08) WHO REALLY BUILT THE
RIDEAU CANAL?
(The following
article is from the May 1-15, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's
leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
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"Labourers on the
Rideau Canal,
1826-1832: From Work Site to World Heritage Site," ed. Katherine M.J.
McKenna, 2008, Borealis Press, Ottawa, 135 pages, illustrations and
footnotes, $19.95, ISBN 978-0-88887-355-2
Review by Kimball
Cariou
Social justice activist Kevin Dooley
is a tireless advocate for the historical memory of the working class,
in particular Irish workers who crossed the Atlantic to North America
during the 19th century. After moving to Ottawa several years ago,
Dooley became deeply involved in efforts to commemorate the Irish-born
workers who played a major role in building the Rideau Canal, many
losing their lives on the job.
Thanks in
part to Dooley's
persistence, a new book provides insight into this story of bitter hard
work and tragedies. Labourers on the Rideau Canal is a slender academic
volume, but the two main essays in the book pack a powerful punch.
Death on the
job is a constant
reality for Canadian workers. Here in British Columbia, an estimated
700 Chinese labourers died building the 350 miles of CPR railway
connecting the west coast to the rest of Canada. When the Second
Narrows bridge in Vancouver collapsed during construction in 1958 due
to an engineering mistake, 18 workers were killed.
Similarly,
today's users of the
picturesque Rideau Canal, stretching 202 kms. from Ottawa to Kingston,
should remember that an estimated 1,000 workers died in the
construction of this engineering marvel. Conceived as a safe supply
route for the British in the event of war with the U.S., the Canal
proved a far more difficult and expensive project than originally
planned.
The first
essay, "Poverty,
Distress and Disease: Labour and the Construction of the Rideau Canal,
1826-32," by William N.T. Wylie, gives the reader a graphic explanation
of the problems faced by planners and builders. For much of its length,
the Canal took advantage of the rivers and lakes used as a
transportation system by Aboriginal peoples and then by European
colonizers. But at the narrow "Isthmus" between Rideau Lake and Mud
(now Newboro) Lake, extensive blasting was required to remove rocks
which turned were far more extensive than first believed. The Isthmus,
site of today's village of Newboro, was perhaps the worst scene of
disaster for canal labourers, many of whom perished in blasting
accidents or from malaria.
Wylie gives
a fascinating
account of the anti-Irish racism of the British authorities, the use of
the military to put down protests related to low pay and poor working
conditions, and the struggles between colonial authorities and corrupt
contractors over funds for the project.
The essay
examines the
demographics of the workforce, which consisted mainly of Irish migrants
(many from the northern Protestant areas) and French Canadians. Not
surprisingly, the colonial government and contractors did their best to
pit workers of different origins against each other, a tactic often
used by bosses in the succeeding two centuries.
Katherine
McKenna's essay,
"Working Life at the Isthmus, Rideau Canal, 1827-1831" focuses more
sharply on this particular location. Her equally interesting account
gives many details of the dangerous construction process, and of the
daily lives of the labourers and their families.
The book
also includes an
article by Bruce Elliott on "Tracing Your Rideau Canal Ancestors," with
useful suggestions on important historical resources.
Not least,
the volume features
over a dozen colour reprints of historic drawings and paintings from
the era, bringing to life the vivid text of the authors.
Labourers on
the Rideau Canal is
a well-written and superbly researched account of this important
episode in Canadian history, a fitting response to the bourgeois tale
of Lieutenant-Colonel John By, who supposedly "built" Ottawa and the
Canal. Readers should ask local independent bookstores and libraries to
order copies.