In the short term, the National Policy was terrible for Canada’s economy as the first thing that it implemented was the completion of the CPR, and that cost a huge amount of money; $25 million in cash, 25 million acres of land, and $37 million in surveys. (Well over $1 billion today due to inflation) It put Canada in a large amount of debt, and the country was almost bankrupt. Then the CPR Syndicate came around, and they had turned the railway around to make a profit of $17 million off of it, and that was just the beginning of the money that was being made from…
In the 1800’s I think the factory systems were bad people got very sick and hurt. They should have changed the working conditions because the factory systems were very bad. In document A the people said They had to work from 5 in the morning to nine or ten at night, and on Saturday's they had to work until 11-12 at night. They were dirty and people got diseases. In document C they said They broke elbows, scraped arms and got beat up. They could not tell the truth about there treatment or they would get in trouble. In conclusion, the factory systems were bad and it was not good for the workers.…
This started causing issues throughout the companies and the skilled workers they had hired. The upper management wanted the power to hire and fire people, but the crews wanted that power because they knew what it took to work and build the tracks. White writes, “Allowed skilled workers to institute their own practices and to a remarkable degree impose them on the companies” (White 2011, 238). It was not surprising that there were company and worker disputes due to the amount of work that companies demanded from the workers. White also discusses that the workers had the upper hand in the disputes because the owners would lose money if the workers stopped working and laying the tracks (White 2011, 239). With the increase of technology it eased tensions between both sides, but it was a victory for the workers because the machines did not have to battle the sun and heat like they did. The owners were just looking for a way to keep even more money rather than having to spend it on machines they could need repair work done after a while unlike a worker who can be…
The working conditions of factories and mines were in appalling conditions. There were a lot of deadly accidents when coal was brought to the surface with buckets. The ropes used to haul the coal were unstable and workers would plunge to their deaths. There were also children workers in the mines who worked in the dark because their families were too poor to provide candles for light.…
Of course, the railway has a particular mystique for Newfoundlanders as well. The line connected the major bays to each other, and the old headland "fishing capitals" to the new towns of the interior. The railway provided substantial employment and created a brotherhood of railwaymen as well as a network of railway families. It also provided the first overland link to the mainland. The saga of the line's construction across the interior and its continued operation in the face of enormous difficulties was a source of national pride in Newfoundland. After Confederation with Canada in 1949 the railway continued as a symbol of Newfoundland's former independence. The construction era figures in our history much as the building of the great trans-continental lines does in the history of Canada and the United States: as both a milestone in the march of progress and an exercise in nation-building.…
Back in the 19th century, the railroad companies started building railwas in the Pacific Northwest region, and it provided opportunities for immigrant to come to the United States and fulfill their own American dreams. The railroad companies’ representatives went to China for the recruitment, and many Chinese were attracted to working in the United States by the hope of bringing affluent back home. Soon, the Chinese came to the United States crew by crew, and the massive Chinese workforce increased the Asian population in the Pacific Northwest in a few years. The immense Chinese workforce became one of the essential human resources for establishing the railroads in the Pacific Northwest, and the railroad companies boosted the region's economy. Despite the fact that the railroad companies raised the economy in the Pacific Northwest, the Chinese labors suffered from financial hardships, health issues, and inequalities when they were doing laborious works .…
The accidents in the factories were horrendous they mainly consisted of people cutting their arms, legs and hands of because of the powerful machinery. When the children fall asleep on the job they usually get their hands caught in the machinery and will never be able to work again. In the rooms it could get very dusty and the dust would get into your lungs which leads to serious breathing problems. The children would have to stand throughout their shifts so if they fell because they were tired they would again get caught in the machinery. According to one hospital that every year they treated nearly a thousand people for wounds and mutilations caused by the machines…
There were unhealthy conditions and air pollution from all the factories. Also, there were unfair and unsafe conditions in factories, which resulted in people having medical problems. For example, in document 1, someone is interviewing a worker from a factory. The worker exclaims that he began working at the age of 10; he worked from five in the morning to nine at night and had one period of 40 minutes in the 16 hours at noon for a meal. Also, he wasn’t educated and could only read, but not write. More examples of bad factory conditions are in document 2, where another factory worker was interviewed about their experience in the factories. The man has damaged lungs, improper leg muscles, and he would die in a year. His doctor says it was caused by dust in the factories, overworking, and an insufficient diet. His brother died from a bad cut from a machine and of infection. The worker also stated that he knows that nearly a dozen children died during the two and a half years that he worked there. These examples show that there were many negative effects of the Industrial…
The biggest plight against the farm workers was that they were taken advantage of from all angles. They continually endured irregular work, terrible working conditions, inhuman living conditions and absurdly low wages. The growers thought that they could continue the status quo because the migrant worker, specifically the Mexican and Filipino, were thought of as passive and unintelligent.1 The farm workers wanted to eradicate their constant subjection to this type of environment so they were forced into a revolutionary stance for that to change.2 They unionized along with other migrant workers in Southern California into the Workers Union of the Imperial Valley.3 How the farm workers thought about themselves change. They went from accepting the horrible conditions; to seeking a life more desirable and this is what would crack the door for the Communist Party to eventually be able to provide the necessary support for the unionizing movement.…
Throughout different places in the world the people that worked as laborers had to go through many harsh conditions that affected their health conditions. The working conditions were not fair at all because if the owners of the…
As said before by many people, the better man in certain situations is the person that learns that they are wrong, are willing to learn from their mistakes, for the sake that they will be able to move on forward from what they learned. The North and the south are like a teacher and student, the North can teach the South as a student how lead the reconstruction era for it to become successful however, its up to the South as the student to see what they think is best. As so the South did act foolish and led to many missed out opportunities for its lands to become successful with allowing the blacks to live as an everyday white person. Now, “the better man is the person who learns from their mistakes” and so that is why I placed the North as the teacher, they learned from their civil war in order to have had been shaped into a great place. Now no side is perfect at this point, with the North agreeing upon the…
African Americans are at an increased risk for undergoing some disciplinary action within the legal system than any other group in the United States. (…
It all began with the Fraser Gold Rush in 1857 and the Cariboo Gold Rush in 1861 (Chan, 14), many foreigners came to strike it rich in Canada. The majority of the miners were of the Chinese race (Chan, 13), much to the dismay of fellow Caucasian miners. Within just two years of the Fraser Gold Rush, the town of Victoria, British Columbia, has grown in population from just 300 to 4461, with the Chinese population at about 1580 (Chan, 15). This issue pertains to rights and laws that are relevant to the everyday life of the many Caucasian individuals, as many felt that the Chinese people were taking over all the jobs and eventually, their town. Anecdotal evidence often provides a deeper look into an issue, in this case, the story of Chin Wong. Chin came to Canada in 1911 at the age of twenty to find a job (The). He returned to China at the age of 40 to get married (The). He married late because he came from a poor background and the five hundred dollar head tax was almost impossible to pay off and put him in great debt (The). He returned to Canada within a year to avoid repaying the head tax and got a job in Whitehorse, Yukon Territory (The). He worked hard and was paid poorly, but at least he was starting to earn his keep (The). In 1947, when he made enough money, he paid one thousand dollars to get his wife and son to come to Canada (The). This was one of the many tales that revealed the hardships and…
I believe that the biggest problem that faced the labor movement in the late nineteenth century was the unsafe working conditions in factories. These factory workers (men, women, and children alike) had to work long hours in poor working conditions, all making very little money. There were not any effective government regulations, so there were unhealthy and hazardous work sites. This led to many people being injured or killed on the job. As America was becoming more and more industrialized, industries merged and factories grew larger, factories got even more dangerous.…
Big companies would force workers to work long days for very little pay. Many immigrants did not know this before going to work for these companies. This would make the company's rich, but the workers were poor. This practice was used by Carnegie. He would work his workers 12 hours a day. He only gave his workers a day off once a year, on July 4th. A lot…