In authors or contributors

Pigs, Cows, and Boarders: Non-Wage Forms of Survival among Montreal Families, 1861-91

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Pigs, Cows, and Boarders: Non-Wage Forms of Survival among Montreal Families, 1861-91
Abstract
To understand the family economy of the working class in the period of early industrial capitalism it is necessary to go beyond a simple consideration of the sufficiency of wages, to put aside the equation of work with wage labour and to examine other ways in which survival could be enhanced. This paper begins an examination of non-wage-based survival strategies. It focuses on animal raising, gardening, the taking in of boarders and house sharing in mid- to late-nineteenth-century Montreal. These particular survival strategies can be ascertained to some extent from people's responses to the census taker. Analysis of their responses as found in the manuscript schedules of 1861 and 1871 constitutes the core of the paper. Professionals and proprietors were most likely to keep cows, the semi- and unskilled pigs. Pigs were outlawed in this period, while cows remained legal. Gardening, too, was largely eliminated on the narrow, densely built lots of the working class. The outlawing of pigs represents one of a complex of changes that, over the length of a generation, severely curtailed the proletariat's access to means of supplementing their wages and altered the contributions a wife and children could make to the family economy.
Publication
Labour / Le Travail
Volume
14
Pages
9-46
Date
Fall 1984
Journal Abbr
Labour / Le Travail
Language
en
ISSN
07003862
Short Title
Pigs, Cows, and Boarders
Accessed
8/21/15, 1:08 PM
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Bradbury, B. (1984). Pigs, Cows, and Boarders: Non-Wage Forms of Survival among Montreal Families, 1861-91. Labour / Le Travail, 14, 9–46. http://www.lltjournal.ca/index.php/llt/article/view/2615