the interpretive brochure
Transcription
the interpretive brochure
LONDON WORKS: Labouring in the Forest City 1 London Street Railway repair shop, 1907. During London’s period of industrialization, items that were not mass produced in factories were handcrafted by skilled workers. These workers are smithing parts for London’s early streetcars. Courtesy of Western Archives, Western University. 2 Foreword Each year, the Public History Master’s Program at Western University partners with a community cultural or heritage organization. Because public history is how history is understood by and communicated to the public, student opportunities to participate in real world projects are key to our program. We have a long history of collaborating with and learning from Museum London staff, and this year we are extremely pleased to present London Works: Labouring in the Forest City. Guided by museum staff, the ten students researched labour and work in London, selected all artifacts and photographs, wrote the text and brochure, designed the layout, interviewed local workers, produced educational and public programming activities, and publicized the exhibition through social media. Highlighting themes of industrialization, professionalism, and gender, the students have chosen objects that explore the development of factories, women’s and children’s labour at home and in workplace, unions, strikes and unemployment, and medicine, law, and the role of Western in educating professionals. Living in a city which has suffered recent economic decline and struggles to keep young people here, Londoners will find that these historical themes still have relevance today. We hope that Londoners will make connections between the objects on display and their own experiences. From Museum London, we would like to thank Melanie Townsend, Kevin Zacher, Matt Thomas, Ross Bell, Dianne Pearce, Lisa Di Lullo, Robert Ballantine, and former staff Maya Hirschman and Mike Baker. We are indebted to Steve Mavers, Curator of Education, who initiated the project and has generously contributed his time and expertise to make this exhibition both a success and a valuable learning experience. Many others helped us along the way, including Theresa Regnier, Tom Belton, Bev Brereton, and Barry Arnott from Western Archives and Arthur McClelland of the London Room of the London Public Library who assisted our research; the Special Collections of the Hamilton Public Library, London Life Corporate Archives and The Memory Project for use of photographs; Bill Turkel and Devon Elliott from Western University who provided technological assistance; and Susan Ruth, Jay Menard, and Tim Carrie and Brandi Damm of Canadian Auto Workers Local 27, who graciously allowed us to interview them about their experiences highlighted in the accompanying exhibition video. Professor Michelle A. Hamilton 3 McCormick soda biscuits box, late-nineteenth to early twentieth centuries. McCormick biscuit boxes were made of tin before the invention of cardboard. Established in London in 1854, the business produced biscuits and confectionary goods. Its newly built factory in 1914 became iconic in the city and employed thousands of Londoners. Collection of Museum London 4 Factory Work During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, London's widespread industrialization brought significant social change to the City. While factories became larger and increasingly productive over time, not all parts of London’s society benefitted equally from the City’s industrial growth. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, family-run operations produced small quantities of goods for London consumers, but by the 1850s, factories were starting to mass produce goods for the local market. Thomas Carling and John Labatt established breweries in the 1840s, selling to residents and the military garrison. John McClary and his brother Oliver partnered in a tinsmithing business in 1851, selling pots door-to-door. Catering to London’s sweet tooth, Thomas McCormick started a small cookie and candy shop in 1854, and Daniel Perrin did the same in 1863. The oil industry experienced a spectacular boom and bust in this early period. Oil discovered in Lambton County (just west of London) brought a large wave of oil refiners to London East, led by William Spencer and Herman Waterman, who set up the first refineries in 1863. Attracted by the oil boom, hundreds flocked to London East, but overproduction and economic depression resulted in a market crash by the end of the 1870s. The coming of the railway and electrification marked the next stage in London’s industrial growth. Although the City’s first train brought change in 1853, it was not until 1882, when the Grand Trunk Railway was established, that industries really expanded. The Grand Trunk connected most of Southern Ontario and parts of the U.S.A., opening new markets for goods manufactured in London. The Canadian Pacific Railway expanded into London in 1887, allowing London’s growing factories to ship their products from Vancouver to Halifax. The introduction of electricity to London was also significant. The first electric companies emerged in the 1880s, but high prices limited its adoption. Cheap electricity became widely available in 1910, when London connected to the Niagara hydro system. Industries were eager to transition, and electric power quickly had factories producing more for less. However, with lower costs, increased production capabilities, and access to wider markets, larger-scale manufacturers edged out or absorbed many smaller local businesses. McCormick, for example, had great success, building its large state-ofthe-art factory in 1914 and absorbing its rival the Canadian Biscuit Company 5 (formerly D.S. Perrin & Co.), in 1926. In 1914, Carling’s four-acre factory was also testament to its success, but prohibition and wartime restrictions caused a decrease in the demand for beer. Carling was acquired by Canadian Breweries Ltd. in 1930 and its operations later moved to Waterloo. In contrast, Labatt Breweries weathered prohibition and wartime restrictions with good management and marketing strategies, and achieved significant growth after becoming a publically traded company in 1945. London’s cigar-making industry, started by German immigrants in the 1860s, also profited from industrialization. By the 1880s the railroad allowed London factories to meet Canada’s demand for tobacco. In the 1910s cigar making was London’s largest industry, with more than twenty manufacturers employing two thousand workers in factories, producing eighty million cigars a year. Even the oil industry that had declined in the 1870s saw amazing growth in the twentieth century. In 1923, John Gordon Thompson and J.D. Good established their first gas service centre at 326 Dundas Street. Later called Supertest Petroleum Co. Ltd., it sourced its oil from regional operations. By 1936, Supertest had grown to own and operate 342 service stations in Ontario and Quebec. Some of London’s businesses experienced international growth during this period. By 1925, the McClary Manufacturing Company was producing stoves and house wares for distribution all around the world, shipping items to England, Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand. Labatt also gained international recognition for the quality of its India Pale Ale. Following London’s far-reaching growth and industrial success, American investment came north. The early twentieth century saw big American names in hosiery, such as Penman and Holeproof, establishing their Canadian headquarters in London. The McClary Manufacturing Company gained fame for the stoves and house wares it made. This 1920s oil heater burned kerosene from a tank, making it easy to move around the house. Collection of Museum London 6 However, despite the impressive growth of many of these manufacturers, some smaller family-run operations continued to service more local needs. Established in 1906, W. A. Jenkins’s Royal Purple brand sold food additives and medicines for livestock, serving the needs of farmers across Southwestern Ontario. Smaller yet, the Miller Bros. Tinsmithing shop, established in 1919, made handcrafted building materials, pots, and accessories for London’s local residents. The industrialization of London brought economic success to the City, but also caused social unrest. The new factories hired thousands of workers, many of them from the countryside, who had come to London looking for steady and wellpaying jobs. However, the reality was that factories offered low wages, demanded long hours, and exposed workers to dangerous machinery. As a result, many industrial workers decided to organize themselves through labour unions. These kinds of activities were illegal until 1872, but this did not stop London's workers. In the 1850s, the first local labour unions appeared with This 1898 edition of The Industrial Banner, Canada’s longest running union publication, celebrates the victory of a London Street Railway workers strike. Courtesy of Western Archives, Western University 7 Child workers outside Tuckett Tobacco Company, Hamilton, Ontario, c. 1900. Children were employed in many early factories. Photo courtesy of Local History & Archives, Hamilton Public Library. 8 the establishment of the Iron Moulders Union and the Typographical Union. Over the next several decades dozens more appeared, including international groups such as the Cigar Makers’ International Union, the Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor, and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen. Primarily, these organizations aimed to increase workers’ pay, reduce their twelve to fifteen hour work days to eight or nine, and advocated for safety in the industrial workplace. Many also advocated for the establishment of social protection in the case of sickness, accident, unemployment, or even death. The wives, daughters, sisters, and mothers of unionized workers often organized ladies’ auxiliaries to promote the welfare of workers and their families. However, these women were not workers. Local labour unions did not generally admit working women, even if they represented a large portion of the industrial force. Towards the end of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth century hundreds of women worked in factories, particularly in the biscuitmaking and textile industries. Even if they were paid lower wages than men, women still came in large numbers to London to contribute to their families or support their independence. Children often worked alongside women as unskilled labour, but were paid far less than their adult coworkers. In factories, they were favoured for their small hands and ability to reach places in the machinery, which adults could not. It was not until 1921 that laws made it illegal to employ children under the age of fourteen. The adoption of electricity and the coming of the railroad helped small-scale manufacturers increase production and find new markets. Industries succeeded, merged, and fell as manufacturers adapted to the many changes witnessed during industrialization. In this historical period, London’s workers also fought for fairness in their workplace and society. Today, conditions in the workplace have improved, but London’s industries and workers continue to adapt to the new challenge of globalization. William Ward and Co. employees in front of the factory, 64 Dundas Street, c. 1905. Collection of Museum London A large number of cigar workers were women. By 1901, the provincial ratio was one women for every two men, and of the 1800 cigar and cigarette makers in Ontario that year, 40% worked in London. 9 Some members of the classes of 1906, 1907 and 1908 with Dr. Hadley Williams (wearing the felt hat) on the front steps of the medical school, York and Waterloo Streets. Courtesy of Western Archives, Western University 10 Professional Work Workers in the upper classes were represented by a variety of professions, including politicians, lawyers, doctors, and insurance agents. The commercial success of London’s businesses and relative affluence made it a hub for insurance, medicine, and law in Ontario. The establishment of Western University in 1878 also meant that Londoners could be educated for professional careers and remain in the city to practice. The lifestyles and privileged positions of the professional class were often supported through the labour of the working class. Henry Corry Rowley Becher was a notable lawyer who studied and practiced in the City. Becher and his family immigrated to Canada from the United Kingdom in 1835 and quickly became one of the most distinguished families in Middlesex County. Henry C. R. Becher was a prominent jury lawyer, working with important clients such as the Great Western Railway. He also attempted a political career but his ambitions were thwarted when local newspapers criticized the management of the ball he held to honour the Prince of Wales during his royal visit in 1860. Despite this, his success in the legal field resulted in the Bechers becoming one of the most well-known and wealthy London families. H.C. R. Becher’s grandson, Henry, trained in law under his father and grandfather, and left an even deeper mark on the City as mayor in 1885. Because of the Western Law School which opened in 1881, London saw the start of the careers of many other prominent lawyers. Notably, the first male and female Indigenous lawyers in Canada graduated from Western; Norman Lickers attended the university in the late 1930s, and Roberta Jamieson in the 1970s. Both became very well known for their contributions to First Nations rights and Canadian law. London and Western also hold a reputation for medical and scientific advancements, such as Dr. Frederick Banting’s work in the discovery of insulin as a treatment for diabetes. Trained as an orthopedic doctor, Banting was teaching a lecture on the pancreas at Western’s medical school in October of 1921, a topic he knew little about. After researching for his lecture, he awoke suddenly one night with the idea for insulin to treat diabetes. The development of insulin took place at the University of Toronto, but he always accredited his idea to living and working in London. This development changed the face of diabetes. Another famous doctor, Dr. Carol Whitlow Buck, graduated from Western’s medical school in 1947. Living in London until her death in 2004, she practiced medicine at a time when men dominated the profession. She became the first woman to obtain a full professorship at Western in 1962 and became the Department Head of Community Medicine in 1967. 11 Medical advancements also extended into the realm of psychiatric medicine. Dr Richard Maurice Bucke grew up in London and became the superintendent of the London Asylum for the Insane from 1877-1902. While some of his methods were controversial, he instigated many changes to the treatment of mental health patients, such as eliminating the use of alcohol. He also reduced the practice of restraint treatment for the mentally insane and encouraged patients to work at the hospital, developing the concept of occupational therapy. The insurance industry continues to be an important source of employment in London today. Historically, executives and agents of insurance companies, such as insurance agents J.H. Warburton and G.M. Gunn, both of whom owned their own business, were part of the elite class that enjoyed the luxurious lifestyle of London’s professionals. Among the dozens of successful agencies in the City, the London Life Insurance Company, created in 1874, rapidly grew into one of the most lucrative insurance businesses in Canada. With its expansion in the early 1900s, it became a national employer, operating numerous well-known companies across the country, such as Great-West Life Insurance and Canada Life Insurance. Both the Carling and Labatt families started breweries in London during the nineteenth century, accumulating great wealth and high standing in politics and society. The Labatt family not only contributed to the local economy through its brewing operations and mass employment of Londoners, but also made philanthropic donations to the community. Their charitable recipients included the London Asylum for the Insane and Western University. Also a large employer in the City, Carling has been a prominent London name since 1818. John Carling (1828-1911) held a number of impressive positions, such as director of the Great Western Railway in the 1870s, Canadian Minister of Agriculture (1885-1892), and cabinet member under Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald in the 1890s. Dr. Carol Whitlow Buck, ca. 1950s Courtesy of Western Archives, Western University 12 London also has a rich military history and high ranking members were often included in London’s elite. In the 1830s, London became an imperial military post which helped develop the economy of the town, employing nearly half its population. Over the 19th century, there continued to be a strong military presence in London, centred around the Wolseley Barracks which were built in the 1880s just outside of the city. The Infantry School Corps opened at the Barracks in the 1880s, later becoming the Royal Canadian Regiment. London has also been the home to the 1st and 2nd Battalions, the Regimental Headquarters, and is home to the 4th Battalion today. The Royal Canadian Regiment participated in both World Wars, and was awarded a Victoria Cross in WWI, and twenty-eight battle honours for its participation in WWII. With its headquarters located in London, the RCR employed both young soldiers and older colonels during wartime. The role of the military in London still exists today since the company General Dynamics Land Systems is the primary producer of the Generation III Light Armoured Vehicle (LAV), the main mechanized infantry of the Canadian Army. Executive members outside the London Life Insurance Company, 1926. Courtesy of London-Life Corporate Archives 13 People playing croquet at London Asylum for the Insane c. 1900. Cairncross Collection, Courtesy of the London Public Library 14 Outside of the workplace, wealthy families participated in a number of associations and activities only available to the upper class. To showcase their status, the elite population followed certain dress codes. Rich women wore lavish dresses with tight corsets, elaborate brooches, and hats and hatpins. Male fashion included three-piece suits and high-collared shirts, adorned with a gold pocket-watch, cufflinks and a hat crafted and custom-made for the owner. Once dressed, London’s gentlemen gathered at places such as the London Club Association and the London Hunt Club, which were private and only accessible to the upper class. Most prominent men desired to be members of private clubs, but only those nominated by existing members could join. The exclusive nature of these clubs perpetuated the status and division of the elite. Private clubs also provided opportunities for the upper class to participate in sport and leisure activities only they could afford because of their abundance of money and free time. Elite pastimes included croquet, lawn bowling, cricket, golf and hunting. These activities were accompanied by expensive vices such as smoking cigars and drinking fancy liquors from lavish decanters. London’s professional class influenced the growth of London in the past and laid the groundwork for the City as it is today. Professional employment and education, previously exclusive to the wealthy and elite population, are now open to a broader range of backgrounds and social classes. Unidentified London woman, circa 1884-1885. Photo by Frank Cooper. Courtesy of the London Public Library 15 Girls at Covent Garden Market, London, Ontario, 1912. Collection of Museum London 16 Women’s Work Labour is typically regarded as paid work outside the home in factories, businesses, or trades, but the unpaid work done by women inside and outside of the home has played an important role in London’s development. Women in London have raised children, prepared food, cleaned, made clothing, and acted as domestic workers for other families. Due to their shared duties and responsibilities, women tended to congregate in areas of the city where they would socialize while buying groceries or running errands. After its opening in 1835, Covent Garden Market in London became a hub of social activity and labour interactions for women performing duties for their families, and remained so into the mid-twentieth century. Carrie Laird, a young London girl, often referred to her trips to the market in her diary: “Saturday, April 2, 1887, Fine day. Lizzie and Ma went to market after dinner as we had an early dinner. Not many eggs, not nearly as many as last Saturday. Paid 12 ½ c. Got eggs for Easter…” Diaries of Carrie Laird, Courtesy of Western Archives, Western University The long list of household duties performed by women included keeping their families fed, dressed and clean. These roles were not only for wives and mothers; daughters played an important part in the family economy. Knowing how to properly manage a homemade young women more desirable as future wives; therefore, young women before marriage were expected to earn wages and contribute to the running of their family home in preparation for their future husbands. This work involved taking care of siblings and parents when necessary, quilting, running errands, cleaning, and sewing clothing. Carrie Laird describes her typical day: “February 10, 1887, Pa in bed all day but feeling better. His heart not trouble him at all. A story, ‘Little Lord Fauntleroy’ by Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett started in Guardian today. Swept and dusted hall, kitchen, and my room. Finished crocheting for bottom of apron but never touched crazy work today.” Diaries of Carrie Laird, Courtesy of Western Archives, Western University In London, as in other urban centres, many women worked as dressmakers or teachers. This work was often seen as temporary employment; married women who continued to work outside of the home aroused the suspicion that their husband could not fulfill his role as breadwinner. Ada Read, a London dressmaker, 17 worked only until a few months before her marriage to Rowland Hill, a prominent London shoemaker. “April 22, 1893, This has been Ada’s last day at the dress-making business. For the most part of the next ten weeks she will be at home helping and being helped by her mother.” Diaries of Rowland Hill, Courtesy of Western University, Archives and Research Collections Centre Gasoline-fired Iron. Collection of Museum London Not all women were allowed the luxury of leaving work to prepare their ideal home, rather, most working class women and young female immigrants had to enter domestic service as an employment option. Middle and upper class families in London were able to afford to pay for domestic help, and these workers assisted with the heavy burden of household duties. This type of employment saw an increase after 1871, when the province of Ontario began to implement attendance regulations at school. Wives and mothers gradually lost the help of their young children in carrying out everyday tasks and had to turn to hired domestic help in order to make sure all household errands could be completed. Luckily, an increase in disposable income due to industrialization and union bargaining made this possible without stretching household budgets too far. The daily work of a domestic servant was not easy; before the introduction of electricity into homes, all labour was primarily manual. From lifting a heavy gasoline-fired iron to beating a rug, work in the house required a strong arm. Clothes were washed by hand and butter was made from cream using a handcranked churn. This work had to be completed along with basic cleaning tasks and preparing meals for the family. Despite the difficulties associated with domestic service, it remained a popular form of employment into the twentieth century. In 1901, 38% of all women in Canada with paid jobs were domestic servants. As businesses continued to grow and factories developed in London, domestic service work continued to attract more women than the manufacturing sector, particularly among recent immigrants. Early Electric Toaster. Collection of Museum London Expansion of the manufacturing industry during the first fifty years of the twentieth century greatly changed the economic structure of London. More women, including recent immigrants, were able to choose their employment. With the sudden flow of men from Canada to Europe during the First World War, many workplaces previously closed to women suddenly opened up to them. Interest in domestic service declined as job opportunities in factories, offices, or shops became acceptable options for women. This change in the workforce meant that many women found themselves taking on the role of an unpaid housewife as time progressed. The introduction of electricity into the home beginning in the 1920s changed the daily lives of housewives. Inventions such as the electric toaster made simple 18 FURTHER READING Baker, Michael and Hilary Bates Neary. 100 Fascinating Londoners. James Lorimer & Company Ltd Publishers, Toronto, 2005. Baker, Michael, ed. Downtown London: Layers of Time. London: The City of London and London Regional Art and Historical Museums, 2000. Campbell, Cl. T. MD. Pioneer Days in London: Some account of men and things in London before it became a city. Advertiser Job Printing Company, London, Canada, 1921. Gidney, R.D. and W.P.J. Millar. Professional Gentlemen: The Professions in Nineteenth Century Ontario. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1994. Hydro Display, 1915 Labour Day Parade. Courtesy of Western Archives, Western University tasks much easier and altered the nature of housework. Over the course of the century women gained access to electric appliances such as sewing machines, refrigerators, automatic washing machines, vacuum cleaners, and heaters. While earlier versions of these products had existed since the nineteenth century, the updated electric versions cut down the amount of time and labour that women devoted to household tasks. For example, electric refrigerators kept food fresh longer than old fashioned ice boxes; this meant that grocery shopping could be done less frequently, resulting in saved time and money. This change made it easier for women to manage their household and family at the same time without having to rely on hired help. The excitement over the introduction of electricity into the home caused a flurry of advertisements aimed towards women. Women were encouraged to “Cook by Hydro” and purchase the latest appliances. Realizing the significant role that women played in family purchases, companies targeted female consumers with eye-catching ads and snappy slogans. Advertisements aimed towards upper class women included luxury goods that they could easily afford. For middle class women, companies promoted practical items for everyday use that would lighten their workload. By the middle of the twentieth century women had abandoned their carpet sweepers for vacuums, their washing boards for electric washing machines, and hand-cranked egg-beaters for electric mixers. Giles, Wenona and Sedaf Arat-Koç, ed. Maid in the Market: Women’s Paid Domestic Labour. Halifax: Fernwood Publishing, 1994. Janovicek, Nancy and Joy Parr, ed. Histories of Canadian Children and Youth. Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press, 2003. Morton, Desmond. Working People: An Illustrated History of the Canadian Labour Movement, 4th Ed. Montreal: McGillQueen’s Press, 1999. Noon, Alan. East of Adelaide: Photographs of commercial, industrial, and workingclass urban Ontario 1905-1930. London: Shelby Young Printing, 1989. Tilly, Louise A. and Joan W. Scott. Women, Work, and Family. New York: Holt Rhinehard and Winston, 1978. 19 Credits LONDON WORKS: Labouring in the Forest City February 23 - September 22, 2013 Museum London Guest Curators Jesika Arseneau Raiza Báez Calderón Vanessa Dal Bello Jasmine Fong Erica Gagnon Charlotte Hall-Coates Paulina Johnson Shane Pacey Jenifer Sguigna Caileen Weitz Director of MA Public History Program, Western University Michelle A. Hamilton, PhD Curatorial Coordinator Steve Mavers, Curator of Education Designer Robert Ballantine We gratefully acknowledge the support of the George Cedric Metcalf Charitable Foundation. Cover: Hosiery mill, 1914. Women represented the majority of the workforce in London’s textile industry, tied as it was to their traditionally domestic roles. The mechanical circular knitting machines these women are using made tubular items, like socks and stockings. Courtesy of Western Archives, Western University. ISBN: 978-1-897215-40-1 421 Ridout Street North, London, Ontario 519.661.0333 • museumlondon.ca 20