Alma Faulds
Alma Amelia Schmidt (1915-1999) was born in Zorra, Saskatchewan, an Austrian settlement. Her parents were both immigrants to Canada and worked a farm. At 14, the family moved to Manitoba. She didn’t start school until 8 1/2 and had no English. She worked hard to get an education, hoping to go to nursing school, but despite her efforts poverty, illness, and a lack of openings, derailed her into housemaid work. During these years, and as a waitress at the posh Manitoba Club, she joined the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation and honed her understanding of class, politics, and human rights. She married in 1940 to Scottish-born construction worker, Alexander Faulds (1908-1994). Three months later her husband was sent overseas. On his return. they moved to Oliver, British Columbia, where the climate could offer him some relief from chronic arthritis. She worked for a time in the fruit canneries and was instrumental in unionizing the packing houses. She spent the next 20 years as part of the union executive and, from 1959 to 1973 business agent of the Fruit and Vegetable Workers Union, Local 1572, CLC. After a lifetime of activism and committment to social justice, Alma passed away in 1999.