Queens Line WI Tweedsmuir Community History, Volume 1: 1907-79, [1947] - [1979], p. 7

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ADELAIDE HUNTER HOODLESS | (taken from an old newspaper clipping) \ "In 1858 there was born in Brant County a girl child, Adelaide {\ P Hunter, who was destined to leave a deep impress on her day and â€" generation, and to start a movement that would circle the globe. We know her as Mrs. Hoodless, and her portrait hangs in Macdonald Hall, Guelph, to commerate her work as a leader in establishing domestic science in the educational policy of the country. But time is proving that her greatest inspiration was the starting of a little club, a Women‘s Institute, at Stoney Creek where she lived as a young married woman. Adelaide Hunter Hoodless died in 1910, a comparatively young woman, but what tremendous things she wrought in her too brief life span". es ’.€5Ag,u7" $ F Ey 9 .. "Ane 1 > E _ | 6 h F > * s y & U k _ P » h / ‘sk e . . c a e TR o | 54. & i/ e 0 â€" &. & £+.5% | ' es , 8 E" e ;‘_ v,:‘ g:g | _ e ce tss ie 23 5 a o V d lssn hkz 4 F fil n O 0 & ... : d i;‘ 9 > e â€" _ . ‘a CA 22. . l â€" y i waie s . i + _ 9 > w } \ .. e i es i( o l "lg" ~ 5.. & , hm <_ . * &/ , Mrs. Adelaide Hoodless The Founder of Women‘s Institute

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