• You're Lucky You're A Person: Lizzie Cyr/Famous 5 Part 2

  • 2025/04/15
  • 再生時間: 48 分
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You're Lucky You're A Person: Lizzie Cyr/Famous 5 Part 2

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  • "You're not a qualified person." With these dismissive words, the Canadian government repeatedly denied women access to the Senate based on a narrow interpretation of constitutional language. But in 1927, five determined women gathered over tea in Edmonton to launch a legal challenge that would reverberate throughout the British Empire.

    The story begins with Lizzie Cyr, a sex worker arrested for vagrancy in Calgary, whose case inadvertently exposed the precarious legal standing of women in public office. This leads us to the Famous Five: Emily Murphy (the first female magistrate in the British Empire), Louise McKinney (temperance advocate and women's suffrage champion), Henrietta Edwards (legal expert called "Otter Woman" by Indigenous communities), Irene Parlby (rural women's advocate and cabinet minister), and Nellie McClung (fiery novelist and suffragist).

    Facing constant opposition from men who disrupted their political meetings, these women cleverly rebranded their gatherings as "Pink Teas" – social events men typically avoided. Their petition asked a simple question: does the word "persons" in the constitution include women? When Canada's Supreme Court ruled against them in 1928, they appealed to Britain's Privy Council, which overturned the decision in 1929. Lord Sankey's landmark ruling established the "living tree doctrine" – the principle that constitutions must evolve with changing times.

    Yet the Famous Five's legacy carries a troubling contradiction. While fighting brilliantly for women's legal recognition, all five supported eugenics – advocating for policies that led to thousands being sterilized without consent in Alberta until 1972. Their story reminds us that historical figures rarely fit into neat categories of hero or villain, often reflecting both the progressive and regressive ideas of their time.

    Listen and decide for yourself how we should remember these complex women who fundamentally changed the legal standing of women while simultaneously promoting ideas we now recognize as deeply harmful.


    https://www.famous5.ca/

    The Famous 5 and the infamous Lizzie
    By Diane Woollard
    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC80555/


    The Canadian Encyclopedia by Catherine Cavanaugh, Susanna McLeod, Mary E. Hallett, Eliane Leslau Silverman, Susan Jackel
    https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/henrietta-louise-edwards#Eugenics

    Send us a text

    Support the show













    This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

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"You're not a qualified person." With these dismissive words, the Canadian government repeatedly denied women access to the Senate based on a narrow interpretation of constitutional language. But in 1927, five determined women gathered over tea in Edmonton to launch a legal challenge that would reverberate throughout the British Empire.

The story begins with Lizzie Cyr, a sex worker arrested for vagrancy in Calgary, whose case inadvertently exposed the precarious legal standing of women in public office. This leads us to the Famous Five: Emily Murphy (the first female magistrate in the British Empire), Louise McKinney (temperance advocate and women's suffrage champion), Henrietta Edwards (legal expert called "Otter Woman" by Indigenous communities), Irene Parlby (rural women's advocate and cabinet minister), and Nellie McClung (fiery novelist and suffragist).

Facing constant opposition from men who disrupted their political meetings, these women cleverly rebranded their gatherings as "Pink Teas" – social events men typically avoided. Their petition asked a simple question: does the word "persons" in the constitution include women? When Canada's Supreme Court ruled against them in 1928, they appealed to Britain's Privy Council, which overturned the decision in 1929. Lord Sankey's landmark ruling established the "living tree doctrine" – the principle that constitutions must evolve with changing times.

Yet the Famous Five's legacy carries a troubling contradiction. While fighting brilliantly for women's legal recognition, all five supported eugenics – advocating for policies that led to thousands being sterilized without consent in Alberta until 1972. Their story reminds us that historical figures rarely fit into neat categories of hero or villain, often reflecting both the progressive and regressive ideas of their time.

Listen and decide for yourself how we should remember these complex women who fundamentally changed the legal standing of women while simultaneously promoting ideas we now recognize as deeply harmful.


https://www.famous5.ca/

The Famous 5 and the infamous Lizzie
By Diane Woollard
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC80555/


The Canadian Encyclopedia by Catherine Cavanaugh, Susanna McLeod, Mary E. Hallett, Eliane Leslau Silverman, Susan Jackel
https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/henrietta-louise-edwards#Eugenics

Send us a text

Support the show













This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

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