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Farmerettes

Remembrance Day

Stamp Info

Name Value
Date of Issue October 28, 2024
Year 2024
Quantity 795,000
Denomination
PERMANENTâ„¢ (P).
Current monetary value: $0.92.
Series Remembrance Day
Series Time Span 2024
Postal Administration Canada

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Layouts

Booklet of 10 Stamps

Quantity Produced - 150,000
Original Purchase Price: $9.90
Perforation: Simulated perforation
Gum Type: Pressure sensitive
Tagging: General tagging, four sides
Paper: Tullis Russell
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Pane of 6 Stamps

Quantity Produced - 15,000
Original Purchase Price: $5.94
Perforation: Simulated perforation
Gum Type: Pressure sensitive
Tagging: General tagging, four sides
Paper: Tullis Russell
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Official First Day Cover

Quantity Produced - 5,000
Original Purchase Price: $1.99
Cancellation Location: St. Catharines ON
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About Stamp

During the First World War, the Ontario provincial government created the Farm Service Corps, made up of girls 16 years of age and older, to provide farm labour. The Corps ran from 1917 to 1918, and the workers were known as farmerettes.

During the Second World War, a similar initiative, called the Ontario Farm Service Force (OFSF), was put in place from 1941 to 1952. More than 20,000 girls signed up to join the OFSF’s Farmerette Brigade. (The OFSF motto was “We Lend a Hand.”)

Living in camps and working up to 10 hours a day, the girls planted, tended and harvested fruit and vegetables in farms and orchards, and also worked in canneries.

High-school students in good standing who worked a minimum number of weeks could be exempted from year-end exams.

About Stamp Series

Just in time for Remembrance Day, honour Canadian home front heroes with this stamp issue commemorating the Soldiers of the Soil and farmerettes, who provided much needed farm labour in Canada during times of war.

Farm labour shortages due in part to men leaving for military service in the First and Second World Wars led to national and provincial initiatives to maintain both the domestic food supply and Canada’s commitment and ability to produce food for Britain and the Allied troops overseas.

Teenage boys and young women recruited to work on farms through national and provincial initiatives is an example of how civilian members of society stepped in to help with the war effort at home.

This stamp issue salutes the young women and men whose labour through two world wars helped keep plates – and stomachs – full, both on the front and at home.

About the design

The two stamps feature archival photos of participants in the national Soldiers of the Soil initiative and the Farmerette Brigade of the Ontario Farm Service Force, respectively, at work in the fields.

The farmerettes photo, entitled “Taking a break from hoeing celery,” features four Farmerette Brigade participants in Thedford, Ontario, in 1945.

The Soldiers of the Soil photo features program participants harvesting flax in Willowdale, Ontario, circa 1917.

Creators

Stamp Designer: Ivan Novotny, Ivan Novotny Design Inc..

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