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Margaret Crang

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Margaret Crang
Edmonton City Councilor
In office
1933–1937
Alderman on Edmonton City Council
In office
1933–1935
In office
1935–1937
Personal details
Born1910
Strathcona, Alberta
DiedJanuary 5, 1992(1992-01-05) (aged 81–82)
Vancouver, British Columbia
Political partyLabour
Alma materUniversity of Alberta
ProfessionPolitician, Lawyer, Journalist, and Political Activist

Margaret Tryphena Frances Crang (1910 – January 5 or 6, 1992)[1] was a lawyer, teacher, journalist, and political activist.[2] She served as Edmonton city councillor, 1933-1937 and twice ran for provincial office as a leftist candidate.

Crang's election at the age of 23 in late 1933 makes her the youngest ever to be elected to Edmonton city council.[1] In 1935, she became the first woman to be re-elected onto council and was also appointed deputy mayor under Mayor Joe Clarke.[2][3] She served two terms on council from 1933 to 1937 under the banner of the Labour Party.[4] During her time in office, Crang advocated for women's rights, labour rights, and against fascism.[2]

Controversy arose in 1936, after Crang attended the World Peace Conference in Brussels as a representative of Alberta's League Against War and Fascism. Crang among others secretly traveled to Spain, which was undergoing the Spanish Civil War.[5] At the front lines near Madrid, Crang "went up to the sandbag barricade and, borrowing a rifle, fired two shots for the government side".[6]

As well, her candidacy in a 1936 Edmonton by-election in opposition to an official CCF candidate caused her to be banned from the CCF party and damaged her political fortunes. She was nor elected after that.

Personal life

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Early life

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Crang was born in 1910 in Strathcona, Alberta, at the time a separate city from Edmonton.[1] (Her family at the time were living in a house her father had built on the northwest corner of 83 Avenue and 104 Street.) Her parents were Tryphena Crang and Francis Crang.[1] Frank Crang served as Labour Party school board trustee in Edmonton for 25 years.[5] It was her father who inspired Crang's socialist ideologies and her passion for politics.[1]

In her adolescence, Crang was heavily involved in sports and also achieved high academic scores.[1] She was tutored by Harry Ainlay, with whom she later served on council.[1]

Crang obtained three degrees from the University of Alberta: a Bachelors in Arts, Bachelor in Law, and a Diploma in Education.[1] While in university, she took on leadership positions such as secretary for women's athletics.[7]

Political career

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1933 municipal campaign

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Crang said she believed that having a woman on city council would greatly benefit Edmonton.[3] In her campaign, Crang argued that Edmonton women needed representation on council and women had a valuable perspective on food and housing due a their experience in domestic labour.

Other campaign promises including pro-labour actions such as increased wages for civic employees, instituting cash relief payments (instead of food packages) and medical attention for unemployed workers, and providing more services for former soldiers.[3] She also promised to push for appointment of women onto the relief commission, socialized medicine, public ownership of utilities, and to oppose a rise in the five-cent streetcar fare.[1]

City Councilor: 1933–1937

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In 1933, Margaret Crang was elected to Edmonton's city council at the age of 23, as a Labour Party candidate.[1] Crang received over 10,000 votes, the second largest vote tally out of 17 council candidates, just behind 62-year old Rice Sheppard.[3] Labour did well in this election, electing four of the five open aldermanic seats. Due to Labour politicians already on the council (staggered terms), Labour held a majority of seats on the 11-seat council after the 1933 election.

Margaret Crang is the youngest person ever to be elected to Edmonton's city council. She was the second woman to be elected to Edmonton's city council and was the first person born in Edmonton to be elected to that body. She was also the only woman to serve on a city council anywhere in Canada at the time, being identified simply as "Woman Alderman" as far away as Winnipeg.[1][8]

Crang's re-election to council in 1935 made her the first woman to be re-elected to the Edmonton City Council.[4] In this election, she was the most popular candidate, taking over 11,000 votes, coming in first place out of all the candidates.[3] During this term, she was appointed as the youngest deputy mayor in Canadian history under Mayor Joseph Clarke.[3]

In 1937, Crang failed to get re-elected for a third term on city council.[1] That year all Labour Party candidates failed to be elected, including her father, Francis Crang running for the school board. By the time of the 1937 election Margaret was the sole Labour member on council so her lack of success helped cause the pro-business Citizens Committee to hold unopposed power there.[2][9] (Reasons for Edmonton voters turning away from Crang and other Labour candidates at that time include the world was emerging from the Depression and also the Social Credit government was meeting editorial criticism from many of the province's major newspapers.)

Provincial by-elections

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Crang ran as candidate in two provincial by-elections. Each time she was not an official CCF candidate, which opened a split between her and that party.

She ran in a June 22, 1936 by-election to fill the seat left empty by the resignation of William R. Howson. But met with defeat.[2][5] Liberal candidate Walter Morrish took the seat with a majority of the votes. (Instant-runoff voting was used but as it happened, no votes were transferred as Morrish took a majority of votes on the first count.) No Conservative ran in this by-election so Morrish picked up most of the anti-SC votes, while Crang ran on a united front-style platform of both labour and SC, finding common ground in their respective reforms meant to address the Depression. She ran as a candidate for an Alberta Social Credit group and several unemployed organizations. Her former teacher, Harry Ainlay, later mayor of Edmonton, ran under the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation label.[2] Due to her running against him, Margaret and her father were kicked out of the CCF.[2][5]

Crang ran again in an Edmonton provincial by-election held October 7, 1937. But here too she was unsuccessful. She ran under the Progressive Labour label. Edward Leslie Gray, a Liberal running for the anti-SC "Unity League", took the seat. Like Morrish the previous year, he won with a majority of the votes on the first count.

Later that same year she failed in her re-election bid for her city council seat.

Spanish Civil War controversy

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In 1936, Margaret Crang attended the World Peace Conference in Brussels as a representative of Alberta's League Against War and Fascism. Over 5,000 representatives from 32 countries attended this conference.[5] Representatives came from a variety of groups such as women's clubs, trade unions, veteran and youth groups.[5] The goal of the conference was to discuss the recent Spanish Civil War conflict.[5]

After attending the conference, Crang secretly traveled to Spain, which was undergoing a civil war.[5] Crang wanted to see the effects of fascism in Spain and was inspired by the young armed women she saw at the frontlines called the Milicianas.[5] These women were as young as 17 fighting to preserve the elected republican government against General Francisco Franco's fascist rebels.[3][5] To show her support for the elected government and the Milicianas, Crang "went up to the sandbag barricade and, borrowing a rifle, fired two shots for the government side".[6][5]

Controversy back home in Canada erupted for Crang, with multiple newspapers such as The Toronto Star, The Edmonton Journal, and The Vancouver Sun shaming and criticizing Crang's involvement in the conflict.[5] The Edmonton Journal responded with a front-page article with the headline "Ald. Miss Crang Leaves Peace Parley To Fire Shots At Rebels Near Madrid".[6] The Toronto Star described Crang's actions as hypocritical because she originally went to Europe to attend a peace conference and left after firing a gun at the fascist rebels.[2][5] The Vancouver Sun's article summarized Crang's actions as "disloyal to Canada" and were "cruel and inhuman" which made her "unwomanly".[5] Church groups and conservative Canadians were also among the loudest upset groups.[5]

Crang admitted that the incident lead to her losing votes although she never apologized for actions.[3][5] Crang later changed her story saying that she "wasted two bullets" rather than "shot two bullets".[5]

Post-political career

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After her political defeats in 1937, Crang moved to Montreal to become a journalist for the Montreal Gazette, the same newspaper that called her a communist after her Spanish Civil War controversy.[1][5]

Crang continued her advocacy after her political career.[3] This including advocating for the civil rights of Chinese and Sikh immigrants. Crang led a motion to allow Rhumah Utendale, a Black nursing student, to study at the Royal Alexandra Hospital.[3][10][11] Crang asked that the 1938 hospital board to "approve of the principle of admission to the Nurses Training School of girls irrespective of race and color, providing they meet the cultural, educational, and physical requirements".[11] The hospital board rejected the motion, disallowing Utendale to study at the Royal Alexandra Hospital.[11]

Health issues

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Sometime in the 1930s, Crang was diagnosed with Cushing's disease.[1] Due to a medical error, both of Crang's adrenal glands were removed, causing her to undergo hormone treatment.[1] Crang was one of the first people to be cured of Cushing's disease through the use of cortisone.

Death

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The exact date of Crang's death is unknown.[1] She died alone in her Vancouver apartment at the age of 82 on January 5 or 6th in 1992.

Legacy

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There is no memorial dedicated to the legacy of Margaret Crang in Edmonton. In 2013, there was an approval to name a road and a proposal to name a park in the Edmonton neighborhood Cavanagh.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Monto, Tom (2012). Protest and progress: three labour radicals in early Edmonton. Edmonton: Crang Publishing / Tom Monto. ISBN 978-1-895097-12-2.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Simons, Paula (15 June 2013). "Finally getting her due". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Cinnamon, Bruce (2 March 2021). "Margaret Crang: the AOC of #yegcc circa 1933". Edmonton City as a Museum. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  4. ^ a b Evans, David (1978). The city of Edmonton: History of city council 1892-1977. Edmonton: Office of the City Clerk. p. 41.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Hannant, Larry (2004). ""My God, are they sending women?": Three Canadian Women in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939". Journal of the Canadian Historical Association. 15 (1): 153–176. doi:10.7202/012072ar. ISSN 0847-4478.
  6. ^ a b c "Ald. Miss Crang Leaves Peace Parley To Fire Shots At Rebels Near Madrid". The Edmonton Journal. 13 October 1936.
  7. ^ "For Secretary for Women's Athletics". The Gateway. 15 March 1929. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  8. ^ Lévesque, Andrée (2006). Red Travellers: Jeanne Corbin & Her Comrades. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. ISBN 978-0-7735-6019-2.
  9. ^ Rek (1990). Municipal elections in Edmonton. Edmonton. p. 32.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ Mohamed, Bashir (25 April 2021). "Lulu Anderson: The history and present of Black civil rights in Alberta". CBC. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
  11. ^ a b c Mohamed, Bashir (9 September 2018). "History is not Dead". Bashir Mohamed. Retrieved 3 December 2021.