האגודה הישראלית לחקר יחסי עבודה

מחקר, הוראה ומדיניות בתחום יחסי העבודה

header header1
  • שרגא ברוש, יו"ר לשכת התאום לארגונים הכלכליים
  • קובי בר-נתן, מ"מ הממונה על השכר במשרד האוצר
  • השופטת ורדה וירט-לבנה, נשיאת בית הדין הארצי לעבודה
  • עו"ד שלמה יצחקי, הממונה הראשי על יחסי עבודה
  • עו"ד אבי ניסנקורן, יו"ר הנהגת ההסתדרות הכללית החדשה

חיפוש מחקרים

Canada : Coal Mountain: Where Women Paid in Blood

[Editor's note: This Labour Day week The Tyee is daily publishing excerpts from Drawn to Change: Graphic Histories of Working-Class Struggle, a new comics-style collection of stirring moments in Canadian

labour history. Today’s offering is from the chapter “Coal Mountain,” written and drawn by Nicole Marie Burton.

In the little, now faded, company town of Corbin near Crowsnest Pass in eastern B.C., coal miners struck for better wages and working conditions during the harsh winter of 1935. The owners refused to yield, eventually bringing in “scab” replacement workers to break the strike. On April 17, when the miners massed to protest, their wives formed the front line of the demonstration. They found themselves facing the broad, sharp blade of a snowplow fronting baton-wielding police. The plow lurched forward, police began beating the women with their riot sticks, and the striking men responded in fury. What ensued, by one account, “wrote a page of unparalleled police brutality in Canadian history.”

Nicole Marie Barton’s graphic history of those times in Corbin is told through the eyes of child named Gracie, based on the recollections of Grace Roe, who spent some of her childhood in the mining town and bore witness to the hard life and tragic events there. The page excerpted here sets the scene.

For more context, farther down, read Simon Fraser University labour historian and trade unionist Ron Verzuh’s essay “Holding the Line in Corbin”. The work of Burton and Verzuh is excerpted with permission by Toronto-based publisher Between the Lines.
]
1200px version of Coal-Mountain.jpg