Worker's History Finds a Home [ontario Worker's Arts and Heritage Centre]
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Heron, Craig (Author)
Title
Worker's History Finds a Home [ontario Worker's Arts and Heritage Centre]
Abstract
Recently the Toronto Star ran a story about a lavish new lakefront housing development in the eastern suburbs of Toronto owned by one of the Bronfman companies. Under the quaint name of “Port Union Village,” the developer is resurrecting the long-forgotten history of a tiny port that had existed on the spot in the nineteenth century in order to sell a myth of rural gentility in the 1990s. What the story failed to explain was that the new houses were rising on the site of the infamous Canadian Johns- Manville Company, where from the 1940s to the 1970s several hundred workers worked with asbestos. By 1980 43 CJM employées were dead of asbestos-related diseases. The company’s long suppression of information about these hazards became a national scandai before it collapsed into bankruptcy beneath a flood of lawsuits. The Star was thus complic- it in suppressing the memory of a significant industrial workplace, of the organized reistance of the men who worked there and the workplace culture that sustained them, and of their life with family and neighbours beyond the factory walls. For the residents of this new suburb, there never was a working-class expérience here (they might start asking questions when they find the asbestos in their backyard gardens).The Ontario Worker’s Arts and Heritage Centre exists so that this kind of historical white-washing and collective amnesia will not continue to take place. --Introduction
Publication
Bulletin of the Canadian Historical Association
Volume
22
Issue
1
Pages
14
Date
1996
Language
English
Accessed
7/17/25, 3:07 PM
Citation
Heron, C. (1996). Worker’s History Finds a Home [ontario Worker’s Arts and Heritage Centre]. Bulletin of the Canadian Historical Association, 22(1), 14. https://depot.erudit.org/id/005428dd
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