Rise of a Working Class

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Rise of a Working Class
Abstract
The Canadian working class was emerging well before 1867. By Confederation one could say for the first time that the growth of the working class was now unstoppable. The creation of the Dominion of Canada took place precisely at that moment when widespread industrialization was visibly underway. In 1851, fewer than a quarter of Hamilton, Ontario’s workers laboured in workshops of ten or more employees; by 1871 the share was more than 80%.[1] In less than two decades, Hamilton had been transformed from a market town dominated by commerce into a powerful symbol of heavy industry. Significant and startling though this change was at the time, it was dwarfed by developments in the 1890s. In that decade, Canadian economic growth simultaneously intensified in the older cities and found new fields in which to flourish in the West. The population of Canada in 1901 was 5,371,315; ten years later it was 7,206,643 – an increase of 34%. At the same time, however, the labour force grew from 1,899,000 in 1901 to 2,809,000 in 1911, a phenomenal 50% increase.[2] To put this into some perspective, there were only 3,463,000 people in the Dominion in 1867 — by 1911 there were close to that many working, wage-earning Canadians. The working class were motivated and shaped by different factors in the various regions of the country, although common themes were quick to arise. --Introduction
Book Title
Canadian History: Post-Confederation
Place
Vancouver, B.C.
Publisher
B.C. Campus Open Publications
Date
2016
Language
English
Accessed
1/14/22, 4:57 PM
Library Catalog
opentextbc.ca
Extra
Book Title: Canadian History: Post-Confederation Publisher: BCcampus
Citation
Belshaw, J. D. (2016). Rise of a Working Class. In Canadian History: Post-Confederation. B.C. Campus Open Publications. https://opentextbc.ca/postconfederation/chapter/3-4-rise-of-a-working-class/