Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Helen Gregory MacGill (née, Gregory; after first marriage, Flesher; after second marriage, MacGill; January 7, 1864 – February 27, 1947) was one of Canada's first woman judges - and for many years the country's only woman judge - journalist, and a noted women's rights advocate in Canada, where she fought for female suffrage.

  2. Apr 1, 2008 · Helen Gregory MacGill, judge, journalist, musician (born 7 January 1864 in Hamilton, Canada West; died 27 February 1947 in Chicago, Illinois).

  3. The daughter of an early suffragist, Helen MacGill was born in the industrial town of Hamilton in Ontario, Canada, in 1871. An outstanding student, she attended Trinity College in Toronto and was the only woman to graduate in the school's class of 1888.

  4. Apr 26, 2022 · My mother the judge : a biography of Helen Gregory MacGill. by. MacGill, Elsie Gregory, 1905-1980. Publication date. 1981. Topics. MacGill, Helen Gregory, 1864-1947, Judges -- British Columbia -- Biography, Social reformers -- British Columbia -- Biography. Publisher.

  5. Helen Emma Gregory MacGill became Canadas first female judge and, for many years, the country’s only female judge. While recovering from breaking her leg in 1953, MacGill picked up a pen to write her mother’s biography.

    • helen gregory macgill1
    • helen gregory macgill2
    • helen gregory macgill3
    • helen gregory macgill4
    • helen gregory macgill5
  6. Helen Gregory MacGill (1864-1947) helped spread feminism throughout North America. In Ontario in the 1880s, California and Minnesota in the 1890s, and British Columbia in the twentieth century, she strove to improve the lives of women and children. In Helen Gregory, Ontario’s elite produced a New Woman.

  7. People also ask

  8. Helen Gregory MacGill. (1864—1947) Quick Reference. (1864–1947), feminist reformer and judge, first woman graduate of Trinity College, University of Toronto (ba and ma). As a young reporter MacGill travelled alone across the Canadian West to Japan ... From: MacGill, Helen Gregory in The Oxford Companion to Canadian History »

  1. People also search for