Hobnobbing with a Countess and Other Okanagan Adventures
The Diaries of Alice Barrett Parke, 1891-1900
Distributed for University of British Columbia Press
Hobnobbing with a Countess and Other Okanagan Adventures
The Diaries of Alice Barrett Parke, 1891-1900

Table of Contents
Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
“Quite away from all my people”: Arriving in the Spallumcheen Valley
“The real, the useful, the necessary – these occupy one here”: Life in the Spallumcheen Valley
“A very cosy, happy home”: At Home in Vernon
“How many people I have got to know!”: Vernon Friends and Acquaintances
“Oh! I do hope I’ll be able to do something useful and good”: A One-Woman Social Welfare Service
“A great many people have ailments here”: Health and Social Issues in the 1890s
“How I love them all”: Some Members of the Barrett Family
“Oh! I wish I could hear someone who would stir me up”: Religion in the West
“A man of Mr. Parke’s ability”: A Husband of Unusual Accomplishment
“I have been as busy as I could be”: Life at the BX Ranch and Encounters with the Chinese
“There is much of the untamed animal nature in me”: Confessions to the Diaries
“The women work much harder than the men”: Attitudes towards Other Races
“Hob-nobbing with a Countess”: Early Feminism in Western Canada
“I think if I were a man I’d want to go in for [politics]”: Political Life at the End of the 1800s
“People really seem to be getting sanguine over the mining prospects around here”: Exploration and Prospecting in the Okanagan
“It really is shameful the way I neglect my poor old diary lately”: The End of the Journals
“I wonder when I’m a grey haired old woman if I will enjoy reading these papers!”: The Final Years
Notes
Appendix: Chronology of the diaries
Bibliography
Index
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