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Topic: New Journey $50 note  (Read 30579 times)
canada-hongkong
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« Reply #60 on: October 05, 2004, 12:48:09 am »

I feel the new $50 should have images of Canada being developed, everything from showing building of railway, people at work, and the diversity of people in this country which helped build it. Not putting 5 figures who were against that. If this were done, the Journey series would be perfect, we have a Canadian pastime on the $5, rememberance of our heros on the $10, a depiction of native art on the $20, and a map of Canada on the $100. If the $50 showed what I said above, it would be a true "Canadian Journey".
jonathan
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« Reply #61 on: October 10, 2004, 12:19:30 pm »

Well, with the $50 unveiling only three days away, do any of ye have some final feedback over the previous postings on this thread relating to the Famous Five?  How come nobody mentioned anything about Therese Casgrain? ???

Jonathan ;)
jonathan
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« Reply #62 on: October 11, 2004, 02:04:08 pm »

The following items are some useful information about Therese Casgrain.  Sources of these articles are unknown:

Politics: Thérèse Casgrain

Thérèse Casgrain entered the public sphere during the federal election of 1921 when she conducted a highly successful campaign for her husband who was prevented from doing so by illness. She became sole president of the Provincial Franchise Committee (later, the League for Women's Rights) in 1928--a position she held for 14 years. In November 1929 she appeared before the Dorion Commission which had been set up to look into such things as: a woman's right to her own earnings, the right to bring law suits without her husband's consent, etc. One of the main obstacles to winning suffrage in Quebec was the lack of support from rural French women. She was able to reach many of them through her radio program, "Femina," which was broadcast over French and English networks, and by speaking at conventions.

Following the war and the final achievement of the vote in 1940 she continued faithfully to press for child protection laws, prison reform, government appointments for women and amendments to the civil code. She became vice-president of the National Federation of Liberal Women and in 1948 resigned to join the CCF Party. She soon became vice-chairperson of the national CCF executive and in 1951 was chosen Quebec Social Democratic Party leader, which she held until 1957--the first woman party leader anywhere in Canada.

When the NDP succeeded the CCF in 1961 Casgrain continued her active support, holding the position of national vice-chairperson. "I can't imagine a woman who has the best interest of her children at heart not taking an interest in politics," she said.

"I am convinced that until we have more women in politics--openly, flagrantly and unashamedly committed to the struggle for the liberation of woman and determined to change traditional power politics to make it more responsive to the dispossessed of this earth--we as women are doomed to many more years of oppression and exploitation."
(Rosemary Brown, 1977).

http://library.usask.ca/herstory/casgrain.html

<<END OF THIS ARTICLE>>

Here is some more information about Therese Casgrain:

Thérèse Forget was born in a comfortable middle-class family in Montreal. At the age of 19, she married Pierre Casgrain who was a federal Member of Parliament from 1917 to 1941. Despite her active family life, she became involved in the country's social and political life at the beginning of the 1920s. A founding member of the Provincial Committee for Women's Suffrage in 1921, she campaigned tirelessly for the social, political and economic rights of women. Her struggles profoundly marked the feminist movement in Quebec.

In 1926, she founded the Ligue de la feunesse féminine, participated in the foundation of the Fédération des oeuvres de charité candienne-française and established the Montreal Symphony Concerts Society. In 1928, she led an arduous battle against the clergy and the political elite of the time, under the leadership of Henri Bourassa, for the legal rights of women and to obtain the right to vote for women in provincial elections. That objective was realized in 1940 when the Liberal government of Adélard Godbout came to power. During the 1930s she became a journalist and presented a broadcast series called Fémina on Radio-Canada. During the Second World War, she was one of the two Presidents of the Women's Surveillance Committee for the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. In 1942, she spoke out against conscription and campaigned as an independent Liberal candidate in the federal elections. In 1946, she joined the CCF (the ancestor of the New Democratic Party), which was closer to her political ideals. She became President of the Quebec wing of that party and ran a number of times as candidate in the provincial elections without being elected. In the 1940s, she took part in the international meetings of socialist parties and fought beside intellectuals and trade unionists against the government of Maurice Duplessis. In 1962, she became President of the Voice of Women, a movement protesting the proliferation of nuclear arms, and in 1966, she founded the Fédérations des femmes du Québec. She took part in organizing aid for Vietnam war victims and was a three-time President of the League for Human Rights.

In 1970, she was appointed to the Senate of Canada, but she had to retire the following year because she had reached the age of 75. She continued, nonetheless, to fight to promote the rights of Amerindiens, for the abolition of mandatory retirement at 65 and to improve the lot of seniors. A holder of 11 honorary doctorates, the title of Grande Montréalaise in 1980 and numerous prestigious distinctions, Thérèse Casgrain, the Canadian activist woman of the century, died at 85, on November 3, 1981. In 1982, the Government of Canada created the Thérèse Casgrain Award to emphasize and extend the work of this eminent Canadian. In 1985, the Canada Post Corporation issued a stamp in her honour to commemorate the end of the United Nations Decade for Women.

http://edimage.ca/edimage/grandspersonnages/en/carte_v06.html

<<END OF ARTICLE>>
« Last Edit: October 11, 2004, 05:52:01 pm by jonathan »
jonathan
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« Reply #63 on: October 11, 2004, 05:58:47 pm »

Here is yet another article about Casgrain, taken from Webster-dictionary.org:

Marie Thérèse Forget Casgrain (July 10, 1896 - November 2, 1981) was a Canadian feminist, reformer and politician.

Thérèse Casgrain was raised in a wealthy family, the daughter of Lady Blanche MacDonald and Sir Rodolphe Forget. She married Pierre-François Casgrain, a Liberal politician with whom she raised four children.

Casgrain led the women's suffrage movement in Quebec prior to World War I. She founded the Provincial Franchise Committee in 1921 and campaigned for women's rights and for the right to vote in Quebec elections, a right that was not won until 1940. From 1928 to 1942 she was the leader of the League for Women's Rights. In the 1930s she hosted a popular radio show "Fémina."

In the 1942 federal by-election she was the Independent Liberal candidate in the Charlevoix-Saguenay riding, the same seat formerly held both by her father and by her husband.

Following World War II she left the Liberal Party and joined the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation. In 1948 she became one of the federal vice presidents of the CCF. She led the Quebec wing of the party, the Parti social démocratique du Québec, from 1951 to 1957 through three provincial elections using her position as a platform to campaign against the government of Maurice Duplessis. In the 1960s she became a campaigner against nuclear weapons founding the Quebec wing of Voice of Women. She also was a founder of the League for Human Rights and the Fédération des femmes du Québec. In the 1960s, she was president of the Quebec wing of the New Democratic Party, the CCF's successor.

In recognition of her achievements, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau appointed Casgrain to the Canadian Senate where she sat as an Independent for nine months before reaching the mandatory retirement age of 75.

http://www.webster-dictionary.org/definition/Th%E9r%E8se%20Casgrain

<<END OF ARTICLE>>

I hope this information about Therese Casgrain will be very helpful to all Canadians before the new $50 note is unveiled this Wednesday.

Happy Thanksgiving to all!

Jonathan
jonathan
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« Reply #64 on: October 11, 2004, 06:10:54 pm »

On Oct 4th, 2004, 5:15pm, Slugboy wrote:
Quote
Since the theme of the $50 note is "Nation Building", I really think they should have put some Canadian Railroad construction workers on the reverse. Many of the workers were from East Asian countries and were subjected to extremely harsh working conditions as the railroad was built during the 1800s. And their descendants didn't even get to vote until 1948!
 
Considering that the Railroad was so important to the growing Dominion, and that these labourers don't seem to get much credit (other than that one Heritage Minute commercial), the least we could do is commemorate them on the $50 bill. As is, the new notes are hardly representative of the many different cultures that helped build Canada.


If the development of the railway should be depicted on the new $50 note, shouldn't Sir John A. MacDonald's portrait grace the front of our $50 note instead of on our tens, since MacDonald helped develop the railway? ;D

Later, Jonathan  :)
jonathan
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« Reply #65 on: October 11, 2004, 08:01:35 pm »

...or shouldn't the development of the railway have been depicted on our $10's with Sir John A. MacDonald? ;D

Enjoy your Thanksgiving (burp!) ::)

Later, Jonathan
Marc
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« Reply #66 on: October 12, 2004, 02:44:51 am »

Jonathan, this isn't a knock on you, but you've been told to stop replying to your own posts.
« Last Edit: October 12, 2004, 02:45:12 am by Marc_G »

Marc :)
Bob
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« Reply #67 on: October 12, 2004, 01:10:48 pm »

Quote
Thérèse Casgrain was raised in a wealthy family, the daughter of Lady Blanche MacDonald and Sir Rodolphe Forget.

Very interesting!  Rudolphe Forget was President of Banque Internationale du Canada, a chartered bank which operated briefly from 1911 to 1913, when it was absorbed by the Home Bank of Canada.  His portrait is on each of the bank's three denominations.  The notes are terribly rare and valuable.  And no, I don't have any, and never did, unfortunately.
(I can't think of any other examples of father and daughter portrayed on Canadian bank notes, although an example of father and son comes quickly to mind.)

Collecting Canadian since 1955
The Original Ranman
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« Reply #68 on: October 12, 2004, 01:13:49 pm »

I hear you Marc.He did the same thing with his postings about the new $20.00 notes and now the $50.00 notes >:(.Thank God after the $50.00 notes there wont be any new notes for awhile,but I'm sure he'll being doing it in other threads he posts >:(.



   Randy

Randy
jonathan
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« Reply #69 on: October 12, 2004, 01:54:15 pm »

I highly doubt it, Marc and Randy.  After the new $50 is released (or even unveiled), I will try not to answer my own posts in the future.  I just couldn't help myself :-[.

It's just that I had information about Therese Casgrain that I had copied and pasted from other sites, and all that, I could have put on one posting AND one posting ONLY.

Well, I feel so embarrassed about this, and I will try to keep it cool from now on - it's just the excitement over the unveilings and releases that are happening over the next few weeks. :-[

Can't we possibly wait until the new $50 gets unveiled before we discuss this even further? :-[

Thanks, from Jonathan :)
JB-2007
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« Reply #70 on: October 12, 2004, 03:33:49 pm »

And this is a papermoney forum... not a history forum! You are doing way to many postings which relate to the same topic... talk about something new instead of replying 5 times to your posting.
jonathan
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« Reply #71 on: October 12, 2004, 05:44:29 pm »

Okay.  The topic can now be closed. :-X
Let's talk Canadian banknotes and not history. :)
 

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