An
article from 1954....

"GRANDMA ROSS" - 88
Still Active Clicker
It is quite probable that the Department of Transport has the oldest employee
in Canada's Civil Service and one who is "still alive and clicking". Mrs.
Margaret Ross, 88, has served over 57 years as a government telegraph operator
at North East Margaree, N.S. She says she has no intention of retiring as long
as they leave the key with her.
Still spry, sharp as a Morse signal, and with a twinkle in her eye that time
has not dimmed, Mrs. Ross hopes to continue as telegraph operator "until I get
too old to handle it". " That", she said, " will not be for some time".
Her home is a landmark in the beautiful country of Inverness county, a
fisherman's paradise. Watching for the click of the key and the ring of the six
Mutual company and government telephone lines which are connected with the
Government's telegraph service at the Ross house, she does her own cooking and
housekeeping as well as keeping an eye on two of her 36 grandchildren who sleep
in the family homestead with " gammie" for company and also keep a watchful eye
for visitors.
"Grandma Ross" is a veteran of a "telegraph" family. A son, Charlie, lives
next to her and is the Margaree lineman. A daughter, Edna, Mrs. Stanley C.
Haley, Hartford, Conn., once was an operator with Western Union at North Sydney
and during World War II was back to the Morse key for emergency duty.
Mrs. Ross's biggest thrill in telegraphy was receiving word of the World War
I armistice which had been relayed from Sydney to Baddeck and from Baddeck to
North East Margaree. Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Ross had five sons overseas in the war
- Ben, Frank, Losford Murray, Guy and Duncan H. They all came back although some
were wounded. Mr. Ross, who died some years ago, was also in uniform in World
War l. but was turned down for overseas service because of his age. Six of her
eight sons and two daughters are living.
A pleasant holiday Grandma likes to recall was a "fling" in New York to visit
two of her daughters and "do the town". It was her first visit to the big city
and she did it up right by making the round trip by plane.
In the days before radio and when newspaper deliveries were hit-and-miss, the
telegraph station was the centre of information for the district. There is not
much telegraph business at North East Margaree during most of the year, but
during the salmon season there is a pick-up as fishermen wire home to tell the
folks about the big one they caught or the bigger one that got away. Mrs. Ross
has never caught a salmon but she knows plenty about them and the men who whip
the streams for the famous game fish.
In her spare time, Grandma Ross makes patchwork quilts and hooked rugs, and
in her lifetime has completed more than 200. She delights in talking of her
children, grandchildren and great grandchildren - "And there's lots of them to
talk about." Her secret for a happy, vigorous life -- "hard work". She could
have added "and a sense of humour".