Winnipeg's General Strike: Reports from the Front Lines
An exploration of the impact the media had on the most influential strike in Canadian history. A strike gripped Winnipeg from May 15 to June 26, 1919. Some twenty-five thousand workers walked out, demanding better wages and union recognition. Red-fearing opponents insisted labour radicals were attempting to usurp constitutional authority and replace it with Bolshevism. Newspapers like the "Manitoba Free Press" claimed themselves political victims and warned of Soviet infiltration. Supporters of the general sympathetic strike like the "Toronto Daily Star" maintained that strikers were not Reds; they were workers fighting for their fair rights. What was really happening in Winnipeg? In an information age dominated by newspapers and magazines, the public turned to reporters and editors for answers.
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Winnipeg's General Strike: Reports from the Front Lines
An exploration of the impact the media had on the most influential strike in Canadian history. A strike gripped Winnipeg from May 15 to June 26, 1919. Some twenty-five thousand workers walked out, demanding better wages and union recognition. Red-fearing opponents insisted labour radicals were attempting to usurp constitutional authority and replace it with Bolshevism. Newspapers like the "Manitoba Free Press" claimed themselves political victims and warned of Soviet infiltration. Supporters of the general sympathetic strike like the "Toronto Daily Star" maintained that strikers were not Reds; they were workers fighting for their fair rights. What was really happening in Winnipeg? In an information age dominated by newspapers and magazines, the public turned to reporters and editors for answers.
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Winnipeg's General Strike: Reports from the Front Lines

Winnipeg's General Strike: Reports from the Front Lines

by Michael Dupuis
Winnipeg's General Strike: Reports from the Front Lines

Winnipeg's General Strike: Reports from the Front Lines

by Michael Dupuis

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Overview

An exploration of the impact the media had on the most influential strike in Canadian history. A strike gripped Winnipeg from May 15 to June 26, 1919. Some twenty-five thousand workers walked out, demanding better wages and union recognition. Red-fearing opponents insisted labour radicals were attempting to usurp constitutional authority and replace it with Bolshevism. Newspapers like the "Manitoba Free Press" claimed themselves political victims and warned of Soviet infiltration. Supporters of the general sympathetic strike like the "Toronto Daily Star" maintained that strikers were not Reds; they were workers fighting for their fair rights. What was really happening in Winnipeg? In an information age dominated by newspapers and magazines, the public turned to reporters and editors for answers.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781626193390
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 04/22/2014
Pages: 144
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.31(d)

About the Author

Michael Dupuis is a historian and freelance writer. He earned his master's degree in 1973 from the University of Ottawa for his thesis, The Response of the Toronto Daily Press to the Winnipeg General Strike. He contributes history stories to the Winnipeg Free Press and the Manitoba Historical Society has also published his historical studies through local newspapers. Julie Carl is the deputy editor of the Winnipeg Free Press. She has garnered two National Newspaper Award nominations, two Michener Award citations, several Ontario Newspaper Awards, and three Atlantic Journalism Awards.

Table of Contents

Foreword Julie Carl 7

Preface 9

Acknowledgements 11

Introduction 13

Setting the Scene 19

Chapter 1 A Cloak for Something Far Deeper 33

Chapter 2 Enter the Soldiers 53

Chapter 3 Who Owns the Streets? 68

Chapter 4 Midnight Arrests 92

Chapter 5 There Will Be Blood 101

Chapter 6 Let Us Reason Together 115

Epilogue 129

Notes 131

Bibliography 135

Index 139

About the Author 143

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