Mining the Connections: Class, Community, Ethnicity and Gender in Nanaimo, B.C., 1891
Authors
Allen Seager
Adele Perry
Abstract
In British Columbia the 1891 census of Canada coincided with the largest and most
politically consequential strike recorded in the province to that time. The Wellington
strike was a drawn-out dispute over the refusal of one of the most important capitalists
in British Columbia, the Dunsmuir interests on Vancouver Island, to recognize the
Mines and Mine Labourers’ Protective Association. The authors use this combination
of events to examine some aspects of the relationship between industrial growth and
social relations in nineteenth-century Nanaimo. This community, a hitherto obscure
outpost of industry and empire, was being transformed into a place where class,
ethnic/racial, and gender roles took on an appropriate and respectable order.