Québec City's Ship Carpenters, 1840 to 1893: Working Class Self-Organization on the Waterfront

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Québec City's Ship Carpenters, 1840 to 1893: Working Class Self-Organization on the Waterfront
Abstract
In the mid-nineteenth century, the construction of wooden sailing vessels became the single most important employer in Québec City. Thousands of people worked as shipwrights in the shipbuilding industry, but ship carpenters were the backbone of the trade. These workers displayed an extraordinary capacity for mobilization, being responsible for some of Canada's earliest labour organizations, starting in 1840 with the Société amicale et bienveillante des charpentiers de vaisseaux de Québec. This study demonstrates that ship carpenters' impressive capacity for organization was the result of the trade's remarkable ethnic homogeneity, as no less than 90% of ship carpenters were French Canadian, and most lived together in the working class suburb of Saint Roch. This homogeneity allowed ship carpenters to avoid the bitter internecine conflict that plagued the early labour movement, and allowed them to become part of the vanguard of the Canadian working class.
Type
M.A., History
University
University of Ottawa
Place
Ottawa
Date
2010
# of Pages
151 pages
Language
English
Extra
ISBN: 9780494662342 OCLC: 775058973
Citation
Mathieu, J.-P. (2010). Québec City’s Ship Carpenters, 1840 to 1893: Working Class Self-Organization on the Waterfront [M.A., History, University of Ottawa]. https://ruor.uottawa.ca/bitstream/10393/28587/1/MR66234.PDF