Your search
Results 5 resources
-
The objective of this essay is to establish and clarify the dimensions, the character, and the significance of the remarkable labour movement that developed in western Canada in the closing decades of the nineteenth century and flourished during the great boom of the early twentieth century. Within this general purpose are some particular ones: to demonstrate the rapidity of the numerical growth of unionism in the West, to suggest some reasons for it, and to show why western unionists were far more radical and militant than eastern ones. --Introduction
-
Discusses the historical development of Canadian industrial relations and compares Canada's system to the American and English. Originally written in 1972, it summarizes a number of the insights of Pentland's study for the 1968 Woods' Task Force on Industrial Relations.
-
A study of a bitter strike, lasting from January to March 1843, which took place during the construction of Montreal's Lachine Canal. The author argues that the strike, mostly by members of the city's large Irish community, marked the origins of Canada's proletarian class. The author also details the divisions and old-world rivalries which existed within Montreal's Irish community at that time. --Abstract by Brendan O'Donnell, Bibliography on English-Speaking Quebec.
-
First published in 1981, H. Clare Pentland's Labour and Capital in Canada, 1650-1860 is a seminal work that analyzes the shaping of the Canadian working class and the evolution of capitalism in Canada. Pentland's work focuses on the relationship between the availability and nature of labour and the development of industry. From that idea flows an absorbing account that explores patterns of labour, patterns of immigration and the growth of industry. Pentland writes of the massive influx of immigrants to Canada in the 1800s - taciturn highland Scots who eked out a meagre living on subsistence farms; shrewd lowlanders who formed the basis of an emerging business class; skilled English artisans who brought their trades and their politics to the new land; Americans who took to farming; and Irish who came in droves, fleeing the poverty and savagery of an Ireland under the heel of Britain. Labour and Capital in Canada is a classic study of the peoples who built Canada in the first two centuries of European occupation. --Publisher's description
Explore
Resource type
- Book (2)
- Journal Article (3)
Publication year
-
Between 1900 and 1999
(5)
-
Between 1940 and 1949
(1)
- 1948 (1)
-
Between 1960 and 1969
(1)
- 1968 (1)
-
Between 1970 and 1979
(2)
- 1979 (2)
-
Between 1980 and 1989
(1)
- 1981 (1)
-
Between 1940 and 1949
(1)