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Industrial unions were created by American and Canadian craft
workers whose goals were to share revenues, create a more united
front, increase information networks and secure standard work
conditions across North America. Employers in Canada used the
American connection to denounce Canada's affiliates. However,
even the federal government was forced to acknowledge in a 1903
Royal Commission that these unions were making an important
contribution to the workers' lives.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, the Quebec labour
movement, particularly in Montreal, which was Canada's industrial
centre, was dominated by international unions. They recruited their
members from among the construction and transport workers, employees
in the metal, print and garment industries, and skilled labourers in
the manufacturing trades. Such unions were the instigators of most
of the major strikes.
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Stonecutters
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Major Robert Larmour speaks about American influence on Canadian unions.
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Craft workers
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The Royal Commission grudgingly acknowledges the importance of some unions.
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