Home | Multimedia Resources | Video Vignettes | Oral Histories | Marjorie Jamerson | Cooking in Camps
- Babysitting and Whooping Cough
- Black Culture Shock
- Brothers
- Church Community
- Cooking in Camps
- Country School
- Dealing with Prejudice in Edmonton
- Family Success
- Father
- From Provost to Edmonton
- Grandma, Diabetes, and Fire
- High School in Provost
- Learning to Cook — Oil Rigs
- Learning Tolerance
- Mother
- Prejudice in Edmonton
- Racism at School
- Selling the Family Farm
- Siblings and Farming
- Slave Mentality
- Soul Food
Cooking in Camps
Marjorie was on Social Assistance for a while, raised her daughter, and eventually worked for the government, cooking in camps and moving from place to place throughout northern Alberta. She and her bull cook used to cook for 31 men. It was hard work, but Marjorie recalls those days as fun.