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Book details
  • Genre:SOCIAL SCIENCE
  • SubGenre:Sociology / Rural
  • Language:English
  • Pages:115
  • eBook ISBN:9781927570203

Cream Money

Stories of Prairie People

by Deana J. Driver

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Overview
Selling milk and cream to neighbours and townspeople was an integral way of life on the Canadian Prairies in the early to mid-1900s. On many farms, women were in charge of milking cows, separating the cream from the milk, and selling that cream. Cream Money honours this era of Prairie farming, celebrating the work of farm families through true stories of how cream money was earned and spent.
Description
Selling milk and cream was an integral way of life on the Canadian Prairies in the early to mid-1900s. On many farms, the women were in charge of milking the cows, separating the cream from the milk, and selling that cream to neighbours and townspeople. The extra money earned was used to subsidize the family's income, especially in years of poor crops. Cream money helped purchase groceries, fabric, farm supplies, and other items that could not be produced on the farm. While children cherished the occasional candy treat purchased with cream cheque money, everyone in the family enjoyed the everyday bounty of delicious foods cooked with homemade butter or slathered with rich, whipped cream. Cream Money honours this bygone era of Prairie farming, celebrating the work of farm families through true stories and poems of how cream money was earned and spent.
About the author
Deana Driver (dee-na) is an author, editor and book publisher in Regina, Saskatchewan who compiled and edited Cream Money: Stories of Prairie People. She was a freelance journalist for more than 30 years before founding DriverWorks Ink publishing in 2008. She has since worked on more than 30 books as an author, editor or publisher.