b. 1809
d. 1896-01-30
Josette Work, née Legacé, was born in
1809 near Kettle Falls,
Washington Territory. She was the daughter of French-Canadian fur trader Pierre Legacé and a Spokane (Nez
Perce) woman known as “Emma.”
Josette Legacé was only fifteen years old when she married Chief Factor
John Work, a man of thirty, in
1826. Their marriage in
1826 was done according to the
customs of the country,
but
formally
recognized in the church on
6 November 1849. The Works lived at Fort Simpson for twelve years before settling at
Fort Victoria in
1850. While at Fort Simpson, Legacé-Work created good relationships with the surrounding
Indigenous groups, such as the Tsimshian Peoples, while raising her children.
Like many Indigenous wives, Legacé-Work was an indispensable partner to her husband.
For example, she often accompanied her husband on his trading expeditions, such as
his journey into
Snake River country in the
1830s. In
1850, the Works retired to
Victoria with their family of eleven (eight girls and three boys). It was here that they lived
on a property of over 1,000 acres, which Legacé-Work lived on for 35 years after the
death of her husband, who died in
1861.
In her later life, Josette Legacé-Work was described as the
epitome of the Victorian matron
and that at a glance,
she could be taken for the Queen Victoria herself.
Further, her home was always noted for its hospitality and warmth, as one guest described
her kindness towards them. With
Victoria's growth, Legacé-Work became known for her influence and assistance to the incoming
pioneer women. She died on
30 January 1896 at the age of 87 as the
oldest known resident of the province.
Her eulogy stated her
usefulness in pioneer work and many good deeds.
Legacé-Work faced acculturation, assimilation, and racism in her role as one of the
wives of the “five founding families.” She, like other Indigenous women, had to endure
racial asides that would, according to historians Jean Barman and Bruce Watson, never have been made about a white woman.
However, she showed great strength, kindness, and resilience in her assistance of
the “pioneer movement” and further hospitalities to incoming settlers and was recognized
by her contemporaries as a woman of outstanding character.
- 1. Sylvia Van Kirk, Legacé, Josette (Work), Dictionary of Canadian Biography; Person Record: Josette Legace-Work, Fort Nisqually: Living History Museum.
- 2. Sylvia Van Kirk, Tracing the Fortunes of Five Founding Families of Victoria, BC Studies, no.115/116, (Winter 1997/98), p.154; Jean Barman and Bruce M. Watson, Fort Colville's Fur Trade Families and the Dynamic of Race in the Pacific Northwest, The Pacific Northwest Quarterly, vol.90, no.3, (Summer 1999), p.141.
- 3. Person Record, Fort Nisqually.
- 4. Van Kirk, Legacé, Josette (Work); Van Kirk, Tracing the Fortunes, p.154.
- 5. Van Kirk, Tracing the Fortunes, p.165.
- 6. Ibid. 166; Van Kirk, Legacé, Josette (Work).
- 7. Barman and Watson, Fort Colville's Fur Trade Families, p.149.
- 8. Alice Bay Maloney, John Work of the Hudson's Bay Company: Leader of the California Brigade of 1832-33, California Historical Society Quarterly, vol.22, no.2, (June 1943), p.100.