Soon, Peggy
Peggy Soon (née Yuen) was born in 1936 on a farm near Vancouver, British Columbia. Her mother Sam Chun Moy (née Leung Sui Gee) was born in China around 1900, the third girl in her family. Because daughters were often less valued than sons in China, an aunt brought her to Canada in 1905 and left her to be raised by a family in Powell River, British Columbia. The ninth of Sam Chun Moy and Jung Chong Yuen’s ten children, Peggy’s job at home was to look after her younger brother. Growing up, Peggy attended English school during the day and Chinese school in the evening. Both of her parents worked long hours and the siblings were often left to care for one another. At various points during high school, most of Peggy’s siblings left school to take care of the other children or help on the farm. Only her youngest brother, Keith, completed high school. In 1955, Peggy married her husband, Ping Sha Soon (Ping Yee). For the first nine years of her marriage, Peggy lived with her mother on the family’s farm and raised her son while her husband worked. Later, she went to work at her sister’s wholesale grocery business before leaving to work for National Spice. Peggy continued to reside in Vancouver at the time of the interview.
‘She hardly slept, I think.’
In this audio clip, Peggy Soon describes the work her mother did for the family while Peggy was growing up. The family lived on a farm just outside Vancouver in Richmond, British Columbia. Peggy’s mother, Sam Chun Moy, tended various animals, loaded the truck her husband used to transport goods downtown, sewed clothes, and cooked. Peggy notes her mother was fond of finding deals at Woodward’s monthly ‘$1.49 Day’ sales, walking several kilometers to catch the streetcar downtown.