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Social Science Agriculture & Food

Cows Don't Know it's Sunday

Agricultural Life in St. John's

by (author) Hilda Chaulk Murray

Publisher
Memorial University Press
Initial publish date
Apr 2002
Category
Agriculture & Food, Cultural
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780919666535
    Publish Date
    Apr 2002
    List Price
    $31.95

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Description

Before 1950, the greatest number of Newfoundland farmers lived in the St. John's area. They and the townsfolk were interdependent, with the farmers providing meat, poultry, garden and dairy products to the city, while St. John's served as a ready market and a source of cash income. Although many street names serve as reminders of those who once worked the land, and others perpetuate old homesteads, the farmers of St. John's are as unknown today as though they had never been.

Cows Don't Know It's Sunday gives a historical overview of farming and its importance to the economy of Newfoundland, and describes in detail, using the words of more than eighty people who grew up on or near farms, what it was like to farm in and around St. John's in the period within living memory. Farmers worked seven days a week throughout the year. This study of both the work life and social life of the farmers of St. John's is a tribute to the farming families who were the mainstay of the city during the first half of the twentieth century.

About the author

Hilda Chaulk Murray, who resides in Mount Pearl, grew up in Maberly, Newfoundland. She taught in various communities as well as in St. John's. After recieving her M.A. in folklore in 1972, she taught English at the College of Trades and Technology (now College of the North Atlantic). Her first book, More Than 50%: Woman's Life in a Newfoundland Outport, based on her thesis, was published in 1979.

Hilda Chaulk Murray's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"This publication is a detailed account of the agricultural community which existed in and around St. John's in the first half of the twentieth century.....For those who are interested in extending the study of the farming community in new directions, Murray's work will provide a nice point of reference"

Anna Kearney Guigné, Ethnologies