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Federated Women's Institutes of Ontario

Federated Women's Institutes of Ontario
Abbreviation FWIO
Motto For Home and Country
Formation February 6, 1919
Legal status active
Purpose education, advocacy, history preservation
Headquarters Stoney Creek, Ontario, Canada
Location
  • 290 branches
Region served
Ontario
Membership
3,500 members
President
Margaret Byl
Affiliations Federated Women's Institutes of Canada, Associated Country Women of the World
Website [1]

The Federated Women's Institutes of Ontario (FWIO) is a not-for-profit charitable organization with affiliations around the world, working with and for women in rural and small town Ontario.

The FWIO was organized on February 6, 1919, when it became apparent there was a need for the coordination of the work of the Branch Institutes. The FWIO was incorporated under The Agricultural Associations Act by an order-in-Council of the Government of Ontario, dated May 11, 1921. Through the provincial organization, the Women's Institutes of Ontario are able to speak with authority as one voice.

In 1897, Adelaide Hoodless was invited by Erland Lee to speak at a Farmers' Institute Ladies Night in Stoney Creek, Ontario where she suggested the formation of an organization for rural women. The next week, on February 19, 1897, the first formal organization of a Women's Institute took place in Saltfleet Township. The original Branch is now known as the Stoney Creek Charter Women's Institute, by Ontario Regulation 352/78.

The Branch is the basic building block from which the Women's Institute has grown since its inception in 1897. In Ontario, Members belong to a network that connects Branches to Districts and Areas, as well as to the provincial (FWIO), national (Federated Women’s Institutes of Canada) and international (Associated Country Women of the World) levels of the organization.


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