Chapter
Publicly Available
Front Matter
-
Elizabeth Jane Errington
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents vii
- Maps and Illustrations ix
- Preface xi
- Prologue: The Howling Wilderness and Fruitful Fields 1
-
“Around the Domestic Hearth”: Wives and Mothers and Reproduction in Upper Canada
- “The Most Important Crisis“: Marriage in Upper Canada 28
- “A Fountain of Life to Her Children”: Mothering in Upper Canada 53
-
“Woman is a Bit of a Slave in This Country”: The Housewife and Her Help
- “Prime Minister of the House”: Colonial Housekeepers 85
- “The Ordinary Sort of Canadian Servant”: Helping and the Neighbour’s Girl 107
-
“A Sense of Decorum” and “Service”: The World of the Colonial “Aristocracy”
- “No End to the Wants“: Living and Working in the ”Big“ House 136
- “Social Obligations“ and “Angelic Ministrations”: Society Matrons and Crusading Ladies 159
-
Beyond the Bounds of Domesticity: Surrogate Husbands and Independent Business Women
- “Requesting Their Patronage”: Milliners, Mantuamakers, and Wage-earning Women in Upper Canada 189
- Ladies’ Academies and “Seminaries of Respectability”: Training “Good” Women of Upper Canada 209
- Epilogue 232
-
Appendices
- Patterns of Women’s Part-time Employment, 1832-40 243
- Women in the Needle Trades in York, Upper Canada 245
- Notes 249
- Bibliography 357
- Index 367
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents vii
- Maps and Illustrations ix
- Preface xi
- Prologue: The Howling Wilderness and Fruitful Fields 1
-
“Around the Domestic Hearth”: Wives and Mothers and Reproduction in Upper Canada
- “The Most Important Crisis“: Marriage in Upper Canada 28
- “A Fountain of Life to Her Children”: Mothering in Upper Canada 53
-
“Woman is a Bit of a Slave in This Country”: The Housewife and Her Help
- “Prime Minister of the House”: Colonial Housekeepers 85
- “The Ordinary Sort of Canadian Servant”: Helping and the Neighbour’s Girl 107
-
“A Sense of Decorum” and “Service”: The World of the Colonial “Aristocracy”
- “No End to the Wants“: Living and Working in the ”Big“ House 136
- “Social Obligations“ and “Angelic Ministrations”: Society Matrons and Crusading Ladies 159
-
Beyond the Bounds of Domesticity: Surrogate Husbands and Independent Business Women
- “Requesting Their Patronage”: Milliners, Mantuamakers, and Wage-earning Women in Upper Canada 189
- Ladies’ Academies and “Seminaries of Respectability”: Training “Good” Women of Upper Canada 209
- Epilogue 232
-
Appendices
- Patterns of Women’s Part-time Employment, 1832-40 243
- Women in the Needle Trades in York, Upper Canada 245
- Notes 249
- Bibliography 357
- Index 367