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Conspiracy in Winnipeg: How the 1919 General Strike Leaders Were Railroaded into Prison and What We Must Do Now to Make Amends

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Conspiracy in Winnipeg: How the 1919 General Strike Leaders Were Railroaded into Prison and What We Must Do Now to Make Amends
Abstract
The strike started 15 May 1919 with the young women working at the telephone system leading the way. By the end of the second day, 35,000 Winnipeg workers, a majority of them unorganized, had left their jobs in an unprecedented demonstration of solidarity in support of fair treatment, dignity and justice for all working people.
Publication
CCPA Review - Labour Notes
Pages
4 pages
Date
March 2006
Citation
Chaboyer, J., & Black, E. (2006). Conspiracy in Winnipeg: How the 1919 General Strike Leaders Were Railroaded into Prison and What We Must Do Now to Make Amends. CCPA Review - Labour Notes, 4 pages. https://www.policyalternatives.ca/sites/default/files/uploads/publications/Manitoba_Pubs/2006/Conspiracy_in_Winnipeg.pdf