Origins of Labour Day
the Nine-Hour Movement
In the winter of 1872 in the industrial town of Hamilton, Ontario, the railroad industry was shaken by a widespread workers' strike. This action spread to Toronto, where the Toronto Typographical Union launched a strike action demanding a shorter work week, down to nine hours a day, with Saturday afternoons off. Current demands were up to twelve hours a day, including Saturday. The strikers were offered more money instead of the reduced hours, but they refused. Reduced Saturday hours in particular were non-negotiable. Working men, they stated, needed more time in their lives for family and community. Newspaper owners called them "foolish," and threatened them with arrest as union action was illegal in Canada, but the workers refused to back down.
This initiative came to be called the "Nine Hour Movement," and spread to other industries and regions in Canada, eventually becoming an international phenomenon. American labour organizations paid close to attention to the Canadian strikes, and updated readers in the labour publication The Working Man's Advocate.
The strike had widespread public support. A parade led by the printers' union on April 15 went from King St to Queen's Park featured a marching band, and, along its route, grew to 10,000 people. Newspapaper publishers fought back by bringing in other workers and starting an association of printers opposing the strike. After the parade, police arrested twenty-four workers who were seen as instigators.
The public sentiment was in support of the Unionists, and the arrests sparked more and bigger protests at Queen's Park. The Prime Minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, made the political calculation to back the strikers and passed the Trade Union Act on April 18, 1872.
Like a lot of union action at that time, the strike did not succeed in the short term for the workers. Many of them went back to work with their demands unmet or had to leave Toronto for work elsewhere. It's still recognized as a milestone event as unions were finally legalized, and citizens were inspired to not give up the fight for fair working conditions. Demands continued for a shorter work week and other changes, and workers fighting for fair treatment are inspired to this day by the early days of the labour movement in Canada.
Bibliography:
Global Nonviolent Action Database
Babcock, R. H. (1981). A Note on the Toronto Printers' Strike, 1872. Journal of Canadian Labour Studies, 7, 127-129. Retrieved from http://www.lltjournal.ca/index.php/llt/article/viewFile/2659/3062
Bradburn, J. (n.d.). Printers Demand a Nine-Hour Day. citiesintime@historica-dominion.ca Retrieved from http://citiesintime.ca/toronto/story/printers-dem/
Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation. (2010, July 30). Nine-Hours Movement. Canadian Museum of Civilization, 100 Laurier Street, Gatineau, Quebec.
Marsh, J. (2012). Origins of Labour Day. The Canadian Encyclopedia, Historica Foundation. Retrieved from http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/featured/origins-of-labour-day
Nesbitt, D. (2012, February 16). Toronto Printers Strike. heritagemoments@gmail.com Retrieved from http://heritagemoments.ca/2012/02/16/torontoprintersstrike/
Palmer, B. D. (2012). Nine-Hour Movement. The Canadian Encyclopedia, Historica Foundation.
Making a Difference: Knowledge Activism on a Community Scale
For related content, see this Mayday Mayday video about unions in Canada. Learn about past and recent contributions of the United Steelworkers Union - all pivotal steps of worker knowledge mobilizing prevention progress, beginning with the Elliott Lake Wildcat strike 50 years ago, OHCOW's origins in the 80s, translating the Westray Mine Explosion into the Criminal Code in 2004 and facing the mental health and gender-based violence challenges we now recognize in workplaces today.
SPEAKER:Sylvia Boyce, United Steelworkers Canadian National Office, Health, Safety & Environment Department Leader
Celebrating Labour Day: the holiday Canada gave the world
This article is reposted here with permission from the news archives of the National Union of Public and General Employees.
Welcome to Labour Day, the holiday that is so much a part of our culture that Canadians rarely pause to consider its true purpose and meaning.
Today, Labour Day is often more associated with fairs and festivals, and a last summer weekend at the cottage, than with what it was meant to be - a heartfelt celebration of workers and their families. That's too bad, but perhaps not surprising. In a way, the holiday has become a victim of the labour movement's enduring success in improving the lives of working Canadians. Today we take paid holidays, safe work places, medical care, unemployment insurance, fair hours, union wages and 'the weekend' for granted.
But how many of these advances would have happened if it were not for the long-forgotten heroes who fought so hard to make unions, and Labour Day, a reality in the first place?
Labour Day began in Canada on April 15, 1872, a mere five years after Confederation. On that historic day the Toronto Trades Assembly, the original central labour body in Canada, organized the country's first significant 'workers demonstration.'
'Criminal conspiracy'
At the time trade unions were still illegal, and authorities still tried to repress them, even though laws against "criminal conspiracy" to disrupt trade unions had already been abolished in Britain.
Despite the obstacles, the assembly had emerged as an important force in Toronto. It spoke out on behalf of working people, encouraged union organization and acted as a watchdog when workers were exploited. Occasionally, it also mediated disputes between employers and employees.
By the time the landmark parade was organized in 1872 the assembly had a membership of 27 unions, representing wood workers, builders, carriage makers and metal workers, plus an assortment of other trades ranging from bakers to cigar makers.
One of the prime reasons for organizing the demonstration was to demand the release of 24 leaders of the Toronto Typographical Union (TTU), who had been imprisoned for the "crime" of striking to gain a nine-hour working day.
The event took on a life of its own and was one that authorities could not ignore.
10,000 people throng the street
Held on Thanksgiving Day, which was then observed in the spring, the parade featured throngs of workers and a crowd estimated at 10,000 Torontonians who applauded as the unionists marched proudly through the streets, accompanied by four bands. In speeches that followed, trade union leaders demanded freedom for the TTU prisoners and better conditions for all workers.
It was a defining moment in Canadian labour history, opening the door to the formation of the broader Canadian labour movement over the next decade and sowing the roots of what is now an annual workers' holiday around the world.
The Toronto parade inspired leaders in Ottawa to stage a similar event. A few months later, on September 3, 1872, seven unions in the nation's capital organized a parade more than a mile long, headed by an artillery band and flanked by city fireman.
The Ottawa parade passed the home of Sir John A. MacDonald, the prime minister. He was hoisted into a carriage and taken to City Hall where, by torch light, he made a ringing promise to sweep away "such barbarous laws" as those invoked to imprison the TTU workers in Toronto.
The 'Old Chieftain' kept his word. Before the year was out the hated laws were gone from the statute books in Canada.
TLC formed in 1886
In 1873 the Toronto Trades Assembly called a national convention and set up the first national central organization, the Canadian Labour Union (CLU), which in 1886 became the Trades and Labour Congress of Canada (TLC), which was one of the forerunners of the present Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), now the major national labour organization in Canada.
Labour Day celebrations in the United States began in the 1880s, inspired by the beginnings made in Canada.
Initially, Labour Day was celebrated in the spring but that did not last long. After it was declared a legal holiday by the Parliament of Canada on July 23, 1894, the celebration was moved to the early fall, where it has remained ever since.
Around the world today Labour Day is celebrated at different times. In Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia it is known as "May Day" - or International Workers' Day - and it is celebrated on May 1. In New Zealand, it is held on the fourth Monday in October, and in Australia the date varies from state to state across the country.
But wherever it is celebrated, the purpose remains the same. In the same spirit it began so many years ago, it remains a day that affirms the dignity and honour of working people everywhere.
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