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Titre: Clip: Alice Louie-Byne discusses boy-girl relationships from her youth
Date : September 30, 2009
Donateur : Louie-Byne, Alice
Sujet : Childhood, Church and Faith, Marriage and Dating
Province : Alberta
Langue : ENG

Louie-Byne, Alice

Alice Louie-Byne (née Quon) was born in 1916 to Quon Liang and Ng Shee. When Ng Shee first arrived in Victoria, British Columbia in 1914, women were minorities in the gender-imbalanced Chinese ‘bachelor’ community. Alice says that her mother found a friend in her sister-in-law. The two women attended meetings at the Oriental Home and School, established by the Methodist Church as a refuge for young Asian women, where they learned Canadian domestic skills like crocheting and knitting.

Alice and her family moved to Calgary, Alberta, where her parents opened a restaurant. At the age of 12, she left school to work in the family’s restaurant, an industry she would remain in for many years. As a young adult, she encountered barriers to job opportunities outside of family-run businesses. While raising her children, Alice worked alongside her husband at the White Star Café and later, the family’s convenience store. She became a secretary for the Calgary school board in 1964, and later worked for the provincial government in various roles. Outside of work and family life, Alice played an instrumental role in the organization of the annual ‘Chow Mein Tea,’ a Chinese United Church fundraising event. Alice continues to reside in Calgary.

‘There wasn't such a thing as a boy and girl relationship. If you were talking to a boy, well your name was mud.’
In this clip, Alice Louie-Byne explains the strict social code that governed interactions between boys and girls during the 1920s and 1930s. Alice recalls that church groups were the only occasion she had to mix with boys in a social setting.