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The Smelter Poets: The Inspiring Role of Worker Poetry in a BC Labour Newspaper during the" Age of the CIO [Congress of Industrial Organizations]"
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Verzuh, Ron (Author)
Title
The Smelter Poets: The Inspiring Role of Worker Poetry in a BC Labour Newspaper during the" Age of the CIO [Congress of Industrial Organizations]"
Abstract
When celebrated Wobbly troubadour Joe Hill purportedly visited the Rossland Miners’ Hall in the early 1900s to lend his support to the first Canadian local of the rugged Western Federation of Miners (WFM), he no doubt shared some of his inspired verses with the mine workers who are said to have protected him. Claims of his visit are unsubstantiated, but if he did get to Rossland, British Columbia, he likely would have sung them some of his most popular tunes about struggle, resistance, and the dream of a workers’ paradise, and in so doing he would have been performing the same service that poets and songwriters had rendered working people since the earliest days of the trade union movement. This paper explores examples of that historical literary tradition through a study of smelter worker poetry found in the pages of The Commentator, a trade union newspaper published in Trail by Local 480 of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Mine Mill) in the late 1930s and early 1940s as labour activists were striving to rekindle the union spirit at the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada (CM&S Company), then the world’s largest lead and zinc smelter and a key munitions manufacturer during the First and Second World Wars.
Publication
BC Studies: The British Columbian Quarterly
Issue
177
Pages
85–126
Date
2013
Language
English
Short Title
The Smelter Poets
Accessed
4/1/24, 12:53 AM
Citation
Verzuh, R. (2013). The Smelter Poets: The Inspiring Role of Worker Poetry in a BC Labour Newspaper during the" Age of the CIO [Congress of Industrial Organizations]". BC Studies: The British Columbian Quarterly, 177, 85–126. http://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/bcstudies/article/view/183569
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