Rough Work: Labourers on the Public Works of British North America and Canada, 1842-1882

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Rough Work: Labourers on the Public Works of British North America and Canada, 1842-1882
Abstract
The labourers at the heart of this study built the canals and railways undertaken as public works by the colonial governments of British North America and the federal government of Canada between 1841 and 1882. Ruth Bleasdale's fascinating journey into the little-known lives of these labourers and their families reveals how capital, labour and the state came together to build the transportation infrastructure that linked colonies and united an emerging nation. Combining census and community records, government documents, and newspaper archives Bleasdale elucidates the ways in which successive governments and branches of the state intervened between labour and capital and in labourers' lives. Case studies capture the remarkable diversity across regions and time in a labour force drawn from local and international labour markets. The stories here illuminate the ways in which men and women experienced the emergence of industrial capitalism and the complex ties which bound them to local and transnational communities. Rough Work is an accessibly written yet rigorous study of the galvanization of a major segment of Canada's labour force over four decades of social and economic transformation. --Publisher's description
Series
Canadian social history series
Place
Toronto
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Date
2018
# of Pages
416 pages
Language
English
ISBN
978-1-4875-0248-5 978-1-4875-2199-8
Short Title
Rough Work
Library Catalog
Open WorldCat
Extra
OCLC: 1030277854
Citation
Bleasdale, R. E. (2018). Rough Work: Labourers on the Public Works of British North America and Canada, 1842-1882. University of Toronto Press. https://utorontopress.com/9781487521998/rough-work/