Heritage Matters

Heritage Matters – Spring 2018

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Heritage Matters 25 to decline as women became less willing to choose the long hours and lower wages. Wartime and industrialization further impacted the domestic service market, as women filled positions generally held by men and began considering other types of training and employment. The story of the Ashbridges – Dorothy Bullen and her sister Winifred Elizabeth (Betty) Burton – illustrate yet another perspective on the changing roles of women in society. Raised on the Toronto estate (c. 1854) of one of Toronto's founding families Dorothy and Betty would have experienced a shift in gender roles influenced by women's enfranchisement, education and the changing landscape of the workforce. Betty Burton (1907-2002), the younger of the two sisters, studied music at the University of Toronto. She was 34 in 1941 when the Canadian government introduced the first women's divisions in the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) and in the Canadian Armed Forces in response to a shortage of enlisted men. Betty, along with over 17,000 women, served in the RCAF's Women's Division. At first, female-dominated occupations were the trades generally considered to be socially accepted for women to occupy – such as clerks, fabric workers and cooks. Over time, their presence grew to be more significant in traditionally male- dominated positions. When her training was over, Betty remained in Ontario and was stationed at Camp Borden. Her diaries from this period provide compelling insight into how the Women's Division was subjected to the same laws, discipline and liabilities as the Men's Division. Dorothy Bullen (1905-97), also a graduate of the University of Toronto, entered the workforce as a librarian and later continued her education, receiving a Bachelor of Library Science degree. The profession increasingly attracted young, single and university-educated women. In the labour force during the early 20th century, women normally resigned after marriage. This was attributed to the strong sentiment existing against married women working outside the home. Unlike her peers, Dorothy married after retiring from her dedicated service of over 40 years at the Toronto Public Library in various branches, as well as serving on the Library Board. These women's stories illustrate the broader narrative of shifting female roles in Canadian society. Their choices to participate in the employment market reflected changing opportunities for women stemming from the gains engendered in the movement for women's rights and equality. Madison Hamilton is the Coordinator for Toronto Region Sites with the Ontario Heritage Trust. Dorothy Bullen's car decorated for East York Library display at the Dominion Day Parade of July 1, 1960. Mary Fulford dressed for presentation to the court of Queen Victoria circa 1900.

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