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The Rural Voice, 1993-09, Page 17n one of Nellie Johnston's photo albums of the 1976 International Plowing Match held in Bruce County, there are a number of pictures of her husband Earl, now deceased, wearing the medal he was given as that year's Mayor of Tented City. In all the photos, his face is creased by a winning grin while the regal chain of office with its golden hued pins settled on an emerald band, rests comfortably on his shoulders. In many of the photos, Nellie is perched beside him, beaming for the camera. Turn a page and there's another picture, this time of Nellie alone. But the honest smile of the earlier photos has been replaced with an almost bashful grin as Nellie poses, prophetically, with the medal draped on her softer, rounded shoulders. Now, nearly 17 years later, Nellie still wears the same apologetic smile as she talks about being installed as the first Lady Mayor of the 1993 International Plowing Match and Farm Mach- inery Show and Country Living Exposition. "They asked me to be Mayor but I told them it was a man's job," says the 74 -year-old widow. "As you can see, she's not into women's libera- tion," jokes her son Campbell who's sitting with his mother at the kitchen table following lunch at the home farm where Nellie has lived alone since Earl died in 1989. Nellie contends that she never actually agreed to be the Lady Mayor and when it was announced, she refuted the title by telling plowing match organizers that she hadn't consented to the honour. They defended their decision by saying that neither had she declined the position. And so, this unlikely candidate is THE JOHNSTONS BREAK GROUND Nellie Johnston becomes the first woman Mayor of the Tented City, continuing a family tradition started by her husband as the Johnston family hosts its second IPM. By Lisa Boonstoppel-Port The reluctant Mayor, Nellie Johnston, shows her chain of office. breaking ground in plowing match tradition as the first woman mayor. But secretly, Nellie seems to be pleased with the honour. When pressed, she says "I guess it's exciting" with a heartfelt laugh. Banishing the male leadership role isn't the only "first" for the Johnston clan. Earl was in fact the first Mayor of Tented City, a position that has become a tradition over the years. The Johnstons are also the only family which has hosted the annual plowing match twice, first in 1976 and now in 1993 which marks the 80th anniversary of the international event. Nellie remembers Alf Brunton, the chairman of the 1976 match, telling Earl that he'd had his eye on their corner field as the perfect place to host a plowing match. "I was a director on the Formosa Mutual Insurance Company and I would drive by that site a couple of times a month, and I always said that if the plowing match ever came to Bruce, that's where it should be," recalls Brunton, who's now an advisor on this year's plowing match committee. "It's a good piece of land — well drained and situated in a good spot since it's just off a provincial highway without being too close to one that it will disrupt traffic." The field is ideal. It's a broad expanse of relatively flat land located two and a half miles west of Walkerton at the junction of the Elora Road and County Road Two. Take the first sideroad left off the county road and you'll see a cluster of farms, comprised mainly of the three Johnston farms which encompass over 500 acres. This year's chairman, Jack Cumming, had the same thoughts when the executive committee began looking for a site several years ago as part of the bidding process required by the Ontario Plowmen's Association to host a match. In fact, the committee never even looked at any other sites before approaching the Johnstons to see if they'd be willing to be the host farmers. "We knew we'd probably be able to find SEPTEMBER 1993 13