Adelaide Hunter Hoodless
1857 or 1858 – 1910
Inducted 2003
Adelaide Hunter Hoodless was born, in Brant County on February 27, 1857 or 1858. She was moved by the tragic death of her fourth child to help women improve their domestic science and child care skills. In 1897, Hoodless co-founded the Women's Institute, with Erland Lee from Stoney Creek, for which Hoodless coined the motto "For Home and Country". The organization expanded to become the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada and Associated Country Women of the World. Hoodless was involved with the YWCA, the Victorian Order of Nurses, the National Council of Women, the University of Guelph's MacDonald Institute and McGill University's School of Household Science, and also introduced domestic science courses in schools at the secondary and post secondary level. She died on the eve of her birthday in 1910.