Fonds
Murielle Mailloux was born August 10, 1942, in the parish of Immaculée-Conception and grew up in Ville Saint Pierre (now part of the Montreal borough of Lachine). The oldest of five girls, she also had two brothers.
In the early 1960s, she got involved with the Association des guides catholiques du Canada. In 1961, this organization had replaced the Fédération des guides catholiques de la Province de Québec (founded in 1938 and affiliated with the Canadian Girl Guides Association). She began as a senior guide, the usual title for girls over the age of 17. She went on to become an assistant leader and a commissioner. She participated in several camps with the 47th Company Lachine in the parish of Très-Saint-Sacrement. She was also a commissioner in the neighbouring parish of Coeur-Immaculé-de-Marie (Côte-Saint-Paul).
Murielle Mailloux began work as a secretary to pay for her studies, from 1963 to 1966, at the nursing school run by Notre-Dame de l'Espérance hospital (Ville St. Laurent). Founded in 1922 by the Soeurs de l'Espérance to train nursing nuns, the school began admitting laypeople in 1943.
After obtaining her diploma, she worked as a nurse in several Quebec healthcare institutions, including Montreal's Saint-Luc Hospital and the Saint-Jean-de-Dieu mental hospital (now known as the Montreal Mental Health University Institute) in the east end of Montreal.
Murielle Mailloux continued her education, earning a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from Université de Montréal in the late 1960s. She later went on to receive a Master of Public Administration from the École nationale d'administration publique (1980). Highlights of her long, wide-ranging career include her efforts to restore the normal operations of an Outaouais hospital that had been placed under trusteeship. She was active in the Quebec Order of Nurses from 1977 to 1985, notably as a professional development advisor and Chair of the Educational Assessment Committee. She also helped reorganize the professional examination procedure and worked on updating the profession. In the mid-1980s, she worked on the implementation of the 911 system and the Info-Santé health information line in Montreal. Her work has been recognized with several professional awards, including the Abbott Clinical Innovation Grand Prize in 1996.
In the 1990s, she was in charge of nursing care at the Montreal North CLSC. In 1997, at the age of 55, she took early retirement. However, she returned to nursing several years later, working at the long-term care centre Vigi Santé (CHSLD) in Pierrefonds and then as a staff nurse and assistant head nurse at the infirmary of the Congregation of the Sisters of Saint Anne in Lachine. Murielle Mailloux finally retired in 2014, at the age of 71.
Scope and Content
By tracing the personal, educational and professional experiences of a young woman in the 1960s, the Murielle Mailloux fonds makes a valuable addition to the history of women in Quebec. It also offers a fresh perspective on the history of leisure and Catholic youth movements.
This fonds focusses on Murielle Mailloux's activities in the Catholic Guiding Movement, providing information about the camps she attended, the various activities organized at these camps and the jobs she held there. It also chronicles the organization, mission and values of the Guiding Movement.
The fonds contains membership materials (personal notebook, application form for permission to become a leader or assistant and invitation to a Promise ceremony), manuals for guides and senior guides, collections of songs, camp newspapers, instructions for group games, copies of the magazine Vivre, published by the Guides catholiques du Canada (French section), and several objects associated with guide and scout activities like a star finder, badges and a Scout's rosary.
The fonds also documents the nursing program Murielle Mailloux took at the Notre-Dame de l'Espérance hospital nursing school, in the form of school papers, administrative materials and historic documents.
The fonds is completed by photographs, most of which depict scenes of Guide nature camps that feature images of campfires, picnics and sports and religious activities. There are also several photographs of Murielle Mailloux and her sister Angèle.
Classification Scheme
P687
Murielle Mailloux Fonds
P687/A Activities with the Association des guides
catholiques du Canada
P687/A1 Membership
P687/A1,1 Personal documents
P687/A1,2 Guiding manuals
P687/A2 Leadership
P687/A2,1 Camp notebooks
P687/A2,2 Song collections
P687/A2,3 Collections of games and jokes
P687/A2,4 Other documents
P687/A3
Magazine Vivre
P687/B Nursing school
P687/C Photographs
Source of title proper: Title based on the creator of the fonds.
Immediate source of acquisition: The fonds was donated to the McCord Museum by Murielle Mailloux in 2006.
Arrangement: The fonds underwent an initial treatment shortly after it was acquired, and then a more detailed classification plan was adopted in 2017.
Language: The documents are in French.
Associated material:
BAnQ (Old Montreal) : Fonds de la Fédération des guides catholiques de la Province de Québec (P197) and Fonds Fédération québécoise du guidisme et du scoutisme. Section de Québec (P480)
LAC: Fonds des Guides francophones du Canada (R9961-0-9-F)
Historical archives of Girl Guides of Canada, preserved at the Girl Guides of Canada headquarters
Historical archives of the Quebec Order of Nurses
Archives of the Sœurs de l'Espérance
General note: Murielle Mailloux has donated numerous articles of clothing and objects associated with her guiding activities, which are preserved in the McCord Museum's Dress, Fashion and Textiles and Decorative Arts collections.
Last update: February 25, 2019
Information about the objects in our collection is updated to reflect new research findings. If you have any information to share regarding this object, please email reference.mccord@mccord-stewart.ca.Information about rights and reproductions is available here.
This project is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Azrieli Foundation and Canadian Heritage.