File 58 - Canadian Women's Press Club, Toronto Branch.

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Title proper

Canadian Women's Press Club, Toronto Branch.

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File

Reference code

SCA121-GA94-8-58

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Physical description

48 photographs : b&w and col. ; 19 x 24 and smaller

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Archival description area

Name of creator

(1904-[199-?])

Administrative history

The Canadian Women's Press Club was founded in 1904 by a group of Canadian woman reporters returning from a complimentary trip to the St. Louis Exposition. The club was suggested by George Henry Ham, the CPR's publicity director, and the first president was Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman. The Toronto Branch was founded in 1909, one of 15 regional branches organized over the years. Established as a "craft club" to help and promote its members in the profession of journalism, the Club remained active until the 1990's, counting as members most Canadian women journalists of note. In 1971 the Canadian Women's Press Club became the Media Club of Canada, and the Toronto Branch of the Club became the Media Club of Canada, Toronto Branch. In 1976 the Toronto Branch became an autonomous group under the name Toronto Women's Press Club, later changed to the Women's Press Club of Toronto. The Toronto Branch ceased in 199? and the Media Club of Canada suspended operations in 199?

By the 1980's the Women's Press Club of Toronto had launched a history project and put Kay Rex, a long-time member, in charge of collecting materials and writing a history of the Canadian Women's Press Club to 1971. Her book No Daughter of Mine: The Women and History of the Canadian Women's Press Club, 1904-1971 was published in 1995 by the University of Toronto Press.

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Scope and content

Scrapbook of photographs, news clippings and ephemera collected by the Toronto branch of the Canadian Women's Press Club regarding their activities and members from 1967-1968. Photographs predominantly document social events, including Club member's attendance at the Triennial event in Vancouver and subsequent travel through British Columbia with stops in Powell River and Nanaimo, as well as fashion shows and lunches held at 44 York. Also included are clippings regarding Claire Wallace, women working in public relations, and claims of discrimination against women at the CBC [Canadian Broadcasting Corporation], as well as a column by Josephine Sappor regarding the involvement of women in the visioning of a new constitution for Ghana.

Synopsis of time period at front of scrapbook reads: A year of effort and imagination to make the new clubhouse "go".

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Items mounted on acidic paper.

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      Scrapbook is of note compared to earlier scrapbooks in this series due to more structured presentation of information based on dates, events or themes, as well as the higher frequency of annotated photographs.

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