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View Full Version : Labor Day Holiday (Monday, Sept. 6, 2004)


3dGameMan
08-19-2004, 09:15 PM
http://www.calendar-updates.com/images/canadaflag.gif

"Labour Day is celebrated on the first Monday of September. It is a statutory holiday throughout Canada.
The Canadian labour movement can justly claim the title of originator of Labour Day. Peter J. McGuire, one of the founders of the American Federation of Labour has traditionally been known as the 'Father of Labour Day'. Historical evidence indicates that McGuire obtained his idea for the establishment of an annual demonstration and public holiday from the Canadian trade unionist.

Earliest records show that the Toronto Trades Assembly, perhaps the original central labour body in Canada, organized the first North American 'workingman's demonstration' of any significance for April 15,1872. The beribboned parade marched smartly in martial tread accompanied by four bands. About 10,000 Torontonians turned out to see the parade and listen to the speeches calling for abolition of the law which decreed that trade unions were criminal conspiracies in restraint of trade.

The freedom of 24 imprisoned leaders of the Toronto Typographical Union, on strike to secure the nine-hour working day, was the immediate purpose of the parade, on what was then Thanksgiving Day. It was still a crime to be a member of a union in Canada although the law of criminal conspiracy in restraint of trade had been repealed by the United Kingdom parliament in 1871.

Toronto was not the only city to witness a labour parade in 1872. On September 3, members of seven unions in Ottawa organized a parade more than a mile long, headed by the Garrison Artillery band and flanked by city fireman carrying torches.

The Ottawa parade wound its way to the home of Prime Minister Sir John A. MacDonald where the marchers hoisted him into a carriage and drew him to Ottawa City Hall by torchlight. 'The Old Chieftain', aware of the discontent of workers with the laws which made unions illegal, in a ringing declaration from the steps of the City Hall, promised the marchers that his party would 'sweep away all such barbarous laws from the statute books'.

The offending conspiracy laws were repealed by the Canadian government in 1872. The tradition established by the Toronto Trades Assembly was continued through the seventies and into the early 1880's.

In 1882, the Toronto Trades and Labour Council, successor to the TTA, decided to organize the annual demonstration and picnic for July 22. The council sent an invitation to Peter J. McGuire of New York requesting his services of as a speaker for the occasion. McGuire was the founder and general secretary of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters which had organized the previous year.

It was in the same year, that McGuire proposed at a meeting of the New York Central Labour Union that a festive day be set aside for a demonstration and picnic. Labour Day was first celebrated in New York on September 5,1882. It is apparent, however, that the custom had developed in Canada and the invitation sent to McGuire prompted his suggestion to the New York labour body.

Soon pressure for legislation to declare a national holiday for Labour Day was exerted in both Canada and the United States. In 1894 the government of Sir John Thompson enacted such legislation on July 23, with the Prime Minister piloting the bill through Parliament against the opposition of some of his Conservative followers.

Canadian trade unionists have celebrated this day set aside to honor those who labour' from the 1870's on. The first Labour Day parade in Winnipeg, in 1894, was two miles long.

There can be little doubt that the annual demonstrations of worker's solidarity each Labour Day in North America owe their inspiration to small group of 'illegal' members of the Toronto Trades Assembly." ~source (http://www.calendar-updates.com/Holidays/Canada/labour.htm)

Do you have anything planned?

abb1
08-20-2004, 09:58 AM
You forgot option #4 - Working, and that will be me :Sigh

wazman
08-20-2004, 11:33 AM
I'll have the day off, but I'll probably be involved in some kind of drama. That's all I seem to have happen around me any more.

Pengy
08-20-2004, 01:39 PM
idn what i'll be doing... the thursday before labor day i start my first year of highschool :luxhello ... i get that friday off and labor day (weird teacher contracts) SO I'll be doing something that weekend :D

brelsfor
08-27-2004, 05:47 AM
will be working, but I guess I cant complain I do get holiday pay ( double time)

Tivon
08-27-2004, 05:28 PM
One of my normal days off... comp time. :negative

tanman_sg
08-27-2004, 10:35 PM
You forgot option #4 - Working, and that will be me :Sigh


Same here I got school

:bootyshak

getit29
09-01-2004, 01:53 AM
I will probably do the same thing as I would do on any other day either
surf the web, be here at the forums, or be working on someone's system
if I have one in to be repaired that they screwed up. :grumble

TVR_Fan
09-01-2004, 05:57 AM
That holiday does not happen in the UK so I be at College while you have the holiday.

Silent_Death911
09-03-2004, 09:51 PM
My friends were thinking about coming down to Jersey for the weekend, but school calls and they have some stuff to do.

I'll be finishing my summer reading (of which I haven't started, and is due the Tuesday after Labor Day) and being on the computer, nothing special. :)

Race234
09-04-2004, 06:54 PM
well at my college we have the day off and seeing how I dont have school on mondays and tuesdays to begin with, I will be free, not to mention I only work 3 days a week so Im not sure what I will be doing on monday probably go hang out with some friends, maybe do a lan or something. :thumb :food

Raedwulf
09-05-2004, 01:49 PM
Well I HAD been planning of enjoying a Classic CFL matchup
Calgary against Edmonton... (there's a minor game between Toronto and Hamilton to watch as well, maybe)
I have seats on the 50yd line

First time I'll be missing it in years :negative ( I forget how long I've had Season tickets)

Instaed of enjoying a good game, I'll be flying up to Bistcho Lake AB. As far north a person can go in Alberta without crossing into NWT
Fly out of Calgary about noon in a Beechcraft 1900D, stop overs in Edmonton and Peace River, land at Rainbow Lake... from there, it's either helicopter or light plane into Bistcho

I don't mind the flying, it's just that I have to do it the day of the Labour Day Classic

When I return, I'll post some pictures... RTUs, airplanes, helicopters and muskeg
maybe I'll see my namesake, a wolf

3dGameMan
09-06-2004, 08:45 PM
I hope everyone had a great holiday :Thumb

abb1
09-07-2004, 06:31 AM
I hope everyone had a great holiday :Thumb :Nope I worked! :Nope

Raedwulf
09-09-2004, 08:00 PM
Finally back

Guess I didn't miss much of a game (still, I would have liked to lend my support) There's always Friday

Camera needs a recharge

I took alot of pictures, made films of travelling in Bell 206 Jet rangers

The Beech 1900D is bigger than a Beech King (and it has a bathroom you can almost stand straight up in if you're 5' 8") Form Calgary to Edmonton there was only the pilot, co-pilot/flightattendant and me

The job itself went alright... I solved a few problems, but there's not alot a person can do when the air is saturated with H2S(everything metal is quickly changing into some compound of sulphur) I've tracked down a source for H2S inhibiter, it'll stop the corrosion on electronics for awhile

A real head scratcher on two sites that appear to have grounding problems... no way should two points within 4 ft of each other in a panel have a resistance of more than 10 ohms (I detest grounding issues... things screw up in the most weird ways)

Oh yeah... there's something really depressing about seeing snow on the ground