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Timeline of labour issues and events in Canada

Significant events in Canadian labour history From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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This is a timeline of labour issues and events in Canada.

1700s

  • 1799  After establishing fur trading post Greenwich House at Lac la Biche, workers refuse to proceed to Lesser Slave River because of lack of provisions. First known strike action in Alberta.[1][2]

Early-mid 1800s

  • 1803  Seven men working for Peter Fidler at Lake Athabasca refuse to stay on job unless wages increased.[3]
  • ca. 1812  Dock workers in St. John (NB) and Halifax organize a union.[4]
  • 1842  In Quebec, T.M. Moore begins to publish People's Magazine and Workingman's Guardian, the first labour-oriented reform newspaper.[5]

1870s

  • 1871  Toronto Trades Assembly is formed. First central union body in Canada.[6]
  • 1872  Nine Hour Movement - labour activists call for nine-hour day and 54-hour workweek.[7]
  • 1872  March 25, the Toronto Typographical Union goes on strike against their employer, the editor of The Globe. Liberal Party leader George Brown demands a nine-hour workday. Union activity then being a criminal offence, 24 members of strike committee jailed for conspiracy. John A. Macdonald's Conservative government passes Trade Unions Act on June 14, legalizing trade unions.[8]
  • 1872  April 15, the Toronto Trades Assembly organizes the country's first significant workers demonstration.
  • 1872  September 3, Ottawa unionists hold a 10,000-person-strong parade through the city. Prime Minister John A. Macdonald joins and gives a speech where he promises to abolish the sort of laws that had put the Toronto printers in jail. Canadian Parliament names Labour Day (first Monday in September) a holiday in 1894, and now it is a world-wide holiday.[9]
  • 1873  An initial attempt at establishing a national trade union centre is made by the founding of the Canadian Labour Union. It is dissolved in 1878.[10]

1880s

  • 1880-1900  Knights of Labor, formed in 1869 in Philadelphia, active in Ontario.[11]
  • 1883  The Trades and Labour Congress of Canada (TLC), a Canada-wide central federation of trade unions, is formed.
  • 1886  Mutiny among North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) constables at Edmonton over poor food and overcrowding. Mutineers arrested, taken to NWMP headquarters at Regina, are punished and/or driven from the force.[12]
  • 1889  Royal Commission on the Relations of Labour and Capital The commission, chaired at first by James Sherrard Armstrong, notes the many workplace injuries and deaths, and condemns working conditions in many workplaces. The commission recommends several changes to improve working conditions (the federal government does not act on them).[8] In a hearing before the commission, Olivier-David Benoît makes a strong case about the conditions faced by workers in the boot and shoe industry.[13]
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1890s

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1900s

  • 1900  Parliament passes the Conciliation Act and establishes the federal Department of Labour[8]
  • 1900  (by election) Arthur Puttee elected as the first Labour Member of Parliament (MP). Runs under the Winnipeg Labour Party label. Serves as MP 1900–1904.
  • 1903  Consolidated Lake Superior riot
  • 1903  Frank Rogers shot to death at picket line during strike at Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR), Vancouver.[17][18]
  • 1906  Thomas Belanger and Francois Theriault shot to death during strike at Maclaren Company pulp mill at Buckingham, QU.[19]
  • 1906  Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), formed in Chicago in 1905 and then came to BC. Founding convention of BC branch in 1906. Western Federation of Miners (WFM) instrumental in its early efforts.[20]
  • 1906  IWW Lumber Handlers Union No. 526, composed primarily of Tsleil-Watuth First Nations people of Burrard, strikes in opposition to demands of longer hours and lower pay. First IWW strike in western Canada. Strike largely unsuccessful; only victories are in getting jobs back and having scabs fired.[21]
  • 1906  Thunder Bay - the first strike at the Lakehead begins. Again and again, area workers band together to fight for wage increases, job security and non-discriminatory hiring practices.[22]
  • 1907  Quebec Bridge, still under construction, collapses, killing 75.[15]
  • 1907  IWW achieves majority control of the AFL-CIO unions in Nelson.[23] (Just a couple of years later, it becomes Nelson's largest union and leads a successful fight for the 8-hour day and higher wages for city workers.)[24]
  • 1907  August 28, at Cobalt (Ontario), an IWW member killed when scabs overload a charge at the mine.[25]
  • 1907  Rise of industrial unionism pre-World War I involves the IWW and other workers as well. In Quebec in 1907, workers in the textile sector, predominantly Francophone or Jews, organize industrial unions and conduct strikes.[26]
  • Some miners in Edmonton (Strathcona Mine) gain eight-hour day.[27] (United Mine Workers of America achieved eight-hour day in 1898.)
  • 1909  Alberta provincial election: Charles O'Brien, of the Socialist Party of Canada, elected by coal miners in the Rockies.[28]
  • 1909  Prince Rupert (BC) - 123 IWW men walk off sewer construction worksite.[29]
  • 1909  Victoria IWW branch signs up 300 men employed in street construction and leads them out on strike. That same year, Victoria IWW calls for a general strike to demand release of McNamara brothers, arrested for the bombing of the Los Angeles Times building.[29]
  • 1909  Vancouver Free Speech Fight, wherein the IWW, supported by the Socialist Party of Canada, refuses to give in to demands by mayor and police that labourites not hold open-air rallies and meetings. Prominent U.S. leftist speakers Lucy Parsons and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn also assist.[30] (Vancouver Free Speech Fight re-fought in 1911 and 1912.)
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1910s

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The Winnipeg general strike in 1919
  • 1911  Vancouver Free Speech Fight is re-fought in 1911 (and again in 1912). 1911 result: outdoor meetings allowed on certain streetcorners.[31]
  • 1911  December 23, at Nelson, BC, John LeTual and Caleb A. Barton murdered while organizing for Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).[25]
  • 1912  IWW, assisted by Socialist Party of Canada, conducts successful fight for free speech in Vancouver. R.P. Pettipiece, former Alberta/BC newspaperman and now prominent BC labour radical, arrested. IWW calls for a general strike and advocates "direct action up to and including sabotage".[31][32]
  • 1912  Edmonton sewer ditch diggers, organized by IWW, strike for fair wages.[33]
  • 1912–1914  Great Coal Strike on Vancouver Island, aka Vancouver Island War,[34] Miner Joseph Mairs sentenced to 18 months prison term, dies in jail of internal illness, having received no medical attention. He is 21 years of age. A memorial cairn stands in Ladysmith, British Columbia.[35]
  • 1913  Thunder Bay (Port Arthur and Fort William) - conductors and motormen of the civic railway (streetcar service) go on strike. Violence on both sides. The 1913 strike is the last major outburst of labour violence in Thunder Bay prior to World War I.[22]
  • 1913  Social Democratic Party activist Richard Rigg elected to Winnipeg city council.
  • 1914  S.S. Newfoundland sealing disaster - abandoned on ice floes for two nights, 78 sealers perish.[15]
  • 1914  St. John street railway strike
  • 1914  The Workmen's Compensation Act, the first social insurance legislation in Canadian history, is adopted by the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.[36]
  • 1914  June 19, Alberta - Hillcrest mine disaster. 189 workers killed.[15]
  • 1914  July 1, in Lac La Biche, Alberta, outspoken socialist and Wobblie Hiram Johnson killed in brutal knife and axe attack. He had written how his neighbours abhorred his politics. His murder is pinned on James Rowan and W.E. Barrett, two IWW organizers active in Edmonton who discovered Johnson's body. Their legal defence depletes the resources of the Edmonton IWW. The charges are eventually dropped, and the two men are instead sentenced to six months hard labour for vagrancy. Rowan goes on to write The I.W.W. in the Lumber Industry (1919).[37][38][39]
  • 1914  August 20, in Vancouver, Clarke Wallace Connell (of the IWW) dies from abscess on the brain while in police custody.[25]
  • 1915  Social Democratic Party activist Richard Rigg elected to Manitoba legislature. He has backing from the Labour Representation Committee. (He resigns in 1917 to run unsuccessfully for House of Commons.)
  • 1916  Hamilton machinists' strike
  • 1917  The Canadian Labour Party is founded on the initiative of the Trades and Labour Congress of Canada.[40]
  • 1918 September 24  Federal government outlaws the IWW by an Order in Council. IWW is soon partly replaced by One Big Union.[41]
  • 1918  Ontario machinists strive for common wages, eight-hour day, and improved work conditions across the province. Hold first provincial convention of machinists in Toronto in July 1918.[42]
  • 1918-1925  Canadian Labor Revolt, series of strikes aimed at revolution, at least in theory, sweep across Canada.[43]
  • 1918  Vancouver general strike, Canada's first general strike, is sparked by the shooting death of Albert "Ginger" Goodwin.[44]
  • 1918  Protection Island (BC) mining disaster; 16 are killed when the hoisting cable frays on a mine shaft elevator.[15]
  • 1918  Dominion Labor Party (DLP) is founded as a successor to the moribund Canadian Labour Party (CLP). DLP becomes a powerful political force in Alberta and Manitoba.
  • 1919  Western Labour Conference in Calgary votes to found the One Big Union on June 4.[45]
  • 1919  Winnipeg general strike, May 15-June 26. Two shot dead by police.
  • 1919  General strikes in Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton, Victoria, Brandon, Amherst (NS). The 1919 Vancouver strike, in sympathy with Winnipeg, is the longest general strike in Canadian history.[44]
  • 1919  Alberta Coal miners at Drumheller struck for OBU union recognition.
  • 1919  Mathers Royal Commission on Industrial Relations releases its report shortly after end of the Winnipeg General Strike.[46]
  • 1919  United Farmers of Ontario-Labour Party coalition government comes to power in Ontario. (not re-elected in 1923).
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1920s

  • 1920  Labour scores wins in Manitoba. STV is adopted to elect Winnipeg MLAs and city councillors. Four labour-oriented MLAs elected in Winnipeg 1920; 3-5 Labour councillors victorious in the 1920 city election. Nine DLP MLAs elected across Manitoba.[47]
  • 1920  Independent Labour Party forms in Manitoba. Many Dominion Labour Party MLAs move to the ILP.
  • 1920  Five Labour MLAs elected in coal-mining parts of Nova Scotia - Cumberland: Archibald Terris; Cape Breton: Joseph Steele, Arthur R. Richardson, Forman Waye and D.W. Morrison.
  • 1920  Angus McDonald, a carpenter, elected in Temiskaming (northern Ontario) as Independent. Proponent of revolutionary industrial unionism (One Big Union).[48] Re-elected in 1921. Riding abolished prior to 1925 election.
  • 1921  United Farmers of Alberta (UFA) is elected to government in Alberta. The post of Minister of Labor is given to Labor Party MLA Alex Ross, one of four Labor MLAs elected in Alberta in 1921. Another Labour MLA, Philip Christophers, is elected by One Big Union coal miners.[49]
  • 1921 May  Communist Party of Canada is founded. It is the most important single force in the labour movement throughout the 1920s.[50]
  • 1921  Canadian Labor Party revives under James Simpson. (Dominion Labor Party remains its counterpart in southern Alberta.)
  • 1921  Canadian federal election elects two important labourites -- J. S. Woodsworth in Winnipeg under the Independent Labor Party label and William Irvine in Calgary under the Dominion Labor Party label. (Irvine was popular among both city workers and UFA voters.)[51] Calgary also elects Joseph Tweed Shaw (backed by both the UFA and the DLP). Woodsworth, Irvine and others participate in the Ginger Group, a leftist caucus in House of Commons.
  • 1922  Raid on Dominion Coal Company's store at Sydney, NS. Thirteen men sentenced to two or three-year prison sentences. (A company store was similarly pillaged in the 1995 film Margaret's Museum.)[52]
  • 1922-1925  Cape Breton Labour Wars for recognition of the United Mine Workers of America as miners' bargaining agent.
  • 1924  Woodsworth, Irvine, UFA MPs and other progressive MPs form the Ginger Group in the House of Commons to fight on behalf of labour and social advances.
  • 1925  New Waterford, Nova Scotia - Company police kill coal miner Bill Davis and wound many others at a demonstration during a major strike at the British Empire Steel and Coal Company (BESCO). Davis Day is established in memory of Bill Davis. About 2000 soldiers are deployed against the strike, the largest peacetime deployment of the Canadian Militia for an internal conflict since the North-West Rebellion of 1885. "Battle of Waterford Lake" occurs on June 11, 1925. The defeat of the New Waterford strikers is said to end the labour revolt that started in 1918.[53]
  • 1926  Labour elects four MLAs after Alberta adopts proportional representation (STV) to elect MLAs in Edmonton and Calgary. CLP's Lionel Gibbs is elected in Edmonton; DLP's Fred White and Independent-Labour candidate Robert Parkyn elected in Calgary. Use of STV to elect Edmonton MLAs produces election of a Labour Party or Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) MLA in every election from 1926 to 1955, except 1935 and 1940. In Calgary under STV, a Labour/CCF MLA elected in 1926, 1930, 1944 and 1948. After change to first-past-the-post voting in 1956, no CCF/New Democratic Party (NDP) MLA is elected in Edmonton until 1982, in Calgary not until 1986.[54]
  • 1928  Ontario - Hollinger gold mine disaster. 39 are killed by fire in the mine.[15]
  • 1929  Death (suspected murder) in Thunder Bay of Finnish-Canadian union organizers Rosvall and Voutilainen.
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1930s

  • 1930  Workers' Unity League, an organization of industrial unionism, is formed at the Toronto labour union conference. Harvey Murphy[55] and Thomas Ewen are early leaders.[56]
  • 1931  S.S. Viking ship explosion kills 28 sealers and members of a film crew.[15]
  • 1931  Riot of unemployed in Calgary after Calgary police arrest a labour speaker.[57][58]
  • 1931  Estevan riot. Four strikers shot to death by RCMP officers.[59]
  • 1932  Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (Farmer-Labour-Socialist) party founded in Calgary.
  • 1932  Edmonton Hunger March in December. A demonstration by struggling workers and farmers is repressed by billyclub-wielding police, some on horseback. Subsequently, police raid the Hunger March headquarters. 27 leaders and activists arrested.[60][61]
  • 1933  Stratford General Strike. Members of the Workers' Unity League are prominent. Military units equipped with machine guns and armored cars (or tanks) arrive to face off against the picketers.[62]
  • 1933  Blairmore, Alberta elects a city council of socialist activists.[63]
  • 1935  On-to-Ottawa Trek, protest march by unemployed from Vancouver eastward. It is stopped at Regina and dispersed on July 1, 1935, with mass arrests and loss of life (Nick Shaak beaten to death by club-wielding RCMP).[64]
  • 1935  Battle of Ballantyne Pier (1935 Vancouver dockers' strike)
  • 1936  Corbin Mine strike, southern BC near Alberta-BC border. Several strikers sentenced to prison terms. One of them, David Lockhart, dies of cellulitis while in prison.[65]
  • 1938  Bloody Sunday, culmination of "sitdowners' strike" in Vancouver (unemployed workers' protests)
  • 1938  Blubber Bay (Texada Island, BC) strike. Workers belong to recently founded International Woodworkers of America (IWA). Local union leader William Gardner dies after receiving savage beating and kicking from BC provincial policeman.[66][67]
  • 1939  Canada declares war on Germany

1940s

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Female shop stewards at the Burrard Drydock, North Vancouver, British Columbia. The company hired more than 1000 women during World War II, all of whom were dismissed after the war to free up jobs for the men returning from armed service.
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1950s

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1960s

  • 1960s Canada adopts the 40-hour work week -- five days/eight-hour day schedule.[76]
  • 1961  The New Democratic Party (NDP) is founded as the successor to the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) and establishes a formal relationship with the organized labour movement.[77] A non-union affiliate of the NDP, the Woodsworth-Irvine Socialist Fellowship, based in Edmonton, carries on socialist education from 1962 to about 2000.[78]
  • 1961  September 10, a Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers meeting at Sudbury Arena, regarding the union's controversial proposal to merge with the United Steelworkers, erupts into a riot.[79]
  • 1962  Saskatchewan doctors' strike. A 23-day strike by doctors in the province.
  • 1963  Reesor Siding Strike in Northern Ontario. Picketline-crossing log suppliers shot eleven strikers, three were killed.[80]
  • 1963  The Canadian Union of Public Employees is formed from the merger of the National Union of Public Employees and the National Union of Public Service Employees. [81]
  • 1965  Wildcat postal strike leads to the extension of collective bargaining rights to the majority of the public service.[8]
  • 1967  The international Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers merge with the United Steelworkers. Local 598 in Sudbury, Ontario is the only Mine Mill local in the world to reject the merger, instead continuing operations as an unaffiliated union organization until 1993.
  • 1968  Air Canada agents in British Columbia begin work-to-rule over a dispute over the industrial relations department's bargaining methods.[82]
  • 1969  Murray-Hill riot, Montreal police force on strike. FLQ, taxi drivers, and others take radical action.
  • 1969  New Democratic Party of Manitoba forms a minority government, in power until 1977.

1970s

1980s

  • 1980  Canada wing of Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers (formerly Oil Workers International Union) forms the Energy and Chemical Workers Union with Neil Reimer as its leader.[74][88][89]
  • 1981  At Hibernia oilfield near Newfoundland, Ocean Ranger—an offshore oil platform—sinks, killing all 84 workers on board.[15]
  • 1983  July-August, "Women Against the Budget" is formed to fight the 1983 BC budget and other actions taken by Bill Bennett's Social Credit government against working people. The broad-based umbrella organization of activist women helps create the BC Federation of Labour's Operation Solidarity and Solidarity Coalition. On August 10, 40,000 rally at Vancouver's Empire Stadium to protest the BC government. In the face of a threatened general strike, the government backs down on its plans for mass layoffs of its employees.[90][91]
  • 1983  July-August, members of the BC Government Employees’ Union (BCGEU) hold a three-week occupation of Tranquille Institution in Kamloops, after learning the provincial government is planning its closure. Due to the occupation, the institution is allowed to function until 1985.[92]
  • 1984  The Canadian Auto Workers Union (properly the National Automobile, Aerospace, Transportation and General Workers Union of Canada) is founded. Bob White, an official of the United Auto Workers, encourages the Canadian membership of the U.A.W. to split away and form a separate union. White is C.A.W.'s first president. (split covered in NFB film Final Offer)
  • 1984  Strike at Eaton's department stores by the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU) begins in November in southern Ontario. The strike is settled the following May.
  • 1985  The Canadian Auto Workers becomes independent of their former parent union, the United Auto Workers. This process is documented in the film Final Offer (1985).
  • 1986  Alberta NDP takes 16 seats, a record until 2015, and becomes Official Opposition (Brian Mason is elected as MLA - he will be an NDP cabinet minister in 2015).
  • 1986  Six-month-long strike at the Gainers meatpacking plant in Edmonton.

1990s

2000s

2010s

  • 2010  July 5, a tentative resolution of the Vale strike in Sudbury is announced.[98]
  • 2012  February 2, in Halifax, Amalgamated Transit Union goes on strike, crippling the city's public transportation.[99] Transit workers had been denied salary or compensation increases due to a reported $3M deficit.[100] The strike ended March 14, 2012.
  • 2012  September 11, Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and the Liberal party pass Bill 115 'Putting Students First Act 2012', thereby eliminating the rights of all teachers in the province to go on strike for the next two years. Bill 115 also freezes wages, grants ten sick days per year (down from twenty) and eliminates banked sick days from previous years. Unions state that this bill is a violation of their members' rights under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and that the bill violates the Ontario Labour Relations Act of 1995.
  • 2013  Unifor is formed through the merger of the Canadian Auto Workers and the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada, becoming largest private-sector union in the country.
  • 2015  NDP elected to government in Alberta, stays in power until 2019.
  • 2018  Series of strikes by Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) begin in October.[101] The following month, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government mandates that CUPW members return to work, though they do so without a new contract ratified until September 2021.[102][103]
  • 2019  Sheet Metal Workers' International Association ICI (Industrial, Commercial, Institutional) members go on strike in Ontario for 8 weeks in May and June, first strike in 30 years for that organization.

2020s

See also

Footnotes

References

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