y the 1880s, signs of Canada's
advancing industrial revolution were unmistakably clear. Factory
production increased rapidly and the mining, forestry, and other
resource industries expanded quickly across much of Canada. Some
of these businesses were already large and complex, employing hundreds
of workers.
These new times were not necessarily happy for many of Canada's
first generation of industrial workers. Conditions in many of our
factories and mines were harsh. Workers complained of long hours,
poor wages, and irregular employment. Often their lives away from the
factory were equally difficult. Many workers returned home each
evening to crowded neighbourhoods with few services, such as running
water and sewage disposal. Reports of widespread disease in working
neighbourhoods in Montreal, Toronto, and numerous other towns ignited
calls for urban reform.
Workers fed up with intolerable conditions sometimes organized shop
committees to put their demands before employers. Occasionally, they
carried this action as far as a strike. Women who had little previous
union experience proved surprisingly militant in these situations. For
example, textile, boot and shoe, and tobacco workers struck in several
Canadian and Maritime centres in the 1880s. However, such tactics
rarely proved successful in the long term against the growing power
and organization of the manufacturers.
In these circumstances, workers experimented with different types
of organizations. Some tried craft unions with little success. Others
searched for totally new alternatives. In Nova Scotia, coal miners
organized the Provincial Workmen's Association (PWA). It gradually
expanded to include several lodges of glass, foundry, and boot and
shoe workers. The PWA managed to win some important concessions on
safety concerns from mine operators. The union also nominated
candidates for local and provincial elections, a practice rare in
Canada before this time. The PWA's workplace organizing and prominence
in provincial politics did secure important adjustments to mine
regulations from the government.
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