NONIA at 100: Legendary knitwear manufacturer has quite the history
Talk a great yarn! NONIA's history is deeply entwined into N.L.'s rural communities
Mention the name NONIA to a local and chances are you'll get a smile — and a yarn about a treasured hand-knitted item.
Formally known as the Newfoundland Outport Nursing and Industrial Association, NONIA is marking its 100th anniversary this week. It was on May 27, 1920, that Lady Constance Harris, wife of then governor Sir Alexander Harris, established the Outport Nursing Committee, which later went on to become the organization that thrives to this day, with a landmark store in downtown St. John's.
The NONIA brand is known internationally for the high quality of its sweaters, mittens and other knitwears, but its history in providing rural health care is no longer as well known.
One hundred years ago, there were more than 1,300 coastal communities without basic health care. NONIA was founded to assist those communities in accessing health services.
"There was a lot of poverty in the outports, and so there was very little medical care," general manager Keelin O'Leary told Weekend AM host Heather Barrett about the organization's early years.
"Lady Harris led a movement of interested people to figure out a method by which they could raise money to pay for the nursing care in the outports," said O'Leary. "And so they formed the Outport Nursing Committee with the idea of organizing women's labour to create knitting goods which they would sell, and the money could be used to pay for the nurses."
Knit a sweater, help pay for a nursing station
The model proved important. Six nursing stations were established, "but they were expensive to run," says a Facebook post on NONIA history by The Rooms. In 1924, Lady Elsie Elizabeth Allardyce, the wife of governor William Allardyce, made an appeal to the women of Newfoundland, and helped changed the lot of many rural women.
"A cottage industry developed to support the salary of the nurses and pay the crafts people for their work. For some women this was their first time earning money of their own," The Rooms' post notes.
According to Heritage Newfoundland & Labrador, there were a dozen nurses on NONIA's payroll in 1926, "and between 1921 and 1934 NONIA nurses worked in 29 communities and handled 83,000 cases."
In 1934, the government took over the cost of all health care. By that time NONIA was well established and was creating income for women in outports, and so the knitting effort continued as an industrial endeavour. The money the women earned through their knitting was used to help support their households to buy food, clothing and medicine.
Fast-forward to this month: On its actual 100th anniversary day, NONIA had planned to hold its annual general meeting at Government House, to be followed by a sod-turning ceremony of a bronze sculpture, commemorating the milestone.
It was not to be. The COVID-19 pandemic changed that plan, at least for now.
Knitting for NONIA for 50+ years
Some of today's NONIA's knitters have been a part of an industry to keep knitting skills alive for more than five decades.
Gloria Russell of Winterbrook has been knitting for NONIA for 53 years. She told Weekend AM her mother-in-law taught her how to knit in 1966, and she hasn't put down her needles since.
"I enjoy every minute of it," she said.
Russell, like so many other NONIA knitters, has created children's and adults sweaters, caps and mitts — and everything between.
"Right now I'm knitting cardigans, shawl-collared little sweaters. It's nice to have a challenge to do something different," she said. "And the 'Fortune Bay Sweater,' as it's called, is something to look forward to."
Special anniversary quilt
To recognize the 100th anniversary, a centenary knitters' blanket was assembled from 108 squares made by as many NONIA knitters across Newfoundland and Labrador.
It was a project that took two years to complete, and includes 12 squares from women who have been knitting for NONIA for more than 50 years.
NONIA's flagship retail store has been located on Water Street in St. John's since 1958. Before that, it was headquartered in the Newfoundland Hotel from 1933 to 1957.
About 150 knitters and weavers from across Newfoundland and Labrador are employed, producing NONIA's iconic hand-knit sweaters, socks, hats and mitts. The store also carries woven placemats, runners, napkins and scarves.
We thought to commemorate the occasion we'd featured a selection of photos, archival and recent, to highlight a century of NONIA.
Listen to the May 23 segment of Weekend AM with host Heather Barrett, as she interviews NONIA manager Keelin O'Leary and longtime NONIA knitter Gloria Russell:
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
Our sincere thanks to archivist Linda White with Archives and Special Collections, Queen Elizabeth II Library, and NONIA manager Keelin O'Leary for their assistance with this feature.