"A Proper Independent Spirit": Working Mothers and the Vancouver City Creche, 1909-20
Abstract
This article examines the Vancouver City Crèche, established in 1912 as Canada’s first such public institution, as a way to gain insight into the boundaries of social citizenship as they related to work and motherhood. The debates about public responsibility for working mothers in Vancouver revealed that, from the state’s perspective at least, negotiations at the boundaries of social citizenship were contingent not upon maternal service to the state, but upon a mother’s role as a wage-earner and as the breadwinner of a working-class family, one in which the work ethic needed to be preserved and welfare dependency prevented.
Keywords
city creche; social citizenship; social welfare; working mothers
ISSN 0005-2949
BC Studies
University of British Columbia
Rm 2, 6303 NW Marine Drive
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1
T: 604.822.3727
E: info@bcstudies.com