Christine Ross Barker Explained
Christine Ross Barker |
Birth Name: | Christine Ross |
Birth Date: | 2 January 1866 |
Birth Place: | Little Bras d'Or, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada |
Death Place: | London, Ontario, Canada |
Nationality: | Canadian |
Other Names: | Christine R. Barker |
Occupation: | suffragist, pacifist, and tax reformer |
Years Active: | 1904–1938 |
Christine Ross Barker (2 January 1866 – 25 June 1940) was a Canadian pacifist and suffragist, active in the interwar period. She was a member of the Georgist Movement, serving as president of the Women's Henry George League in Manhattan and was one of the founders and first president of the radical Women's Peace Union.
Early life
Christine Ross was born on 2 January 1866 in Little Bras d'Or on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada to Christina Isabella (née MacKay/McKay) and John Ross. Little is known of her early life, but she moved to New York City and married Wesley E. Barker on 23 December 1903 in Manhattan. Barker was the son of Hersey (née Knowlton) and Wesley E. Barker, Sr. of Springfield, Massachusetts. Her husband, known as "Will" was a journalist and a member of the Manhattan Single Tax Club. In 1905 in Manhattan, the couple had a daughter, Mary Ross Barker, who would later become an educator and be honored with the Order of Canada.
Career
Barker became involved in the women's suffrage movement as well as the Women's Henry George League (WHGL) of Manhattan. By 1904, she was speaking on behalf of the league, making presentations with Carrie Chapman Catt and Maud Nathan. By 1905, she had become president of the WHGL, whose object was to replace all forms of taxation with a single tax on resources, i.e. a form of ground rent. She participated in the Progressive Women's Suffrage Union's Parade on Wall Street in Manhattan in 1908, and was one of the members of the organization's executive board. Around 1910, the family moved to North Cambridge, Massachusetts and the following year, they returned to Canada, moving to Toronto. As she had in the United States, Barker became involved in suffragist causes, joining the Canadian Woman Suffrage Association.
During World War I, Barker broke ranks with the business women's club in Toronto, which she headed, because they favored war. Instead, she actively supported the women meeting at The Hague, who would form the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF). Though a member of WILPF, Barker felt that they lacked resolve to maintain the fight as pacifists and made compromises for the war by buying war bonds, knitting goods and wrapping bandages. When in 1921, Barker proposed that conference be held in Niagara, Ontario between American and Canadian women to discuss their pacifist aims, she approached the Women's Peace Society (WPS) rather than WILPF to help her organize it. The WPS had split from the WILPF over the same lack of commitment to the cause that troubled Barker. Out of the conference, held between 19 and 21 August, came the creation of the Women's Peace Union, to unite women from Canada, Latin America and the United States to work for peace. Barker served as the first chair, along with Margaret Long Thomas of New York City, who was appointed secretary, and Gertrude Franchot Tone of Niagara Falls, New York, who served as treasurer. The single-purpose of the organization was to pass a constitutional amendment in the United States to outlaw war.
In September 1927, Barker was one of the featured speakers at the Henry George Congress, held in New York City. She not only participated in the Congresses of the society, attending 1934, 1936, and 1938 meetings, but was actively involved in the Henry George School in Toronto. Her husband died on 26 June 1936 two weeks after they had attended the 1936 School Dinner in New York City.
Death and legacy
Barker died on 25 June 1940 in London, Ontario, Canada and was buried in Brookside Cemetery, New Glasgow, Pictou County, Nova Scotia.
See also
References
Bibliography
- Book: Alonso, Harriet Hyman. The Women's Peace Union and the Outlawry of War, 1921–1942. 1996. Syracuse University Press. Syracuse, New York. 978-0-8156-0417-4.
- Book: Campbell, Peter. Rose Henderson: A Woman for the People. 2010. McGill-Queen's University Press. Montreal, Quebec, Canada. 978-0-7735-8116-6.
- Book: Parshall. James C.. The Barker Genealogy: giving the names and descendants of several ancestors who settled in the United States previous to the Declaration of Independence, A.D. 1776. 1897. unidentified . Middletown, New York. 913500491. 26.
- News: Pooley. Erin. Mary Ross Barker. 16 August 2017. The Globe and Mail. 31 July 2004. https://web.archive.org/web/20170816165600/https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/mary-ross-barker/article4090270/. 16 August 2017. Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
- Book: Roberts, Barbara . Reconstructed World: A Feminist Biography of Gertrude Richardson. 1996. McGill-Queen's University Press. Montreal, Quebec, Canada. 978-0-7735-1394-5.
- Web site: Stillman. Andrew. Brookside Cemetery: Christina (Ross) Barker. Geneofun.on.ca. CanadaGenWeb Cemetery Project. 16 August 2017. Canada. 2008.
- News: . . Best Peace Surety. 16 August 2017. The Morning News. 20 August 1921. Wilmington, Delaware. 8. Newspapers.com.
- Web site: . . Canada Marriages, 1661–1949: John Ross/Isabella McKay. FamilySearch. Family History Library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 16 August 2017. Salt Lake City, Utah. 23 June 1868. FHL microfilm #1570990, Pg 186, Cn 216.
- Book: . . Club Women of New York: 1905–1906. 1905. Club Women of New York Company. New York City, New York. 78. https://archive.org/stream/clubwomennewyor03conggoog#page/n82/mode/1up/search/%22christine+ross+barker%22. Women's Henry George League.
- News: . . For Independent Teachers. 16 August 2017. The New York Times. 24 April 1904. New York City, New York. 3. Newspaperarchive.com.
- . . Henry George Congress. Land and Freedom. September–October 1927. XXVII. 5. 15 August 2017. Land and Freedom Journal of the Henry George Movement. New York City, New York. 134–136.
- . . Henry George Congress. Land and Freedom. November–December 1934. XXXIV. 6. 15 August 2017. Land and Freedom Journal of the Henry George Movement. New York City, New York. 172–173.
- Web site: . . New York Marriages, 1686–1980: Wesley E. Barker/Chrisine Ross. FamilySearch. Family History Library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 16 August 2017. Salt Lake City, Utah. 23 June 1868. FHL microfilm #1298666, Pg 186, Cn 216.
- Web site: . . New York City Births, 1846–1909: Mary Barker. FamilySearch. New York Municipal Archives. 16 August 2017. New York City, New York. 8 January 1905. FHL microfilm #1984406.
- . . Jottings. The Survey. 24 September 1921. XLVI. 20. 721. 16 August 2017. Survey Associates Inc. for Charity Organization Society of the City of New York. New York City, New York.
- . . News, Notes, and Personals. Land and Freedom. July–August 1940. XL. 4. 127. 15 August 2017. Land and Freedom Journal of the Henry George Movement. New York City, New York.
- . . Shareholders in Chartered Banks: The Metropolitan Bank. Sessional Papers Volume 2: Second Session of the Eleventh Parliament of the Dominion of Canada. 1910. XLIV. 565. Government Printer. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
- . . Shareholders in Chartered Banks: The Metropolitan Bank. Sessional Papers Volume 2: Third Session of the Eleventh Parliament of the Dominion of Canada. 1911. XLV. 571. Government Printer. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
- . . Thirteenth Annual Henry George Congress. Land and Freedom. September–October 1938. XXXVIII. 5. 15 August 2017. Land and Freedom Journal of the Henry George Movement. New York City, New York. 143–146.
- . . Wesley Barker. Land and Freedom. July–August 1936. XXXVI. 4. 15 August 2017. Land and Freedom Journal of the Henry George Movement. New York City, New York. 126.
- News: . . Women Planning Campaign for Electoral Franchise. 16 August 2017. The Anaconda Standard. 22 March 1908. Anaconda, Montana. 23.
Further reading
- Book: Cameron. James M.. About Pictonians. 1979. Lancelot Press. Hantsport, Nova Scotia. 0-88-99910-81.