One hundred years ago
this week on August 2, 1918 Canada saw
it’s first General Strike, a well-planned and highly effective one day protest in Vancouver, British Columbia over the suspected murder of labor
activist and draft opponent Albert
“Ginger” Goodwin. It came during a war year punctuated by several strikes and labor unrest in the key
industries in western Canada including lumbering
and milling, coal mining, and on
the docks. Instead of letting the one day action
come and go authorities and industrial barons colluded to violently suppress it using hundreds of recently de-mobilized soldiers.
Patriotic fervor
was running high in Canada,
particularly in British Columbia, considered the stronghold of the Dominion’s
English speaking Empire Loyalists. Canadian
troops had been fighting in France for
three years and had taken heavy
casualties in some of the worst of
the trench warfare carnage of
the Western Front.
On the other hand decades of pent up labor frustration
was coming to ahead. Many workers bitterly opposed the draft
which they saw as “sending poor men’s
sons to fight a rich man’s war.” Socialism had taken deeper hold on Canadian workers than
their American counter parts south
of the border. Many still took to heart the socialist international idealism of the pre-war period which had laid hopes on preventing war by refusing to allow workers
of one country to be used to kill workers of another. Unfortunately, despite that high minded rhetoric, one by one the
western Social Democratic Parties had
fallen in line behind their national governments. Many western workers bitterly objected to
that and remained opposed to the Great War.
Workers also recognize a strategic
opportunity to use a pressing need
to ramp up war production coupled by a labor
shortage created by the draft and general
mobilization, to press for significant
gains in wages and working conditions. The wave
of strikes, large and small was a natural
outgrowth of these circumstances.
The immediate precipitating cause of the General Strike was the death under highly suspicious circumstances
of Goodwin, a popular union leader
and militant.
Albert "Ginger" Goodwin.
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Goodwin was born in Treeton, England on May 10, 1887. He immigrated to Canada in the early 20th Century and was working as a coal miner at Cumberland on Vancouver
Island by late 1910. In 1912 he
joined the epic strike of the
Cumberland mines that dragged on through the beginning of World War I. The long,
bitter strikes confirmed his working class militancy and lead him to taking a greater leading role as a radical and socialist in the trade union movement. He also entered electoral politics running as an anti-war Socialist Party of Canada candidate in the 1916 provincial elections.
Goodwin’s rise to union leadership was even more impressive. In December 1916 he was elected secretary of the Trailmen and Smelters Union local on Vancouver Island, a part of the historically radical Western Federation of Miners and the
next year he was elected Vice President
British Columbia Federation of Labour. After
the WFM changed its name to the International Union of Mine, Mill, and
Smelt Workers (MMSW) he became President
of District 6 and also of the Trail Trades and Labor Council which
united the industrial union MMSW
with craft unions in the mines and
mills.
He
achieved all of this despite his well-known
anti-war views and encouragement
of draft resistance. At first he did not, however, personally resist the draft in order to
continue his labor work. He duly registered and was granted a medical deferment on the basis of black lung disease from years in the coal mines and rotting teeth. After he led a major strike of Trail Smeltermen
in 1917 Goodwin found his deferment
suddenly canceled and he was called
up for active duty. True to his principles, he fled, living for months in the bush supported by his fellow workers.
On
July 27 while camping in the hills
above Cumberland, Goodwin was discovered by Dominion Police Special Constable Dan Campbell who shot him dead. Campbell claimed
self-defense although Goodwin’s gun
was not fired or found near his body.
When
word reached Vancouver the labor movement there was outraged and assumed that
Goodwin had been systematically hunted
down and murdered. That was probably a good assumption given
that no investigation of the
circumstances of the death was undertaken.
The Vancouver Trades and Labour
Council (VTLC), not a notoriously radical body which
included several relatively conservative
craft unions, voted 171-1 in favor of
calling a one day General Strike in protest. There was also a feeling that an effective
General Strike would demonstrate the
power and solidarity of
Vancouver labor, strengthening the hands of member unions in their upcoming confrontations with employers
over wage and hour issues.
The
strike call included the whole of
British Columbia but with just a few days to organize, participation
outside of Vancouver was spotty. But
in the city with the full support of
virtually all of the city’s unions, the strike was paralyzing, but peaceful.
Employers
and local authorities—and perhaps the provincial
and national governments had enough advance notice of the strike
based on the widely publicized call
to do some organizing of their own.
Someone with excellent connections arranged to rally a large numbers of recently discharged soldiers to protest disruptive strikes in key industries during a period of national
emergency. Labor was portrayed as “stabbing the troops in the back” and as German agents and/or Bolsheviks. Not only were the men worked up into a frenzy, they were provided with automobiles and armed
with clubs and pistols. A detailed plan for a surprise attack on strike headquarters at the Labour
Temple at 411 Dunsmuire Street was drawn up and key mob leaders
were provided with detailed layouts of
the building.
Labor militant and well known Suffragist Helena Gutteridge's eye witness account of the raid on the Labor Temple stoked public outrage.
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The
supposedly spontaneous mob attacked the building on the day of the strike. At least 300 men ransacked the offices of the VTLC.
Twice attempts were made to throw
VTLC Secretary Victor Midgely from
the office window. A female
employee was badly roughed up and
injured when she intervened to prevent it. Midgely and a Longshoreman found in the office—probably acting as an unofficial security
guard—were beaten and forced to kiss the Union Jack. Prominent
labor activist and suffragette
Helena Gutteridge was also at the scene, but was unharmed. Her account of the attack was widely circulated afterwards.
The
ex-soldiers searched the city for
union leaders, arresting or kidnapping several. But the strike was well enough organized that rank
and file members kept the strike in
force in good order with a minimum of violence, though there were several street scuffles between strike flying squads and the soldiers and local police.
The
strike ended as scheduled and most
workers returned to work the next day. Union officers, and strike leaders, however,
found themselves were sacked and blackballed.
Ginger Goodwin's funeral procession in Cumberland, British Columbia, the mining town where he rose to prominence in the labor movement.
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To
show the public that the strike had deep
support of membership of the participating unions and was not foisted on them by a cabal of devious Bolsheviks, the officers of the VTLC and many member unions
resigned en masse then stood for re-election. The vast majority overwhelmingly re-elected.
The
Vancouver General Strike helped set the
table for the much larger and open-ended
Winnipeg General Strike in June of
1919. Vancouver would launch to most substantial sympathy strikes in support
of Winnipeg that year.
In
September of 1919 many leading members and unions of the VTLC bolted the
Canadian Trades Council to help form the new One Big Union of Canada, an avowedly
revolutionary union inspired by the Industrial Workers of the World in the States.
Like the IWW it adopted industrial unionism rather than craft
divisions, although in practice many
old craft locals that joined the OBU continued
to function without much change except for better co-ordination with other crafts in their industries.
A 1919 One Big Union of Canada flyer from 1919 refuting a well orchestrated red baiting campaign.
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The
OBU was supported by the Socialist Party of Canada and by revolutionary syndicalists. It flourished
in western Canada well into the 1920’s but was beset by red busting
harassment from authorities and employers, and sapped by poor internal organization. Member unions began drifting back to the established unions. Eventually it shrank to a few thousand
members, most in the Winnipeg Transit
Workers and merged with the Canadian
Labor Congress in 1956.
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