in March 1923, trustees were unwilling to pay her replacement
more than $46 a month, unless the teacher had a diploma (AWQSB, Box 6, File
6.9, Minutes, 19 Mar. 1923). That same year the school board offered teachers
$500 for a ten-month term. By the early 1930s the school board paid qualified
teachers $50 monthly and unqualified teachers $45: ibid., 28 Sept. 1931.
44 Gaffield et
al., History of the Outaouais, 370.
45 A local
history of the Provincial Association of Protestant Teachers shows that
teachers of the Gatineau and nearby districts organized a local branch of the
association, the Gatineau District Local Association, on October 26, 1929.
While membership was open to all teachers and inspectors in the district, it
was not until 1945 when participation became compulsory: The Gatineau
Protestant Teachers= Association Centenary Display, History
of Education in the Gatineau Valley, 1.
46 AWQSB, Box 6, File 6.8,
Minutes, 15
Apr.879.
48 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.9, Minutes, 26
Apr. 1918.
51 Ibid. 3 Dec. 1920; 10 Dec. 1920; 4 Aug. 1921.
55 Ibid., 12 Dec. 1927, 28 Dec. 1927.
56 Little, Crofters
and Habitants, 235.
57 In July
1930, the secretary treasurer advertised for teachers at the following salaries:
The school board would pay the Thurso village teacher $650 and the Lochaber Bay
teacher $600 both for 10 months of teaching, but the Gore of Lochaber teacher
would be paid $45 a month for 9 months beginning October 10th. In
the event that it could not find a teacher for that salary, then the Gore of
Lochaber teacher would be offered $50 a month for 8 months, the school term to
start November 1st (AWQSB, Box 6, File 6.9, Minutes, 15 July 1930).
58 John Abbott,
AAccomplishing >a Man=s Task=: Rural Women Teachers, Male
Culture, and the School Inspectorate in Turn-of-the-Century Ontario,@ Ontario History 78, 4
(1986): 320-21.
60 Inspector=s Report to the Minister of Public
Instruction,
1880-81.
61 Inspector=s Report to the Minister of Public
Instruction,
1868-69.
62 Buckingham
Post, 19 July 1918.
63 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.9, Minutes, 26 Sept. 1914.
65 AWQSB, Box
23, File 23.13, Lochaber & Gore
Permanent Record, Public Schools, Province of Quebec, 1920-51, 31 May 1929, 18
Oct. 1929.
66 Buckingham
Post, 5 Feb. 1904.
68 See Little, ALabouring in a Great Cause,@ 97, and ASchool Reform and Community Control,@ 159.
69 Buckingham
Historical Society, Report on the Protestant School Situation, Municipality of
Thurso, 26 Sept. 1929.
70 Buckingham
Historical Society, Correspondence between J.C. Sutherland and G.W. Hamilton,
27 Apr. 1931.
71 AWQSB,
Correspondence between Dr. Leo Lynch and Romeo Mondello, 24 Sept. 1942.
72 The
Superintendent=s Report, 1879-80.
73 Gaffield et
al., History of the Outaouais, 335-36.
74 AWQSB,
Correspondence between Dr. Percival and Inspector King, 20 Sept. 1939.
75 The new
one-room building was an improvement over the older schoolhouse. Willard
Smith, who had attended the two schools as a child, notes that the 1940 school
had a full basement, a wood furnace, and indoor washrooms. Because there was no
electricity or running water, students continued to carry water from the nearby
creek. See Smith, Silver Creek: The Centre of the World, 61-62.
76 Little, Crofters
and Habitants, 235-36.
77 On this
subject see Chad
Gaffield and Gérard Bouchard, ALiteracy, Schooling, and Family
Reproduction in Rural Ontario and Quebec,@ Historical
Studies in Education 1, 2 (1989): 201-18; Chad Gaffield, AChildren, Schooling and Family
Reproduction in Nineteenth-Century Ontario,@ CHR 72, 2 (1991): 157-91.
78 Curtis, Building
the Educational State, 184-85.
79 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.9, Minutes, 27 May 1942.
80 For Quebec,
see for example Jacques Dorion, Les Ecoles de rang au Québec (Montreal:
Editions de l=homme, 1979); Marta Danylewycz and
Alison Prentice, ATeachers= Work: Changing Patterns and
Perceptions in the Emerging School Systems of Nineteenth- and Early
Twentieth-Century Central Canada,@ALiteracy, Schooling, and Family
Reproduction in Rural Ontario and Quebec@AEducation
and Local Government@; Dufour, Tous à l=école; and Charland, L=entreprise éducative au Québec. For elsewhere, see Houston and
Prentice, Schooling and Scholars; and on gender and teaching, see Alison
Prentice, AThe Feminization of Teaching,@ in The Neglected Majority: Essays
in Canadian Women=s History, ed. Susan Mann Trofimenkoff and
Alison Prentice (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1981); Abbott, AAccomplishing >a Man=s Task=.@ On rural schooling elsewhere, see Cochrane, The
One-Room School in Canada; J. Donald Wilson and Paul J. Stortz, AMay the Lord Have Mercy on You: The
Rural School Problem in British Columbia in the 1920s,@ BC Studies 79 (1988): 24-58;
Jean Barman et al., eds., Children, Teachers and Schools in the History of
British Columbia (Calgary: Detselig Enterprises, 1995); and Paul Axelrod, The
Promise of Schooling: Education in Canada, 1800-1914 (Toronto: University
of Toronto Press, 1997).
81 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.8, Minutes, 10 Aug. 1889.
82 Wilson and
Stortz, AMay the Lord Have Mercy on You,@ 31.
84 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.9, Minutes, 24 Oct. 1926.
85 AWQSB, Box
23, File 23.9, Reports of the School Trustees, 1903-32, 1915-16.
87 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.9, Minutes, 28 May 1923.
88 Gatineau
Protestant Teachers= Association Centenary Display, History
of Education, 35.
89 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.9, Minutes, 9 Jan. 1932.
90 AWQSB, Box
23, Permanent Record, Public Schools, Province
of Quebec, 1922-40, 2 Oct. 1922.
91 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.8, Minutes, 15 Mar. 1918, 10 Jan. 1919.
92 Kathleen
Underwood, ASchoolmarms on the Upper Missouri,@ Great Plains Quarterly 11
(1991): 227-29.
93 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.9, Minutes,23 Feb. 1922.
94 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.8, Minutes, 8 Oct. 1912.
96 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.9, Minutes, 20 Feb. 1915.
98 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.8, Minutes, 23 Feb. 1929.
99 AWQSB, Box
6, File 6.9, Minutes, 28
April 1922.
101 Smith,
Silver Creek: The Centre of the World, 63.
102 AWQSB,
Box 6, File 6.9, Minutes, 28 Sept. 1931.
104 Buckingham
Post, 14 July 1905.
|