Manitou, Canada
In 2017, two of Nellie McClung’s homes were relocated to Manitou, Manitoba, and opened to the public. The Nellie McClung Heritage Site celebrates the life, achievements, and legacy of the legislator, social reformer, and women’s rights activist Nellie Letitia McClung in the same location she started her adult life.
Nellie Letitia McClung (1873-1951) was 16 years old when she arrived in 1890 to work as a teacher at the Hazel school near Manitou and boarded with the Hasselfield family. Hazel Cottage is one of two houses on the Nellie McClung Heritage Site.
Two years later, she started teaching at Manitou school and boarded with the family of a Methodist minister. The minister’s wife, Annie E. McClung, was a women’s suffrage supporter and the provincial president of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU); she inspired and influenced McClung to become an active member of the organization. In 1896, she married the family’s second son, Wesley, and they moved to the McClung House in 1899. In this house, they raised four of their five children; she wrote two of her 16 books and became a prominent leader in the Canadian suffrage movement and women’s right to vote.
In 1911, the family moved to Winnipeg, and McClung continued her suffrage work. In 1916, following the campaign McClung led, Manitoba became the first province in Canada to grant women the vote.
Her most famous achievement happened in 1929 when she, as one of the Famous Five, won the Person Case that qualified women as persons and allowed them to serve in the Canadian Senate.
During the spring and summer, the Hazel Cottage and McClung House were renovated and restored to the time when McClung and her family lived there. On display are 19th-century artifacts and memorabilia related to McClung and her family and an exhibition of historic wedding gowns and dresses. Read more...
Manitou, Canada
Outside the historic Opera House of Manitou stands the bust of Nellie McClung commemorating her legacy and contribution to women’s rights in Canada and specifically in Manitoba, which was the first province in Canada to grant its women the right to vote.
Nellie McClung (1873-1951) was a women’s rights activist, author, legislator, and social reformer. She is well known as one of the women from the group of the famous five who submitted the petition in the person case to allow women to run for the Senate in Canada. But before McClung fought for women’s voting rights at the national level, she did so at the local level, and it started in Manitou.
McClung arrived in Manitou in 1892 to work as a teacher at the Manitou school. She lived with the family of a Methodist minister. The minister’s wife, Annie E. McClung, was a women’s suffrage supporter and the provincial president of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, who inspired and influenced McClung to become an active member of the organization. Nellie developed a romantic relationship with the family’s second son, Wesley, and the couple married in 1896. After the wedding, she stopped working but stayed active in the WTCU and other organizations.
In 1908, McClung published her first novel, Sowing Seeds in Danny, which became a best-seller. Over the years, she published 16 more books and articles. McClung left Manitou in 1911. She continued advocating for women’s suffrage, co-founded several organizations, gave lectures, and even served at the Alberta Legislative Assembly for five years. Once the person case had won and women could run for Senate, McClung focused on her writing and staying active in local organizations. She passed away at the age of 78.
The Manitou Culture and Tourism Committee, under the leadership of the historian, Bette Mueller, decided to commemorate McClung with a statue.
They placed it outside the historic Opera House due to its central location and historical significance to McClung. The current venue was built in 1930, replacing the first building that burned down. McClung’s husband promoted and built the first Opera House when he was mayor.
Several other monuments commemorate McClung in Canada. Three depicts her with the Famous Five in Winnipeg, Calgary, and Ottawa. Read more...
Winnipeg, Canada
On the west grounds of the Manitoba Legislative Building in Winnipeg stands a sculpture of Nellie McClung with her fellow Famous Five members – Henrietta Muir Edwards (1849-1931), Emily Murphy (1868-1933), Louise McKinney (1868-1931), and Irene Parlby (1868-1965). They are depicted in the middle of a meeting, around a table, signing a petition.
Nellie McClung (1873-1951) was a social reformer, suffragist, women’s rights activist, and author. She founded and led many women’s organizations in Canada. When she lived in Winnipeg, she led the women’s suffrage campaign and won. In 1916, Manitoba became the first province in Canada to grant women their voting rights.
On August 27th, 1927, the Famous Five started the first wave of feminism in Canada when they filed a petition to allow women to be senators. The Supreme Court ruled that women are not included in the word ‘persons’ in Section 24 of the British North America Act, 1867, and therefore cannot become senators. The Famous Five appealed to the highest court of appeal in the British Empire, and on October 18th, 1929, it overruled the Supreme Court decision and declared that women were “qualified persons.”
The Nellie McClung Foundation, led by Manitoba politician Myrna Driedger, commissioned the statue to honor McClung’s activism work towards equal rights for Manitoba women and Canadian women in general.
The sculpture was created by the sculptress Helen Granger Young and was dedicated on June 18th, 2010.
There are two more statues of Nellie McClung in Manitou and Edmonton. The Famous Five were also honored with monuments on Parliament Hill and Olympic Plaza in Calgary. Read more...