Aleta Dey
Francis Marion Beynon
Paperback
(CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Oct. 22, 2016)
Francis Marion Beynon (26 May 1884 - 5 October 1951) was a Canadian journalist, feminist and pacifist. She is known for her semi-autobiographical novel Aleta Day (1919). Francis Marion Beynon was born in Streetsville, Ontario on 26 May 1884. Her parents were James Barnes Benyon (1835–1907) and Rebecca (Manning) Beynon (1847–1898). They married in 1872. Both parents were convinced Methodists, a faith she would later reject, and teetallers. Her sister was Lillian Beynon Thomas (1874–1961). Her family moved to Manitoba in 1889 when she was a child and took up farming in the Hartney district. She earned a teaching certificate and taught near Carman for some time. Around 1909 Beynon and her sister moved to Winnipeg, where Francis found work in the advertising department of the T. Eaton Company, a department store. Both sisters were active in fighting for women's suffrage, changes to dower legislation and the right of women to homestead. From 1912 to 1917 Beynon edited the woman's pages ("The Country Homemaker's Page" and "The Sunshine Guild") of the Grain Growers' Guide. She also was responsible for the children's pages under the pseudonym "Dixie Patton" and wrote an anonymous column, "Country Girl's Ideas." She used the women's pages to discuss women's suffrage, women's work, marriage and the family. Beynon and her sister helped found the Quill Club and the Winnipeg branch of the Canadian Women's Press Club. She was one of the organizers of the Manitoba Political Equality League, which led the struggle in Manitoba for women's suffrage. Beynon was a social feminist. She accepted that women should be responsible for care of the home and of children, but felt this should not preclude them from education, property rights and discussion of political issues. She felt that women should stand on their own feet, and that husband and wife should share responsibility and success. During World War I (1914–18) Beynon supported giving all immigrants the right to vote, opposed conscription without a plebiscite, and believed these issues should be freely discussed in public. She, her sister Lillian, Nellie McClung and Ella Cora Hind helped bring about the defeat of Rodmond Roblin's Manitoba government in 1915, and helped ensure that his successor T.C. Norris gave full suffrage to women in provincial elections from 1916.