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The Morning After

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The Morning After Life after WWI – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Morning After


1
The Morning After
  • Life after WWI

2
Learning Goals
  • Understand the economic struggles that led to a
    workers revolt in the Winnipeg General Strike
    (K/U)
  • Understand the agrarian cultivation of land
    discontent of farmers following the war (K/U)

3
Issues at home after WWI
  • Inflation during the war years meant decreased
    real wages
  • Average familys purchasing power was less
  • Increased unemployment as 500,000 veterans
    returned from overseas
  • Prosperity eventually returned by the mid-1920s

4
Winnipeg General Strike (1919)
  • Winnipeg
  • Largest Western City Capital of Saskatchewan

5
The Lead Up
  • Soldiers
  • Lack of govt aid (pension, medical)
  • Few jobs
  • Resented rich employers (factory owners)
  • Workers
  • Poor pay
  • Poor conditions
  • Influenza (Flu) Epidemic
  • Passed along CPR
  • Hit Winnipeg hard
  • Communist Influences
  • Russian Revolution (1919)
  • Workers Unite!
  • No private ownership
  • High Russian Population

6
Workers Rights in 1919
  • No minimum wage
  • British Columbia adopted the Mens Minimum Wage
    Act in 1925, making it the first province to
    legislate a minimum wage for male workers
  • 2012 minimum wage in Ontario is 10.25 and the
    lowest in Canada is 9.00 in the Yukon
  • Low salaries
  • No benefits
  • No collective bargaining

7
Rules of the Workplace (Cigar Factory)
  • 10 hrs make up a day's work
  • No one is allowed to stop work during working
    hours
  • All employees to be search before leaving the
    factory
  • Loud or profane talking strictly prohibited.
  • All employees wasting or dropping tobacco on the
    floor will be fined for each offence.
  • Hair combing not allowed in the factory

8
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12
Winnipeg General Strike
  • Dispute over wages and collective bargaining
    rights in the building and metal trades
  • 35,000 workers belonging to 50 different unions
    left their jobs

13
Citizen Committee of 1000
  • Business leaders, politicians,factory owners
  • Create Special Police Force
  • Arrest strike leaders
  • Fire civic workers
  • Sedition threatening the state
  • By the time the strike ended (six days after
    Bloody Saturday), 7 of the strikes leaders had
    been charged with seditious conspiracy

14
Bloody Saturday (June 21, 1919)
  • Climax of the strike clash between committees
    special police (N.W.M.P.) and strikers
  • Deaths of 2 marchers
  • Injury of 34 others
  • Arrest of another 80

15
Summary of the WGS
  1. Winnipeg in a fragile state, unhappy masses
  2. Workers strike to protest unrest
  3. City grinds to a halt
  4. Citizens Committee of 1000 opposes
  5. Bloody Saturday - violence erupts
  6. Workers return back to work

16
WGS Provocative Question
  • Were the workers justified in their decision to
    strike?

17
Agrarian Discontent
  • Farmers were
  • Concerned about rural depopulation
  • Anxious to see fed. govt do something about
    tariffs
  • Angry at fed. govts refusal to honour its
    promise to exempt farmers songs from
    conscription

18
Effects of agrarian discontent
  • Agrarian discontent led to formation of United
    Farmers of Ontario (UFO) who swept the October
    1919 provincial election in Ontario
  • United Farmers parties formed government in
    Alberta in 1921 and became official opposition in
    other prairie provinces
  • In next session of federal Parliament, several
    western members of the union government joined
    forces with a group of Liberals and created a
    farmers representatives under leadership of
    Thomas A. Crerar (National Progressive Party)

19
vs.
  • Activity
  • If you were a wealthy businessman who wanted to
    make more profits, write your views on the
    Winnipeg General Strike. If you were a worker and
    were not able to afford basic necessities, write
    your views on the Winnipeg General Strike.
  • Who would you vote for in the federal election of
    1921?
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