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niyad

(113,259 posts)
Thu Mar 14, 2013, 09:21 AM Mar 2013

a biography of the day-irene parlby (women's rights activist, famous five)


Irene Parlby
Born 9 January 1868
London, England
Died 12 July 1965 (aged 97)
Known for Women's rights activist

Irene Parlby (born Irene Marryat; 9 January 1868 – 12 July 1965) was a Canadian women's farm leader, activist and politician.


Born in London, England, Parlby came to Canada in 1896. In 1913, Parlby helped to found the first women's local of the United Farmers of Alberta. In 1921, she was elected to the Alberta Legislature for the riding of Lacombe, holding the riding for 14 years. Appointed as minister without portfolio, she was the first woman Cabinet minister in Alberta.
Parlby was one of the Famous Five or Valiant Five[citation needed], who by means of a court battle known as the Persons Case established that women were "qualified Persons" in the meaning of the Constitution of Canada and therefore entitled to sit in the Senate of Canada.

A lifelong advocate for rural Canadian women and children, Parlby was president of the United Farm Women of Alberta from 1916 to 1919. On behalf of the UFWA, she pushed to improve public health care services and establish municipal hospitals as well as mobile medical and dental clinics. In 1921, Parlby was elected to the provincial legislature and made a cabinet minister (the second woman in Canada to hold a provincial cabinet post).

She was once quoted saying: "...and what when we die? Should women go back to the state they once belonged to. No, they should rather take arms against it, and fight for acknowledgment, not uniformity." Here she fought for acceptance rather that equality to the male gender.

She was the last surviving member of the Famous Five.

Among other honours, in October 2009, the Senate voted to name Parlby and the rest of the Five Canada's first "honorary senators."[1] Irene Parlby was recently award a mural in her honour in Edmonton, Alberta.[2]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irene_Parlby
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