Saturday, 7 December 2013

1906 - Hamilton Street Railway Strike



In August of 1906, the Hamilton Street Railway Company and the union representing its motormen and conductors were locked in a bitter dispute over wages and working conditions. Finally, negotiations broke down completely and the matter went to arbitration.
The arbitration award was mainly in favour of higher wages and shorter shifts.
At first, the company seemed to accept the ruling, but as time wore on, the new schedules reflecting the ruling did not appear. The HSR claimed that there were not enough men on staff to institute shorter hours. However, they would not hire any more men.
Matters went from bad to worse until finally on November 4, 1906, the Street Railwaymen’s Union, 180 strong, walked off the job and the strike was on.
Generally, public sympathy was with the workers. The service provided by the Hamilton Street Railway Company had gradually deteriorated while at the same time the company was maneuvering for even higher profits through renegotiation of its agreement with the municipal government.
The Spectator noted in an editorial that the company “has antagonized the people of Hamilton by long neglect of its duty as carrier of passengers. I has allowed its rolling stock and track to run down : its service has been abominable : its anxiety to please the public invisible.”
The company’s reaction to the strike was to be as tough as possible. The men were each notified that their services were no longer required and that when they turned in their badges and their hats, their wages would be available. Plans to import strike breakers to operate the cars were put into effect.
Manager    Green was interviewed by a Spectator reporter and was quoted as saying :
“We are going to fight and we are going to fight that union to the finish, even if it takes two or twenty years. The men discharged themselves, and their money is here when they call for it. They are no longer employees of ours, and we are finished with them forever. Our cars will be operated by non-union men, and we will never again be operated by these union men.”
As the strike entered its third week, people all over the city wore “WE Walk” buttons and attended parades and benefits organized to support the workers’ cause.
The cars, operated by strike-breakers, began to run during the day but were seldom used. Most cars had private detectives aboard to help the scab motormen if any trouble arose. Nothing serious happened although the public’s attitude towards the strike-breakers was evident in the stones and bricks which were occasionally thrown at the passing cars.
The expression of hostility toward the Hamilton Street Railway Company and its strike-breakers gradually escalated until, after a few outbreaks of violence, the police declared their inability to control the situation.
Citing lack of manpower, Police Chief Alexander Smith warned Hamilton Mayor   Biggar that outside reinforcements might be necessary if the situation deteriorated any further.
By Friday, November 28, 1906, the situation had indeed deteriorated further, much further. The Street Railway officials decided to not only run its street cars during the daylight hours, but would also reinstate the evening schedules. This action was seen both by the union and the public generally as a direct provocation, worthy of an equally direct response.
The union men were ordered to continue to act peaceably and to cause no trouble, which they proceeded to do. The public, through the newspapers especially, was urged to stay calm and keep the peace.
However, tensions were high, and when the first evening street car was sent out, the scene was set for unrest.
Many claimed that the strike-breakers set off the trouble themselves by kicking out the windows of their cars in order to incite the hostile crowd which had gathered to watch the confrontation. Although it was debatable as to who started the trouble, the problem soon got out of hand, leading to events which would later be called “Hamilton’s disgrace.”
The derisive jeering of the crowd and the occasional hurled brick soon descended into complete lawlessness among the crowd.  
A Spectator reporter on the scene described it as follows :
 “ It was a mob gone wild or mad – the ascendancy, complete and unshackled, of the primeval spirit of depredation and ferocity over the more temperate spirit of good citizenship caused by law and order. That it was the rough element that caused all the trouble there can be no doubt, but that hundreds of peaceably inclined citizens became infected with the general spirit of lawlessness reigning and took a hand in the game, there also can be no doubt. The restrictions of law and order were set at naught, and a scene of turmoil, lawlessness, riot and disorder reigned, such as was never seen before in this city.”
The crowds were particularly large on James Street North between Gore Park and the Hamilton Street Railway Company’s offices at James and Gore streets.
As a car tried to go through the crowd, “glass fell on the street, the sounds of broken glass could be heard for blocks away, while the dull biff of stones on the car sides made many shutter.”
The police, under the direction of Sergeant-Major Prentice, would form in a double line to guide each car through the crowd, while ducking the dozens of stones and bricks thrown their way.
By 8:30, the situation was getting out of hand. The last car on the night schedule was spotted coming from the north on James street :
          “The crowd gave vent to one shriek, and then waited in deathly stillness for the car to come.”
Expecting a warm reception, strike-breaker R. G. McVeary, opened the throttle and dashed the car forward at top speed through a shower of stones and other missiles. Holding his arm over his face, McVeary managed to escape injury and was awarded $25 by his fellow strike breakers for his bravery.
While there was a lot of action downtown, another storm centre was brewing on Hunter street where the strike breakers were boarding. A large, angry crowd formed outside the boarding house, and since most of the police force were downtown, those left were unable to cope with the disturbance.
After a prolonged series of derisive shouts and epithets, a hail of stones and bricks hit the house, breaking most of the windows :
          “The vicious temper of the mob was apparent and those who merely looked on saw a repetition of the great mobs of the French revolution. The strike-breakers’ door was broken down by a pine log wielded by strong hands, but the police gathered in sufficient numbers to stem the tide.”
Some young boys were being particularly troublesome and when Constable Yaxley tried to arrest one of them, the crowd turned on him. The policeman was pelted with stones, roughly pushed about and his revolver was taken away. As the police retreated, shots were fired in the air punctuating the mob’s ascendancy at this point.
After the company stopped sending out its cars, the downtown crowd turned its fury on businesses which were felt to be sympathetic to the company’s management. The Stanley Mills department store was a notable target, suffering the loss of most of its large plate glass display windows.
Most of the crowd gradually dispersed by 10:30, but a hard core group chose to continue the lawlessness. At 12:30 a.m., some strike-breakers tried to leave from the Sanford avenue barns for home. The crowd smashed every street light in the area and the scabs had to literally fight their way through the mob. Some shots were fired, but there were no serious injuries. The night’s rioting was capped off by the explosion of a stick of dynamite on the roof of the Sanford avenue barns.
The rioting over the evening had prompted Mayor Biggar to call for the militia to help control the disturbances. The call was placed at 9 p.m., the troops arrived at the Stuart street station on a special train at 1:30 a.m. By that time, the streets from the station to the armories were virtually disserted. At the armories, the troops were met by many local political and military leaders to discuss strategy.
An editorial calling for “peace and order,” appeared in the following morning’s Spectator and it read in part :
“Violence, bloodshed, the destruction of property must be prevented at any cost. That is the first duty of a civilized community. Nothing must be permitted to go before peace and order. The city of Hamilton must be made safe for life, limb and property, no matter what cause – what organization suffers.”
By 3 o’clock in the afternoon, the soldiers made their first appearance on the streets. The soldiers were seen as being present to protect the strike-breakers. Many citizens shouted at them, calling them ‘scabs’ and, in one case, ‘wizened-up wieners.”
The soldiers were stationed at every switch-point on the system, to protect with fixed bayonets, the switches from being tampered with. At 7 p.m., the dusk was falling and large crowds gathered downtown to await the action they were sure was to unfold.
At 7:15, Mayor Biggar, fully aware of the crowd’s hostility and the Company’s determination to run its cars, made his decision.. He would order Sheriff Middleton read the Riot Act.
Accompanied by some aldermen and other city officials, Mayor Biggar and Sheriff Middleton appeared on the steps of City Hall, surrounded by a phalanx of policemen.
As the Riot Act was being read, the sheriff ‘s voice could not be heard above the din. As the sheriff concluded his reading of the act with the phrase, “God Save the King,” the police immediately dove into the crowd, batons flailing.
Within seconds, over 100 people, men and women alike, were lying in front of the city hall, either assaulted by the police or knocked over as the crowd retreated. The city hall was turned into a temporary hospital as over 50 people had suffered severe head wounds.
The police assault continued as people were chased up Merrick, Rebecca, King William and York streets, as well as up any alleys between those streets.
As the police rushed up the sidewalks, the militia, on horseback, would follow with swords drawn, driving away any not cleared by the first police line. After the cavalry charge, the infantry would follow. With fixed bayonets, the soldiers would poke the rear ends of those citizens still reluctant to move.
The actions of the soldiers were generally more restrained and disciplined than those of the Hamilton police. The Herald denounced the local police force as follows :
“The conduct of the uniformed constables stirred up more feelings of anarchy and lawlessness than ever the actions of the Cataract Power Company. Though technically they were right, and had the law on their side, the conduct was viewed by some citizens as being brutal. Staid citizens, who hold law and order dear, and who have always given the police every support, denounced them in unsparing terms.”
In their efforts to clear the streets, the police followed the retreating crowds into stores. At McDonald Cigar store, a squad of police went in and threw everybody out of the store, while another squad waited outside and clubbed those thrown out.
A large crowd took shelter in the Arcade building. When police tried to evict one man, he pleaded that he was the caretaker and lived there. “Don’t give a damn,” the policeman replied,  “get out of here,”
An employee of the Herald tried to cross the street to get a late supper at a nearby restaurant. A brawny cop approached him, ordering him to “Get on, get on.” When the newspaperman explained that he was just going out for a meal, the policeman shouted “This is all the supper you’ll get” and viciously swung his club. The newspaperman managed to duck his head, but the club did land heavily and painfully on his shoulder.
The rioting continued sporadically all evening. As the crowd was chased from one area, it would regroup and occupy another area. About 9:30 p.m., a gang of rioters placed several planks and barrels full of stones in the middle of the track at King and Walnut streets. When the car came along, it had to stop. The strike-breakers then had to get out of the car to remove the obstruction. When they did, they were set upon by a gang of rioters. Under a shower of bricks, stones and fists, the men dove back into the car, which the crowd proceeded to nearly demolish. All ten strikebreakers in the car were severely roughed up. One of them, Arthur Bertrand, was so badly injured that he had to be removed to the hospital in a very serious condition.
About ten o’clock, the rioting finally subsided when the cars ceased to run. The action then turned to the No. 3 Police Station on King William street. Thirty-two arrests had been made and the cells were overflowing.
The crowd at the station was huge, and described in the Herald as follows :
“Scenes about No. 3 police station were pitiful. Wives begged for the liberty of their husbands, mothers for their sons and children for their fathers. There was but one reply for them all, and all were removed to the jail.”
The following Sunday morning, the prisoners were granted bail and released. The streets were calm and the street cleaners were busily removing the bricks and stones, while the shopkeepers attended to their broken windows. The strikers themselves, who repeatedly claimed no involvement in the rioting, attended a church service all together.

Sunday, 28 July 2013

1907 - Bank of Hamilton



“Bank buildings in Hamilton, as a rule, are models of architectural skill, and the new Bank of Hamilton, now nearly finished, is one of the handsomest in exterior and interior in the Dominion,”
          “A Handsome Structure : The New Bank of Hamilton Now Nearly Ready for Occupancy”
          Hamilton Spectator June 12, 1892.1
          Situated on the southwest corner of James and King streets, facing Gore Park, the head office of the Bank of Hamilton was a major addition to Hamilton’s stock of financial buildings in the city’s downtown core.
          Constructed of Connecticut brownstone, with a sand-polished surface, the building, designed by architect Richard A. Waite of Buffalo, New York,  was of the Italian renaissance style.
          Highlighting the exterior of the building was a wealth of carvings in stone, executed in low relief and treated in the modern Italian style of the day.
          A major feature of the Bank of Hamilton’s design was its strikingly imposing main entrance:
          “The doors and woodwork of the vestibule are of San Domingo mahogany, the walls of Low’s art tile, with a heavy dado of brownstone. The ceiling is of Numadian marble of reddish cast, blending handsomely with the rich, red mahogany, and is divided into panels.”1
                The real eyecatcher of the large banking room was its ceiling. Over 35 feet above the tellers’ counters, the ceiling was painted a golden color with sea green ornamentation. The panel moldings and ornamental stucco work were painted ivory white, picked out with lines of orange-red, and gold.
          The Spectator reporter, obviously most impressed, concluded that “there is nothing like this ceiling in Canada and its effect is superb.”1
                Above the principal banking room were the president’s office, the chief cashier’s office and apartment and “a handsome for the exclusive use of women, fitted up with a check counter and other conveniences.”1
                After a series of financially successful years just after the turn of the century, the directors of the Bank of Hamilton decided to enlarge their head office.
          The original 1892 building’s rooms were retained for the exclusive use of the Bank of Hamilton’s employees. However, to make a much more profitable use of the prime location and King and James streets, it was decided to construct a large office building above what was already there.
          Local architect Charles Mills was given the task of designing the alterations to the Bank of Hamilton’s presence, turning the three story structure of Richard Waite’s design into a modern skyscraper.
          In an article appearing in the Hamilton Spectator on January 19, 1907, the new Bank of Hamilton was lauded as surpassing “anything of the kind, not only in Hamilton, but anywhere else in Canada. The Owners of the building – the shareholders of the bank – can boast of having the most up-to-date office building as an asset that possibly could be imagined.”
          The tenants of the offices above the banking rooms were provided with all the most modern conveniences available for office buildings of the day. For example, there was a vacuum air cleaning device to clean out every office at night. Each office had a wash basin, supplied with hot and cold water, plus a movable quarter-cut cabinet for hanging coats and hats. Each office also was provided with a mirror on the back of the door to the hallway, and a combination vault to store valuables.
          An attraction to potential tenants was the means of access to all floors of the building. Two 30 horsepower Otis-Fensom elevators, run by electricity, were installed.
In case of the electricity from the Cataract Power Company being temporarily interrupted, a storage battery of large capacity was available to run the elevators :
“This provision has not been provided for anywhere else in the city. Tenants will appreciate this every much, as great inconvenience has happened in other buildings through elevators stopping.”
Another innovative feature of the building was the manner by which the offices and main entrance of the building were locked. One key could unlock the main entrance door any of the toilet rooms in the building. The same key would unlock the tenant’s office door, but no other office door in the building.
Fire escapes were constructed on the west side of the building :
“So that should a panic arise from smoke, the occupants are not dependent for their safety by getting down the main staircase.”
As for ventilation in general, the Bank of Hamilton office building had a large Sturtevant fan on the roof which brought fresh air down through pipes to every office and hallway in the building.
Another feature of the building, new to Hamilton but already commonplace in the United States, was the method of numbering the offices in the hundreds For instance, the offices on the fourth floor would start with the number 400 :
“It, at once, appeals to the tenant that room 409 sounds infinitely better than room 49, thus the reason for using this style of numbers.”
On the top floor of the building, a lunch room was provided for the use of tenants, while on third floor a bath room was provided “so that tenants can get a refreshing bath at any time if they so desire.”


Saturday, 2 February 2013

1912 - Dr. Pain and the Titanic



The news of the sinking of the Titanic hit the city of Hamilton Ontario Canada in the same way it did in most other cities in the world.

Shock and dismay were the usual reactions to the headlines splashed across newspapers. In Hamilton all three daily newspapers, The Spectator, the Herald and the Times, covered the story in as much detail as they could.

At first, there was a limited amount of information and many rumors. As the days passed, interest in all things related to the Titanic did not wane, and the headlines on the front pages of all three newspapers remained full of references to the disaster and its aftermath.

In Hamilton , as in most others communities in Canada, the United States and Europe, there was a burning desire to know whether any local residents were on board the ill-fated ship, and whether they were among the saved or among the lost.

Hamiltonians soon learned that Dr. Alfred Pain, the 23 year old of locally prominent militia member, Captain A. Pain, had been booked to sail on the famous White Star liner.

The Hamilton Times of April 15 1912 described the situation with the popular young Hamilton doctor as was known when that edition of the newspaper went to press :

“Dr. Pain has been in England for a year, taking a special course in one of the large hospitals. Before going to the old country, the doctor was on the Hamilton Hospital house surgeons’ staff for a year. Before sailing for home he wired to his father that he would return on the Titanic. Of course, Mr. and Mrs. Pain are very anxious to hear from their son direct.”

Nothing was heard from the handsome young man. His parents, his friends, indeed all the local community held out hope at first, but soon enough that hope was replaced with bitter disappointment and sorrow.

Dr. Pain’s body was never recovered.

On April 19, 1912, at ceremony held in Hamilton’s Armouries, Lieutenant-Col. S. C. Mewburn briefly spoke to the troops gathered there about the Titanic disaster and the loss of the son of one of the regiment’s best known and most popular officers.

The Times reporter captured the essence of Mewburn’s brief  address as follows :

“The lieutenant-colonel spoke in glowing terms of Captain A. Pain, father of the young physician, as an enthusiast in military affairs, and that he had done more towards the advancement of rifle shooting than any other man in the regiment.

“In the graphic and thrilling stories by survivors of the Titanic wreck,”he said, “we hear a good deal about this man and that man and how this woman was saved and the other woman went down, but of the lonely Hamiltonian who was on board, we know nothing more than he was not among the saved. Young Dr. Pain had no wife or daughter to die for. He died for strangers. Young, with all the world and bright prospects before him, it must have been hard for such as he to lay down his life. Apparently unnoticed in the struggling, panic-stricken crowd, he quietly gave up his life. What must have been his thoughts at the critical moment when death stared him in the face! No doubt home and mother was the last picture in his mind as the waters swallowed him up. That he died a hero’s death is the grim satisfaction of those he left behind.”

A few days later, a memorial service was held in St. John Presbyterian Sunday School. A talented musician, Dr. Pain, during his collegiate school days, and afterwards, was a member of the Sunday School Orchestra.

The memorial service was on the Sunday afternoon. April 22, 1912. It was ended with all members of the St. John Presbyterian Sunday School singing the following words together:

“Forever with the Lord!

 Amen! So let it be!

Life from the  dead is in that word,

 ‘Tis immortality.”