Strong Women in Difficult Times
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Well, the Depression was hard and, and mom, dad died in 1932.
He died in March. The last day I saw him was on my birthday,
and he died in March and my grandfather died the following
December, and so, my mom was left with three young children. I
was 7, Jean was 5, I just turned 7, Jean was 5, and Don was 2.
So it was quite a, quite a responsibility, and, well, so mother
had studied law. She had never articled and she didn't want to
leave us children and go to article, and so she ran the farm,
she kept the post office, and she took over my father's
insurance business and sold insurance at night. Yeah, so that
was, but we worked, I mean, I knew what it was to work outside
because mom had a, did have a, a man that, a hired man, but in
those days it was a dollar a day they, they got for pay. And
then in the winter time when it was quieter, he would take the,
the horses to the woods and the horses got paid, received
payment too, they received payment for the horses. So, then as
we got older, we had to take on the chore of milking the cows
and feeding the hens and looking after sheep and all of that.
But he always came home in March when the sheep were ready to
lamb again. So it was a big, a big responsibility. And, you
know, and I took on that responsibility as serious. Jean wasn't
well when she was young, so she couldn't do any
of that heavier work out in the...
Interviewer: So it was left to you for a long while?
Yeah, well, I mean, I didn't overwork but it was the cold.
Going out in the cold in the morning in the winter was a....
Interviewer: You remember that?
I remember that, yes. Wonder why the hens didn't freeze to
death. But anyway. And you'd go to roll loose hay down from
the barn, that we fed from the top, but, you know, the, those
hatches at the top of the manger and you'd go to roll the hay
down and it wouldn't roll, wouldn't break up and you'd have to
pry it apart and, but anyway, that's okay. I kept the horse
barn cleaner than I kept my bedroom. I loved horses. So we had
to, we had an Arabian mare and I used to go horse back riding
and jump fences and all that stuff, so it was exciting, I mean,
there were, there were compensations for everything.
Description
After her father died Mrs Grégoire and her mother had to take over all the family businesses to carry them through the depression.
Christina Janet Grégoire
Mrs. Grégoire was born in Campbellton, New Brunswick, on March 1, 1925, and grew up in Sillarsville, Québec. In March 1943, when she was 18, she joined the Air Force in Montréal. After training at Rockcliffe and a first posting in Scoudouc she was given a Top Secret rating by the RCMP before being assigned to the Air Force Headquarters Intelligence Directorate in Ottawa. She was discharged after VJ Day and released in November 1945. She now gives workshops for the United Church and is involved in volunteering in various Hospital Veterans' Wards.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 03:11
- Person Interviewed:
- Christina Janet Grégoire
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Canada
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- Air Force Headquarters, Directorate of Intelligence (Ottawa)
- Occupation:
- Clerical work
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