Review
An engaging character with a fine eye for social and cultural observation. The editor's sensitive additions to the diaries allow the reader the opportunity of understanding the broader personal, regional, and historical significance of [the diaries. . . . The [editor's sensitivity to historical issues of culture and ethnicity is one of the characteristics that make this such a good local history. -- Ruth Sandwell, editor of
Beyond the City Limits: Rural History in British Columbia
Product Description
In 1891, Alice Barrett moved from Port Dover, Ontario, to the Okanagan Valley to keep house for her brother and uncle. She soon married Harold Parke, a former NWMP officer, and spent the next decade recording her experiences in a series of notebooks sent to her Ontario family. Few womens diaries have survived from that time, and Barrett Parke recalls a period of profound transformation in a region newly opened to white settlement by the railway. She was an astute observer and an exceptional writer, and her diaries provide invaluable insights into work, health, religion, race and gender relations, and womens lives. On a personal level, her writings show the conflict between her independent spirit and womens traditional roles. Although wary of the emerging feminism of the time, Alice was co-opted into the vice-regal circle of the Countess of Aberdeen, who stayed at nearby Coldstream Ranch, and became the first corresponding secretary of the Vernon chapter of the National Council of Women. Selected as a BC Book for Everybody.