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Cows Don't Know It's Sunday: Farming in St. John's
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Murray, Hilda Chaulk (Author)
Title
Cows Don't Know It's Sunday: Farming in St. John's
Abstract
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. --Publisher's description
Series
Social and economic studies (St. John's, NL)
Volume
65
Place
St. John's, NL
Publisher
Memorial University Press, Institute of Social and Economic Research
Date
2002
# of Pages
343 pages: illustrations, map
Language
English
ISBN
978-0-919666-53-5
Short Title
Cows Don't Know It's Sunday
Extra
OCLC: 51295723
Citation
Murray, H. C. (2002). Cows Don’t Know It’s Sunday: Farming in St. John’s (Vol. 65). Memorial University Press, Institute of Social and Economic Research.
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