|
The author acknowledges financial assistance from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, University of New Brunswick, and University of Victoria. This study was assisted by archivists, particularly at the University of Victoria Archives and Special Collections, and Gregory S. Kealey, Eric W. Sager, Patricia Roy, Ian MacPherson, Phyllis Senese, Foster Griezic, Monica Gaudet, and the journal's anonymous readers.
Notes
1. University of Victoria Archives and Special Collections (hereafter UVASC), Victoria Labour Council fonds (hereafter VLC fonds), accession 80–59, series IV, box 3, "Minutes and Minute Books," Minutes, 19 February 1919.
2. Royal Commission on Industrial Relations (hereafter Mathers Commission), Evidence, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 181, Library and Archives of Canada (hereafter LAC), reel M1980. Appointed by Borden's Union government in March 1919, and chaired by Thomas Graham Mathers, Chief Justice of Manitoba, the commission conducted hearings in 28 towns and cities between April and June 1919, gathering testimony from 486 witnesses. Tom Moore, president of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada, served as labour's representative on the commission.
3. Winnipeg Defence Committee, Saving the World From Democracy: The Winnipeg General Sympathetic Strike, May–June, 1919 (Winnipeg 1920); D.C. Masters, The Winnipeg General Strike (Toronto 1950); Kenneth McNaught and David J. Bercuson, The Winnipeg Strike: 1919 (Don Mills, ON 1974); Bercuson, Confrontation at Winnipeg: Labour, Industrial Relations, and the General Strike (Montreal 1974); Bercuson, Fools and Wise Men: The Rise and Fall of the One Big Union (Toronto 1978); A. Ross McCormack, Reformers, Radicals and Revolutionaries: The Western Canadian Radical Movement, 1897–1919 (Toronto 1977).
4. Gerald Friesen, "Yours in Revolt: Regionalism, Socialism, and the Western Canadian Labour Movement," Labour/Le Travailleur, 1 (1976), 141–57; Elaine Bernard, "Last Back: Folklore and the Telephone Operators in the 1919 Vancouver General Strike," in Barbara K. Lantham and Roberta J. Pazdro, eds., Not Just Pin Money: Selected Essays on the History of Women's Work in British Columbia (Victoria 1984), 279–86; David Bright, The Limits of Labour: Class Formation and the Labour Movement in Calgary, 1883–1929 (Vancouver 1998), 145–61; James Naylor, The New Democracy: Challenging the Social Order in Industrial Ontario, 1914–25 (Toronto 1991), 42–71; Geoffrey Ewen, "Québec: Class and Ethnicity," in Craig Heron, ed., The Workers' Revolt in Canada: 1917–1925 (Toronto 1998); Nolan Reilly, "The General Strike in Amherst, Nova Scotia, 1919," Acadiensis, 9 (Spring 1980), 56–77; Gregory S. Kealey, "1919: The Canadian Labour Revolt," Labour/Le Travail, 13 (Spring 1984), 11–44; Larry Peterson, "The One Big Union in International Perspective: Revolutionary Industrial Unionism, 1900–1925," Labour/Le Travailleur, 7 (Spring 1981), 41–66.
5. Paul A. Phillips, No Power Greater: A Century of Labour in British Columbia (Vancouver 1967), 81; Arthur J. Turner, Somewhere – A Perfect Place (Vancouver 1981), 23–24; Gregory S. Kealey, "1919: The Canadian Labour Revolt," 33; Allen Seager and David Roth, "British Columbia and the Mining West: A Ghost of a Chance," in Heron, Workers' Revolt in Canada, 256–8. The historiography of Victoria labour is sparse and parochial. For insight into the prewar period, see George Hardy, Those Stormy Years: Memories of the Fight for Freedom on Five Continents (London 1956), 27–55; and Mark Leier, Where the Fraser River Flows: The Industrial Workers of the World in British Columbia (Vancouver 1990), 35, 73–4. The only survey, commissioned by the Victoria Labour Council, lacks a unifying theme and analytical breadth, concluding that while Winnipeg and Vancouver experienced general strikes, "there wasn't enough support for another in Victoria." Bruce Lowther, A Better Life: The First Century of the Victoria Labour Council (Victoria 1989), 25–26. Christian Sivertz's biography displays similar weaknesses, stating simply: "The 1919 general strike in Winnipeg was a major event in ... the history of Canada. It is too big to go into this story and in any case Christian had to do with it only peripherally." See Bent Gestur Sivertz, The Sivertz Family, Book 1: Christian Sivertz of Victoria and of Canada's Early Labor Movement (Parksville, BC 1984), 68.
6. Craig Heron, "National Contours: Solidarity and Fragmentation," in Heron, ed., Workers' Revolt in Canada, 292 and 281–5; also Heron, "Introduction," Workers' Revolt in Canada, 6–7; James R. Conley, "Frontier Labourers, Crafts in Crisis, and the Western Labour Revolt: The Case of Vancouver, 1900–1919," Labour/Le Travail, 23 (Spring 1989), 1–37.
7. Gordon Hak, "The Socialist and Labourist Impulse in Small-Town British Columbia: Port Alberni and Prince George, 1911–33," Canadian Historical Review, 70:4 (December 1989), 519. Examples of nuanced works include Mark Leier, Red Flags and Red Tape: The Making of a Labour Bureaucracy (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1995); Robert A. J. McDonald, Making Vancouver: Class, Status and Social Boundaries, 1863–1913 (Vancouver: UBC Press, 1996); Andrew Parnaby, "'The Best Men that Ever Worked the Lumber': Aboriginal Longshoremen on Burrard Inlet, BC, 1863–1939," Canadian Historical Review, 87:1 (March 2006), 53–78; Richard Rajala, "Pulling Lumber: Indo-Canadians in the British Columbia Forest Industry, 1900–1998," British Columbia Historical News, 36 (Winter 2002/2003), 1–13; and John Douglas Belshaw, Colonization and Community: The Vancouver Island Coalfield and the Making of the British Columbian Working Class (McGill-Queen's University Press, 2002).
8. One Big Union – Bulletin No. 8 (Vancouver c.1920), LAC, CIHM 85767; Todd McCallum, "'Not a Sex Question'? The One Big Union and the Politics of Radical Manhood," Labour/Le Travail, 42 (Fall 1998), 15–54; McCallum, "'A Modern Weapon for Modern Man': Marxist Masculinity and the Social Practices of the One Big Union, 1919–1924," MA thesis, SFU, 1995; Gillian Creese, "Exclusion or Solidarity? Vancouver Workers Confront the 'Oriental Problem,'" BC Studies, 80 (Winter 1988–89), 24–51. The role of women in the postwar labour revolt is explored in Linda Kealey, "'No Special Protection – No Sympathy': Women's Activism in the Canadian Labour Revolt of 1919," in Deian Hopkin and G.S. Kealey, eds., Class, Community and the Labour Movement in Wales and Canada, 1850–1930 (Aberystwyth 1989), 134–59.
9. Jean Barman, The West Beyond the West: A History of British Columbia (Toronto 1996); and John Sutton Lutz, "Structural Changes in the Manufacturing Economy of British Columbia 1860–1915," MA thesis, University of Victoria, 1988.
10. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 194, J.B. MacDonald testimony.
11. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 91, 153, 185–193, and 203–205, Paul Thompson, Charles Wylie, Major Bullock-Webster, and James Dakers testimony; "Sympathetic Strike Now May Mean Extinction of Shipbuilding Industry," Daily Times (Victoria) (hereafter Times), 31 May 1919; "Foundation Co. Secures Contract," British Columbia Federationist (Vancouver) (hereafter Federationist), 6 September 1918. The economic impact of the Foundation Company is cited by Dakers.
12. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 193, Major Bullock-Webster testimony.
13. Mathers Commission, 26 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 3, 7–8, and 17, Robert Donnachie and Anger Berry testimony.
14. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 214, Emily Sutton testimony.
15. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 158, Charles Wylie testimony.
16. Mathers Commission, 26 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 3–4 and 65–90, Donnachie and Cameron testimony.
17. Food prices are listed in "Green Vegetables in Large Numbers," Times, 17 June 1919. For the wage scale adopted by the Victoria Boilermakers in March 1919, see UVASC, Victoria Shipyard Workers Federated Union Local #238 (Boilermakers) fonds, Accession 89–3, box 1.2, "Minute Books," 14 March 1919. The VTLC discussed the cost of living frequently. See UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 6 December 1916.
18. The struggle of soldiers' wives for adequate compensation is illuminated in a letter by Mrs. F.A. Haines, "Dependents' Allowances," Daily Colonist (Victoria) (hereafter Colonist), 9 October 1918.
19. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 212–213, Emily Sutton testimony. The Minimum Wage Act came into force in February 1919. See Betty Griffin and Susan Lockhart, Their Own History: Women's Contribution to the Labour Movement in British Columbia (Vancouver 2002), 49–50.
20. Victoria, Annual Reports: Corporation of the City of Victoria, 1918 (Victoria 1918), 89.
21. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 184, C.T. Cross testimony. See also Craig Heron, Booze: A Distilled History (Toronto 2003); Jan Noel, Canada Dry: Temperance Crusades before Confederation (Toronto 1995).
22. In July 1918, the VTLC-backed newspaper, The Week, was suppressed by government order and its editor jailed for publishing the terms of the Allies' secret treaties. In September, the VTLC's secretary-treasurer was instructed to inquire "of the Food Control Board if it was a fact that 5,000 cases of Butter weighing 56 lbs each were lying at Swift Co. against Food Control orders." That month, the Dominion government banned 14 political organizations, including the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), and outlawed various radical publications. See PC 2384 and "Consolidated Orders Respecting Censorship," Canada, Canada Gazette, (Ottawa 1918), 1278, 1294–1296, 1379, 1391, 1525, and 1626; UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 7 August 1919, 18 September 1918, and 8 January 1919; "Intervention in Russia," The Week (Victoria), 20 July 1918; "Here We Are Again!" The Week, 1 May 1920; Gregory S. Kealey, "State Repression of Labour and the Left in Canada, 1914–20: The Impact of the First World War," Canadian Historical Review, 73 (September 1991), 281–314; S. W. Horall, "The Royal North West Mounted Police and Labour Unrest in Western Canada, 1919," Canadian Historical Review, 61 (June 1980), 169–90; Jeff Keshen, "All the News That Was Fit to Print: Ernest J. Chambers and Information Control in Canada, 1914–19," Canadian Historical Review, 73 (September 1992), 315–343.
23. Benjamin Isitt, "Mutiny from Victoria to Vladivostok, December 1918," Canadian Historical Review, 87 (June 2006), 223–264; "Censorship Comes In For Criticism," Times, 13 January 1919; "Victoria Workers Hold Protest Meeting," Federationist, 17 January 1919.
24. "Victoria Labor Party Meeting," Federationist, 10 January 1919.
25. "Chairman Refuses to Allow Red Flag to be Brought Out," Times, 3 February 1919.
26. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 24 February 1919. The relationship between war and radicalism is explored in Craig Heron and Myer Siemiatycki, "The Great War, the State, and Working-Class Canada," in Heron, ed., The Workers' Revolt in Canada, 11–42.
27. The Western Federation of Miners sunk roots in BC in the closing years of the 19th century, establishing a militant tradition among miners, loggers, and fishers, and spawning a general strike in support of railworkers in 1903. The Industrial Workers of the World built upon this tradition, organizing itinerant workers and developing branches in Vancouver, Nelson, and Victoria. The Victoria IWW spearheaded a split from the AFL-affiliated Teamsters prior to the war, and mobilized 'free speech' fights and support for imprisoned Vancouver Island coal miners; Mother Jones addressed a VTLC-sponsored meeting in 1914, after attempts by border officials to deny Jones entry into Canada were defeated by the labour councils of Vancouver and Victoria. But the spread of industrial unionism was opposed by influential labour leaders, such as VTLC president John Day, a local boss of the ruling Conservative party, which had unleashed the militia against striking coal miners. The Victoria IWW dissolved in May 1914 and the VTLC filed unread a request for funds from the Edmonton IWW. According to Leier, local IWW leaders left Victoria in search of work. See William Bennett, Builders of British Columbia (Vancouver 1935), 60–4; Hardy, Those Stormy Years, 27–55; Leier, Where the Fraser River Flows, 35, 45, and 73–4; Jack Kavanagh, The Vancouver Island Strike (Vancouver 1913); UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 21 January 1914, 4 February 1914, 3 June 1914, 12 August 1914, and 19 August 1914; Linda Atkinson, Mother Jones: The Most Dangerous Woman in America (New York 1978).
28. On 4 August 1914, Martin organized a protest meeting against the summons to the militia. A VTLC official said labour would not "permit some irresponsible person to pass resolutions under the roof of the Labor hall deprecating men doing their duty at this time." See "Ends in Fiasco," Times, 5 August 1914; UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 5 August 1914.
29. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 3 July 1918; Sivertz, The Sivertz Family, 41–58; also BC Archives and Records Service, Christian Sivertz Collection. According to Sivertz's biographer-son, he "had a deep feeling for the young, then emerging nation of Canada, and he took seriously the war against the German Kaiser." Morever, Sivertz "believed that exemption should be granted only on the very strongest grounds." Sivertz, The Sivertz Family, 58.
30. The 1917 BCFL referendum asked affiliated members: "Are you prepared to place in the hands of the executive of the British Columbia Federation of Labor the power to call a general strike in the event of conscription?" Of 2417 ballots cast, 1841 favoured a general strike with only 576 opposed. See "BC Federation of Labor Issues Referendum," Federationist, 8 June 1917; "Action of Delegate Montreal Endorsed – Capital City Labor Men Are Opposed to Scheme of Conscription," Federationist, 22 June 1917; "First Unwilling Conscript To Be Signal For 'Down Tools,'" Federationist, 7 September 1917; also Martin Robin, "Registration, Conscription, and Independent Labour Politics, 1916–17," in A. M. Willms et al., eds., Conscription 1917 (Toronto 1969); Phillips, No Power Greater, 67.
31. "Albert Goodwin Shot and Killed by Police Officer Near Comox Lake" and "Trades and Labor Council Endorse 24-Hr. Protest," Federationist, 2 August 1918; "Labor Temple Scene of Trouble and Rioting" and "Goodwin Buried At Cumberland," Federationist, 9 August 1918; Susan Mayse, Ginger: The Life and Death of Albert Goodwin (Madeira Park 1990); and Roger Stonebanks, Fighting for Dignity: The Ginger Goodwin Story (St. John's 2004).
32. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 7 August 1918; also 29 July 1918.
33. "Machinists Strike In Victoria Yards," Federationist, 3 May 1918; "Shipyard Workers Get Half Holiday," Federationist, 10 May 1918; "Will Not Accept A Week of 48 Hours," Federationist, 10 May 1918; also "Strike By Shipyard Workers Is Deferred for the Present," Federationist, 1 March 1918; "Shipyard Inquiry Opens At Victoria," Federationist, 15 March 1918; "Big Walk-Out Started in City To-Day When Boilermakers Struck," Times, 21 June 1919.
34. Public Archives of Manitoba (hereafter PAM), OBU papers, MG10, A3, "Correspondence," Taylor to Midgley, 18 April 1919. For organizational gains in various industries, see UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, June to August 1918; Federationist, June to August 1918; "Strike Vote Returns Will Not Be Issued Until After Meeting," Times, 2 June 1919.
35. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 18 September 1918.
36. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 2 October 1918 and 7 August 1918; also "Delegates to Trade Congress Make Report to Central Body" and "Congress Delegate Reports to Island Council," Federationist, 4 October 1918; "Some Impressions of the Congress," Federationist, 11 October 1918; and Trades and Labor Congress of Canada, Report of Proceedings, 1918.
37. "Delegates to Trade Congress Make Report to Central Body," Federationist, 4 October 1918.
38. The Workers Industrial Union of Australia was initiated by the New South Wales Trades and Labor Council, and endorsed at a Sydney convention in August 1918, winning the support of state labour federations and workers in 600 unions. Its constitutional preamble borrowed heavily from the IWW: "There can be no peace as long as want and hunger are found among millions of working people, and the few who constitute the employing class have all the good things of life." See "Australia to Have One Big Union for All," Federationist, 27 September 1918; "Red Flag Banned in Australia," Federationist, 6 December 1918; "One-Big-Union Wins New Victory," Red Flag (Vancouver), 28 December 1918; "Shop Steward's Movement," Red Flag, 1 March 1919; Industrial Workers of the World, The Founding Convention of the IWW: Proceedings (1905; New York 1969), 247.
39. PC 2384, Canada, Canada Gazette (Ottawa 1918), 1278; "The IWW Trials in Australia," Federationist, 29 November 1918; "IWW Members Given Long Terms," Federationist, 6 September 1918.
40. "The Organization and Its Value to Workers," Federationist, 18 October 1918; "Naylor Is Found Not Guilty At Nanaimo" Federationist, 11 October 1918.
41. Woodward received 15 votes to Taylor's 14. As an expression of good will, Taylor moved that the vote be made unanimous. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 15 January 1919.
42. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 174–180, Woodward testimony; also University of British Columbia Special Collections (hereafter UBCSC), Eugene S. Woodward papers; Andrew Neufeld, Union Store: The History of the Retail Clerks Union in British Columbia, 1899–1999 (Vancouver 1999), 37–43. Woodward differed from radicals in his interpretation of the class struggle. "I think the only class war is between the workers – under which I include the average employers – and the monopolist, that is the owner of the natural resources." However he claimed to support an overthrow of the capitalist system: "Although I am not myself a socialist, I am prepared to work with them for the overthrow of the present system so that human life may receive the maximum consideration and property rights very little."
43. "Ole Talks," Semi-Weekly Tribune (Victoria) (hereafter Tribune), 13 February 1919; "Would Make IWW's in States Outlaws," Times, 21 February 1919; "Seattle Is Tied Up In General Strike," Federationist, 7 February 1919; "Seattle General Strike Called Off," Federationist, 14 February 1919; "Seattle Asks For General Strike," Tribune, 30 January 1919; "Attempt Fails," Tribune, 6 February 1919; "Breaking the Backbone," Tribune, 10 February 1919; Robert L. Friedheim, The Seattle General Strike (Seattle 1964).
44. UVASC, Boilermakers fonds, "Minute Books," 28 January 1919 and 25 February 1919.
45. "Will Seattle Be Loyal?" Times, 11 March 1919.
46. This claim is made in F. Henry Johnson, A History of Public Education in British Columbia (Vancouver 1964), 240–2, quoting from H. Charlesworth, Teachers Institutes, manuscript in possession of BC Teachers' Federation, 4; Rennie Warburton, "The Class Relations of Public Schoolteachers in British Columbia," in Warburton and David Coburn, eds., Workers, Capital, and the State in British Columbia: Selected Papers (Vancouver 1988), 250.
47. "The School Teachers," Tribune, 13 February 1919; also "'Scab' Teachers," Tribune, 13 February 1919; "The Teachers' Strike," Tribune, 17 February 1919; also "Now Teachers Present Ultimatum," Colonist, 3 October 1918; also Alison Prentice, ed., Women Who Taught: Perspectives on the History of Women and Teaching (Toronto 1991); Seager and Roth, "British Columbia and the Mining West," 252.
48. 'Lights in the World,' Tribune, 20 February 1919.
49. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 5 February 1919.
50. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 1 April 1914.
51. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 19 June 1918 and 15 January 1919.
52. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 215, Emily Sutton testimony.
53. "Issue Their First Report," Tribune, 13 February 1919. This mirrored efforts by James Duncan of Seattle to reform the AFL along industrial lines. "Seattle's Plan vs. Canada's OBU," Federationist, 16 May 1919.
54. Mathers Commission, 28 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 226–228, Phil R. Smith testimony.
55. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 19 February 1919; "Labor's Local Parliament," Tribune, 20 February 1919.
56. The BCFL had polled affiliates on the question of moving the convention to coincide with the Western Labor Conference. See UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 4 December 1918 and 8 January 1919.
57. "BC Federation of Labor Proceedings," Federationist, 4 April 1919.
58. "The Origin of the OBU," One Big Union Bulletin (Winnipeg) (hereafter OBU Bulletin), 24 March 1927; Winnipeg Defence Committee, Saving the World from Democracy, 26–30. Vancouver's W.A. Pritchard topped the polls with 210 votes, followed by Dick Johns of Winnipeg with 201, Joe Knight of Edmonton with 176, Victor Midgley of Vancouver with 161, and Cumberland's Joe Naylor with 118. The convention declared, "without a dissenting vote," its "open conviction that the system of Industrial Soviet Control by selecting of representatives from industries is more efficient and of greater political value than the present form of Government." For a discussion of ideology within the OBU, see Friesen, "Yours in Revolt," 139–40; Kealey, "1919: The Canadian Labour Revolt," 37; Leier, Where the Fraser River Flows, 119; Martin Robin, Radical Politics and Canadian Labour: 1880–1930 (Kingston 1968), 178–98; Bercuson, Fools and Wise Men, 125–8; and McCormack, Reformers, Radicals and Revolutionaries, 143–9 and 156–64.
59. "BC Federation of Labor Proceedings," Federationist, 4 April 1919; "'One Big Union' in Western Canada," Times, 14 March 1919.
60. "Labor's New Magna Charta," Times, 12 March 1919.
61. "Minister Bars 'One Big Union'," Colonist, 5 April 1919; "Look Askance at One Big Union," Colonist, 16 March 1919.
62. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 19 March 1919.
63. Mathers Commission, 26 April 1919, Victoria, BC, 168–79, Woodward testimony. Woodward called for the nationalization of basic industries and the CPR. On 25 April, a special meeting had convened to decide the VTLC's policy on the Mathers Commission. See UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 25 April 1919.
64. "Tom Moore and the One Big Union," Federationist, 2 May 1919.
65. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 19 March 1919 and 2 April 1919. Taylor forwarded two cents for every affiliated member. The 2300-strong Shipyard Laborers paid per-capita directly to the OBU Central Committee, since it was not a VLTC affiliate. See PAM, OBU papers, MG10, A3, "Correspondence," Taylor to Midgley, 18 April 1919. The Boilermakers passed a vote of confidence in the OBU's provisional central committee at the end of March. See UVASC, Boilermakers fonds, "Minute Books," 25 March 1919.
66. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 13 April 1919; also 9 April 1919. The VTLC convened a special meeting to pressure the Pantages into renting the hall.
67. "Speakers Tell of One Big Union Scheme," Colonist, 15 April 1919.
68. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 13 April 1919.
69. "Mass Meeting in Victoria," Federationist, 18 April 1919.
70. LAC, Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) collection, RG18, A2, vol. 878, "Labour Organizations and Communism," McLean to Deputy Minister of Militia, 7 March 1919.
71. LAC, MG 26, Borden papers, H(1)a, vol. 103, Reel 4340, White to Borden, 28 April 1919. VLC fonds, Minutes, 25 April 1919.
72. LAC, RCMP collection, rg18, vol. 1930, "Certified Copy of a Report of the Committee of the Privy Council," 12 December 1918; also "Monthly Report," F.J. Horrigan to The Commissioner, 13 March 1919; UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 8 January 1919.
73. LAC, MG 26, Borden papers, H(1)a, vol. 103, Reel 4340, Barnard to Borden, 4 December 1918. Borden refused this request, claiming that "as far back as 1885 we have attended to our own rebellions." See LAC, Borden papers, H(1)a, vol. 112, Borden to White, 29 April 1919; also White to Borden, 16 April 1919; Borden to White, 18 April 1919; White to Borden, 22 April 1919; White to Borden, 28 April 1919.
74. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 4 December 1918; "Returned Soldiers Agree to Co-operate With Labor Unions to Insure Future," Colonist, 9 December 1918.
75. Giolma handily defeated his nearest opponent, Liberal William Langley, with 3,642 votes to 1,359; Conservative Richard Perry received 1,001 votes, while Independent Socialist candidate John McDonald received a scant 71 votes. All three defeated candidates lost their deposits. Giolma was endorsed by the Great War Veterans Association, Army and Navy Veterans of Canada, Campaigners of the Great War, and British Campaigners Association. See British Columbia, Statement of Votes (1918); "Ex-Private Giolma Went Over the Top," Times, 29 June 1918; "Returned Men's Candidate Wins," Colonist, 29 June 1918.
76. UVASC, Boilermakers fonds, "Minute Books," 27 April 1919.
77. "The Blacksmiths and the OBU," Federationist, 9 May 1919.
78. UBCSC, One Big Union Collection, "Appendix A," 1. The Shipyard Laborers approved the general strike with 1902 in favour and 222 opposed.
79. Seager and Roth, "A Ghost of a Chance," 251.
80. "Big Majority for the OBU," Federationist, 30 May 1919. The referendum results were influenced by the decision at Calgary to adopt the "BC Method" of ballot counting, which required locals to record abstentions as 'yes' votes. See Steeves, The Compassionate Rebel, 48.
81. "Sec'y V.R. Midgley Issues Call for Conference," Federationist, 23 May 1919; PAM, OBU papers, "Correspondence," Midgley to Berg, 2 May 1919; also Midgley to J.R. Knight, 31 March 1919.
82. PAM, OBU papers, "Correspondence," Midgley to Berg, 2 May 1919; Nolan to Midgley, 23 April 1919. Referendum results are cited in "Mooney Defence League Planning Strike in States," Times, 7 June 1919.
83. PAM, OBU papers, "Correspondence," Midgley to Russell, 21 April 1919; "One Big Union at Seattle," Federationist, 25 April 1919; "Longshoremen in Convention," Federationist, 9 May 1919; "Convention Favors One Big Union Idea," Colonist, 22 June 1919. Pritchard offered a warning in a Victoria speech: "If we move, even though it be in accord with working class principles, unless we move in relation to a thoroughly proletarian movement below the line, such movement will be premature and doomed to failure. If the working class movement below the line is not solidified, we could easily be swamped in Canada by the dispatch of militia from any single state." See "Mr. Pritchard's Advice," Tribune, 10 April 1919.
84. PAM, OBU papers, "Correspondence," Pritchard to Midgley, 18 April 1919; "Seattle's Plan vs. Canada's OBU," Federationist, 16 May 1919.
85. "26,000 Winnipeg Workers Ceased Work on Thursday," Federationist, 16 May 1919; Winnipeg Defence Committee, Saving the World from Democracy, 32–47; Bercuson, Confrontation at Winnipeg; Masters, The Winnipeg General Strike.
86. PAM, OBU papers, "Correspondence," Russell to Midgley, 19 May 1919.
87. C. Peacock, on behalf of Lethbridge miners, advised "OBU EXECUTIVE TO CALL GENERAL STRIKE IN WEST" if martial law was declared in Winnipeg, a request echoed by P.M. Christophers from Calgary. OBU organizer Dick Johns wired Midgley from Montréal: "THINK WESTERN MOVEMENT OUGHT TO LINE UP WITH WINNIPEG BOYS IF THAT FIGHT IS WON THE PROPAGANDA FOR THE OBU HERE WILL BE EASY." PAM, OBU papers, "Correspondence," Peacock to Midgley, 19 May 1919; Christophers to Midgley, 19 May 1919; Johns to Midgley, 19 May 1919.
88. "Winnipeg in Trouble," Times, 15 May 1919.
89. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 21 May 1919. The meeting also selected delegate Stevenson to represent the VTLC at the OBU's founding convention in Calgary. A second telegram was received announcing a strike of Toronto metal-trades workers for the eight-hour day, requesting Dominion-wide action.
90. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 21 May 1919.
91. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 5 June 1919; "General Strike Still Pending," Times, 5 June 1919.
92. "The Sympathetic Strike," Times, 28 May 1919.
93. "Vote 'No,'" Times, 3 June 1919.
94. "Favors the General Strike," Times, 30 May 1919.
95. "Civic Employees Support Winnipeg Strikers," Tribune, 2 June 1919.
96. "Endorses Winnipeg Strike," Tribune, 26 May 1919.
97. UVASC, Boilermakers fonds, "Minute Books," 30 May 1919. Three boilermakers voted against holding a strike vote and there were two abstentions.
98. "Anticipates General Sympathetic Strike to Begin Here Next Week," Times, 30 May 1919; "Loyalty League is Created to Suppress Lawless Acts Here," Times, 31 May 1919.
99. "General Strikes Are Started in the Cities of Edmonton and Calgary to Aid Winnipeg Strike," 26 May 1919; Kealey, "1919: The Canadian Labour Revolt"; Heron, ed., Workers Revolt in Canada.
100. "Strike Vote Returns Will Not Be Issued Until After Meeting," Times, 2 June 1919.
101. "Why?" Times, 31 May 1919.
102. "Premier Oliver Says Hope of Agitators is to Make a Dictatorship in Canada," Times, 10 June 1919.
103. "Where Labor Loses," Times, 30 May 1919.
104. "Out With Them," Times, 26 May 1919. The spelling 'Lenine' was common in the press at the time.
105. "Loyalty League is Created to Suppress Lawless Acts Here," Times, 31 May 1919; "Strike Vote Returns Will Not Be Issued Until After Meeting," Times, 2 June 1919; "Loyalty League Explains Objects," Times, 6 June 1919; "Loyalty League Anxious to Meet Labor Delegates," Times, 7 June 1919; "Loyalty League to Be Permanent Body," Times, 9 June 1919; also UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 4 June 1919. The League was headed by a provisional committee of prominent local citizens, including mill-owner J.O. Cameron. Citizens were invited to take the following pledge: "We hereby join the Loyalty League of Victoria and we solemnly pledge ourselves to do all in our power to uphold all constituted authority, to maintain law and order, and to suppress lawlessness in Victoria and the surrounding districts." Veteran groups including the Army and Navy Veterans and Comrades of the Great War affiliated to the League. See "Comrades Are Solid for Loyalty League," Times, 7 June 1919.
106. "Cannot Agree With the Loyalty League," Times, 10 June 1919; also "No Hope In Sight for Co-operation," Times, 24 June 1919.
107. "Loyalty League is Created to Suppress Lawless Acts Here," Times, 31 May 1919; "Spectre of Strike Results in 'Rush' on Grocery Stores," Times, 12 June 1919.
108. "Strike Vote Returns Will Not Be Issued Until After Meeting," Times, 2 June 1919. In August, Sivertz provided a list of 31 unions affiliated to the VTLC. See UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 6 August 1919.
109. "Firemen and Police to Remain on Duty," Times, 3 June 1919; "Strike Vote Returns Will Not be Issued Until After Meeting," Times, 2 June 1919.
110. "Retail Clerks' Union Do Not Favor Too Precipitate Action," Times, 3 June 1919.
111. "Possible Strike Here Depends Largely Upon Action Take by Organized Labor in Vancouver," Times, 3 June 1919.
112. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 4 June and 9 June 1919; "Local Labor Committee Visits Vancouver," Times, 4 June 1919; "Labor Awaiting Leader's Return," Times, 6 June 1919; "Strike Committee 'Sounding' Labor," Times, 10 June 1919; "Endeavor to Focus Opinion of Labor," Times, 11 June 1919. For the Vancouver strike, see Elaine Bernard, "Last Back: Folklore and the Telephone Operators in the 1919 Vancouver General Strike," 279–86; Irene Howard, The Struggle for Social Justice in British Columbia: Helena Gutteridge, the Unknown Reformer (Vancouver 1992), 127–9, 284. Several key Vancouver labour leaders, including Garment Workers' official Helena Gutteridge, opposed the general strike and the OBU.
113. "Seamen's Strike Will Tie-Up Coast Shipping," Times, 2 June 1919; "Seamens' Strike is Anticipated," Times, 3 June 1919; "Coastwise Seamen Leave Their Ships," Times, 3 June 1919; "CPR Will Use Women in Stewards Department to Replace the Strikers," Times, 4 June 1919; "Seamen's Strike Nearing An End," Times, 25 June 1919; "The Seamen," Tribune, 26 June 1919; UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 4 June 1919.
114. "Mass Meeting Favors Tie-Up," Colonist, 12 June 1919.
115. The VTLC's actions are obscured by a peculiar gap in the archival record. The council's otherwise meticulous "Minute Books" contain no records between 9 June and 16 July 1919.
116. "Labor Continues to Watch and Wait," Times, 16 June 1919; "Strike Seems Unlikely Now," Colonist, 17 June 1919.
117. "Labor Continues to Watch and Wait," Times, 16 June 1919; "The Loyalty League," Times, 18 June 1919.
118. "Red Ruin Apostles," Times, 14 June 1919. An earlier Colonist editorial declared: "The propagation of class hatred means the perpetuation of war and the permanence of misery. It is the outgrowth of distorted minds." See "Class Hatred," Colonist, 12 June 1919.
119. "Red Societies Are Identical," Colonist, 17 June 1919. In Ottawa, the Dominion Government introduced amendments to the Militia Act to double Canada's permanent army from 5,000 to 10,000 troops. "Permanent Force to be Increased," Colonist, 17 June 1919.
120. "There Will Not Be General Strike Here," Colonist, 18 June 1919; "Individual Unions May Strike, Local Labor Leaders Say," Times, 18 June 1919; "Strike Decision Promised To-Night," Times, 17 June 1919; "Strike Seems Unlikely Now," Colonist, 17 June 1919; "The Strike Vote," Tribune, 19 June 1919. The Strike Committee consisted of 30 delegates, but multiple votes from locals were disallowed, in particular 5 votes from Carpenters' locals. The vote was paired down to 16 delegates and the chairman, which allowed for the split vote. Prior to the meeting, Teamsters had reaffirmed their vote against striking, while Streetcar Workers and Retail Clerks, like Electrical workers, refused to put the question to a vote.
121. "No Strike Here," Colonist, 18 June 1919; "A Sensible Decision," Times, 18 June 1919.
122. "Electricians Object to Strike," Colonist, 22 June 1919.
123. Woodward cancelled the meeting when the Dominion government agreed to a civil trial for the British-born. The Metal Trades Council then called its own meeting, at the same time and venue. "Mass Meeting to Protest 'Star Chamber Trial'" and "Deportation of Men Seized at Winnipeg is Government's Plan," Times, 19 June 1919; "Now Satisfied With New Stand of Government," Times, 20 June 1919; "Electricians Objects to Strike," Colonist, 22 June 1919; "Money Powers Conspire," Tribune, 19 June 1919.
124. "Longshoremen Shy at Overland Cargo," Colonist, 20 June 1919. As the Longshoremen struck, the last troops from the Canadian Siberian Expeditionary Force landed at Victoria's Outer Wharves aboard the ship Monteagle. Major-General J.H. Elmsley, commander of the Canadians in Siberia, was aboard the ship. See "Canadian Troops Back From Siberia," Times, 19 June 1919.
125. "Longshoremen Have Declared Walk-Out," Times, 20 June 1919; "Metal Trades Council Calls Strike Monday," Colonist, 21 June 1919. Conflicting reports appeared on the cause of the dispute, with the Colonist reporting that the Longshoremen's secretary denied the strike was in support of the Seamen.
126. UVASC, Boilermakers, "Minute Books," 20 June 1919.
127. "Big Walk-Out Started in City To-Day When Boilermakers Struck," Times, 21 June 1919. The sentiment to strike "was very greatly intensified by the developments at Winnipeg," the Times reported, and metal-trades workers were incensed over the dissolution of the Victoria Strike Committee.
128. "Metal Trades Council Calls Strike Monday," Colonist, 21 June 1919.
129. "Big Walk-Out Started in City To-Day When Boilermakers Struck," Times, 21 June 1919. It was later reported that Metal Trades Council delegates had voted 2010 in favour of a strike, but the result was subsequently made unanimous. Prior to the vote, the council heard a presentation from Vancouver delegates Crawford and Wells; A.S. Wells had previously been an active member of the VTLC and served as a BCFL officer throughout the war. See "A Strike Discussion," Colonist, 28 June 1919.
130. "Big Walk-Out Started in City To-Day When Boilermakers Struck," Times, 21 June 1919; Masters, The Winnipeg General Strike, 1078; Bercuson, Confrontation at Winnipeg, 87, 1714. A Times editorial was damaged prior to its transfer to microfilm. Legible portions include the statement: "Confident of their control of the machinery of organized labor in Manitoba's capital they threw off their mask and exposed themselves as the 'One Big Union' movement for what they were – Red revolutionaries masquerading as champions of organized labor." See "Would Set Up a Soviet," Times, 21 June 1919.
131. "Borden Must Go," Tribune, 23 June 1919; "Strike Meeting Is Held Behind Closed Gates," Times, 23 June 1919.
132. "Electricians Object to Strike," Colonist, 22 June 1919.
133. "Workers Threw Down Tools When Strike Order Went Forth," Times, 23 June 1919; "Borden Must Go," Tribune, 23 June 1919.
134. "General Strike Still Pending," Times, 5 June 1919; also "Sympathetic Strike Now May Mean Extinction of Shipbuilding Industry," Times, 31 May 1919.
135. "Workers Threw Down Tools When Strike Order Went Forth," Times, 23 June 1919; "Thousands Quit At Strike Hour," Colonist, 24 June 1919; "Estevan Men Quit," Colonist, 26 June 1919; "Expect to Load in Spite of Strike," Colonist, 27 June 1919; "Railroad Rally," Tribune, 26 June 1919. The Times reported that 50 of 180 Harbor Marine workers downed tools, while the Colonist reported that only 8 men quit work. A day later, the Colonist reported that 16 men remained at work at Yarrows, while the Victoria Machinery Depot "still has a few" and Ramsay's Machine Shop was "going full blast." "Strikers Will Resume Shortly," Colonist, 25 June 1919.
136. Victoria's union membership is pegged at "approximately 7000" in "Firemen and Police to Remain on Duty," Times, 3 June 1919.
137. LAC, Department of Labour Collection, RG 7, vol. 315, Strikes and Lockouts file, John Chrow to F.A. Ackland, 1 August 1919; "Labor Pressing Unions to Strike," Times, 24 June 1919.
138. "Workers Threw Down Tools When Strike Order Went Forth," Times, 23 June 1919.
139. "Foundation Strikers Arrange Big Sports" and "Thousands Quit At Strike Hour," Colonist, 24 June 1919; "Sports Occupy Workmen During Strike Period," Times, 24 June 1919.
140. Turner, Somewhere – A Perfect Place, 23.
141. "Workers Return to Duties," Colonist, 25 June 1919; "Winnipeg General Strike Declared Off," Times, 25 June 1919; "Mr. Gompers Is Again President," Times, 22 June 1919.
142. LAC, Department of Labour collection, RG 7, vol. 315, Strikes and Lockouts file, Strike 224, June 1919; "Sympathetic – Victoria," RNWMP Report, "Conditions in Victoria Re: Mass Meeting held Athletic Park 26–6–19"; "Strike Ends This Morning at Eight," Colonist, 27 June 1919. The vote did not affect the Seamen's and Longshoremen's strikes, as they had decided to strike independent of the Metal Trades Council. See "Seamen's Strike Nearing An End," Times, 25 June 1919; "Longshoremen Are Still On Strike," Times, 27 June 1919.
143. "Industrial Activity Resumed To-Day at Victoria Shipyards," Times, 27 June 1919; "Return to Work Without Trouble," Colonist, 28 June 1919; "All Strikers To Be Reinstated," Times, 28 June 1919.
144. Triple Alliance refers to the coalition of the AFL-internationals, employers, and the state. It derived from the working-class Triple Alliance in Britain, consisting of 800,000 miners, 500,000 rail workers, and 300,000 transport workers, as well as the military alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy. See "SPC and Organized Labor," Red Flag, 30 August 1919; "A Message From Across the Sea," Federationist, 5 September 1919; "War Declared on OBU," Federationist, 11 July 1919.
145. "Think Police Acted Beyond Their Power," Times, 2 July 1919; "Red-Coats Busy," Tribune, 30 June 1919; also "Red Guards Again," Tribune, 18 August 1919. Taylor was named in a warrant issued by Alfred E. Andrews, special counsel for Manitoba of the federal Department of Justice and envoy of the Citizens Committee of 1000. The warrant read, in part, that "there is reason to suspect that certain books, papers, letters, documents, [and] writings ... afford ample evidence ... of the indictable offense of seditious conspiracy, are concealed in ... the place of abode, office and premises of J. Taylor."
146. "Mounties Raid Home and Offices of Labor Men," Federationist, 4 July 1919; "Vancouver Labor Temple Raided By Police," Times, 30 June 1919; "Tons of Bolshevik Papers Seized in Raids Made By 130 Montreal Police" and "Further Raids Made At Winnipeg," Times, 2 July 1919. The national dimensions of labour radicalism were illuminated months later with the release of a list of police targets, a virtual who's who of BC's socialist movement. "Andrews' List of Undesirable Citizens," Federationist, 30 January 1920.
147. Gregory S. Kealey and Reg Whitaker, R.C.M.P. Security Bulletins: The Early Years, 1919–1929 (St. John's 1994), 679.
148. "No Squeeling," Tribune, 10 July 1919.
149. "Pritchard's Points and Punches," Tribune, 14 July 1919.
150. "W.A. Pritchard's Speech," Tribune, 14 July 1919.
151. UVASC, VLC, Minutes, 16 July 1919; "Labor's Local Parliament," Tribune, 17 July 1919; "Constitution of The One Big Union," Tribune, 16 June 1919.
152. "Trades Council Is To Lose Its Charter," Federationist, 1 August 1919; Bercuson, Fools and Wise Men, 133–55.
153. "Trades and Labor Council," Tribune, 3 July 1919.
154. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 6 August, 20 August, and 3 September 1919; "International Officers," Tribune, 28 August 1919. Farmilo and William Varley of Toronto were paid $42.00 per week to defeat the OBU, funded by a $50,000 grant from the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees, administered by TLC secretary P.M. Draper. In July 1919, Farmilo set up a parallel Vancouver Trades and Labor Council to rival the OBU-controlled council. Bercuson, Fools and Wise Men, 121–2; Robin, Radical Politics and Canadian Labour, 186.
155. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 6 and 20 August, 3 September, 1 October, 5 November, and 3 December 1919. In October 1919, the Painters informed the VTLC they had withdrawn their affiliation to the Council. A month later, a spokesperson for the Organization Committee said the Painters "local has joined the One Big Union group." However by December, Sivertz reported "that the Painters union were in good standing, having paid their per capita tax to the end of 1919."
156. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 20 August 1919; also UBCSC, Eugene S. Woodward papers, box 1, file 2, "National Industrial Conference ... Official Report of Proceedings," 168–75.
157. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 6 and 20 August 1919.
158. Trades and Labor Congress of Canada, Report of Proceedings, 1919, 69–70, 166; "Dominion Trades Congress in Session," Tribune, 25 September 1919.
159. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 15 October 1919. BCFL secretary A.S. Wells justified this action on the grounds "that no democratic minded man would stand for any such procedure, namely, that of giving Executive Officers of Congress power to remove the officers of Provincial Federations of Labor."
160. In July, VTLC delegates had approved a $100 donation for the defense of the Winnipeg strike leaders. Other unions locals, both AFL and OBU, donated to the fund, including the Steam Engineers, Teamsters, and Printing Pressmen. In November, the VTLC endorsed proposals from the BC Defense Committee for 'One Day's Pay for Winnipeg' and a 'Workers' Liberty Bond' campaign. As J.S. Woodsworth told a Victoria FLP meeting in February 1920, "no other province had so loyally supported the defense as British Columbia." See "Done Much to Solidify Workers," Federationist, 27 February 1920; UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 16 July, 20 August, 3 September, 1 October, 19 November, 3 December 1919.
161. "Shipyard Laborers Union Demise," Federationist, 5 March 1920; "Victoria Metal Trades Council," Federationist, 27 February 1920; UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 18 February 1920.
162. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 3 March 1920.
163. The VTLC had earlier voted 20–4 in favour of sending delegates, an action opposed by Woodward, but delegates subsequently reversed this decision. Upon learning that the Vancouver Trades & Labor Council (AFL) had voted to pay its per-capita dues and send two delegates, the VTLC voted 12–9 to take the same action, but later decided against sending dues. A requirement that convention delegates belong to unions affiliated with the BCFL limited the number of eligible nominees from Victoria. Only Longshoremen's delegate Varney was elected, and when the VTLC imposed a number of instructions governing his actions, Varney resigned. See UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 4 February, 3 March, 17 March 1920.
164. "BC Federation of Labor Dissolved at Victoria Convention," Federationist, 12 March 1920; Bercuson, Fools and Wise Men, 156–7.
165. UVASC, VLC fonds, Minutes, 21 April 1920; "Another OBU Social Success," Federationist, 7 May 1920. The VTLC rejected overtures from the OBU to jointly organize a 1 May parade protesting the imprisonment of the Winnipeg strike leaders.
|