Ethnic partition of the work force in 1840s Montreal.
Olson, Sherry
Introduction
AS AN APPRAISAL OF ETHNIC WEIGHTING in the Montreal labour force, I
introduce the 1842 manuscript census to estimate the relative sizes of
four cultural communities and the social distances among them. The logic
of grouping is schematized in Figure 1 in terms of shared language or
religion. Since each community occupied a distinctive niche in the urban
economy, it is possible that ethnic differences, often cited as a root
of the violence of the 1840s, may have veiled its economic basis. For
this reason, the ethnic partition of work, coupled with differential
vulnerability of the several communities to economic stress, becomes
critical to interpretation of the volatility of the 1840s.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
The political violence of that decade has been overshadowed by the
Rebellions of 1837-1839, which were more readily perceived as a
milestone in a nation-building historiography. Indeed, imposition of
Union in 1841 has been so generally regarded as closure to a drama that
textbook accounts, even the periodization of programs of teaching and
research, often break off at this point. (1) Yet the decade of
denouement was as bumpy as the winter roads. (2) Crucial decisions were
made, rescinded, revised, or re-imposed, and historians face numerous
unresolved questions about the interests at stake.
In that decade of upheaval and experiment, the city of Montreal was
a pivot on which events turned. It had been clear since 1812 that its
site at the Lachine Rapids was critical to the economic strategy and
military logistics of British North America. The uprisings fifteen years
later were concentrated in the Montreal region, as a zone of relatively
productive and intensive agriculture, steeper inequality, and heavier
seigneurial burden. (3) From 1840 onward, Montreal outran Quebec City in
population, and its hinterland became a growth economy, forming one of
the best-integrated regions of Lower Canada, with the city as its nodal
point. (4) Waterpower developed on the Lachine Canal in the 1840s
launched Canadian industrialization; (5) and a plethora of railway and
telegraph projects made the city the fulcrum of modernization, and in
its wake opposition, agitation, and repression. Montreal was, as it is
today, a primary node of cultural exchange, cultural conflict, and
cultural compromise. (6)
Economic transformation, with its opportunities for speculation in
urban land, induced a shift in the conception of property. (7) Both
Young and Kolish have pointed to ordinances imposed by the Special
Council (1840-1841) as the first steps toward dismantling the
seigneurial system. (8) The Special Council also abolished imprisonment for debt, withdrew the vote from women, and moved toward
"reform" of civil law, (9) intruding, as Young has argued,
into family, marriage, and community relations: rights of dower,
inheritance, marital authority, and female access to public space. All
of these actions evoked resistance. (10)
New instruments such as the Montreal Turnpike Trust (1840) placed
power in the hands of engineers, bankers, and merchant-manufacturers).
(11) "Restoration of the assembly in 1841 and the achievement of
responsible government delivered power--and the accompanying problems of
establishing authority--to the local elite." (12) Fyson, even while
arguing for institutional continuity, has identified mechanisms by which
a Montreal elite imposed its will. (13) Senior, detailing collusion of
the garrison with "the English Party" of 1840-1848,
underscored the frequency of violence in the process. (14) While the
firing of Parliament in 1849 is usually situated in the ethnic
hostilities in the wake of the Rebellion, one might inquire more deeply
into the harsh fiscal restructuring that was underway, affecting both
the Montreal elite and those at the economic margins, in the outskirts
of the city. (15)
Virtually every dimension of life was transformed in the 1840s by
movements that touched the quick of convictions, modified habits, and
founded institutions, changing the face of the city as well as its role
in a Canadian polity. Religious fervor was revitalized and the
groundwork laid for an ultramontanism whose fundamental tenet was
superiority of religious over secular power. Yvan Lamonde's latest
book spotlights the intellectual reconstruction: the expansion of
publishing, emerging threads of romanticism, and the way in which the
alliance of Throne and Altar--a Protestant throne and a Catholic
altar--throttled a vigorous liberalism and converted a political
conception of the nation into a cultural nationalism. (16)
Experimentation was everywhere evident in flurries of excitement
over annexation, the tithe, and the usury law. Critical choices
introduced patronage as a habitual instrument of government, (17)
imposed local taxation, and created municipal powers of self-government
within limits which confine us today. (18) Decisions of the 1840s
established sectarian management of asylums, hospitals, and correctional
institutions, and ensured for 150 years to come confessionalism in the
schools of Quebec. (19) Struggles of the 1840s marked out fault lines
for future confrontations.
All of those actions and outcomes were affected by the partition of
property, social status, and economic roles among the several ethnic
components of the population. Despite general acknowledgement of the
importance of class and privilege, little progress has been made toward
taking their measure. Attention to both artisans and labourers remains
fragmentary; Protestant evangelism is usually narrated as a separate
story, disconnected from the Catholic "reveil," (20) and
despite recognition of a changing of the guard in the 1840s, we have no
satisfactory analysis of the social origins and social structure for
either the Anglo-Protestant community or the city's Irish-born
residents. (21) To fill such holes in the historiography, and to develop
a more coherent picture of the ideologies, the coalitions, and the
impacts anticipated from new legislation and jurisprudence, it becomes
important to open up a source virtually untouched: namely, the
manuscript census of 1842.
From the census it is possible to identify members of the Irish
Catholic community, of particular interest in that configuration of
social relations. Despite the increasing stream of immigrants from 1825
onward, scholars, for want of appropriate sources, have said little
about the status of the Irish in Montreal on the eve of the massive
famine arrivals of 1847 and 1849. (22) Since famine migrants are often
presumed to have transformed the Irish community, we look to the census
of 1842 for a window onto the receiving community. Montreal and Quebec
City, in contrast to most cities of England, North America, and
Australasia, offered an unusual reception, since immigrants encountered
a Catholic majority that hemmed in "anti-papist" prejudices.
In the second half of the 19th century, Irish Catholics of Montreal
formed a "third people," distinctive in their demographic
behavior and institutional allegiances. With colleagues, I have reported
elsewhere the relatively high rates of survival of their infants, who as
young adults moving into the labour force made substantial advances over
their parents in terms of occupational status and housing. (23) Factors
in their upward mobility were, arguably, the assertiveness of the
receiving community and the alliances they made. We shall see from the
census of 1842 that the Irish-Catholic community of Montreal was already
numerous and substantial.
Scholarly neglect of the Montreal Irish, both Catholic and
Protestant, is an anomaly if we look back on the past decade, with
ambitious re-examinations of the social evolution of Ireland, monographs
on Irish immigrants in scores of cities, and the attention given to the
Irish in other parts of Canada. Donald Akenson, working first in an
Ontario county and subsequently in the global literature of the Irish
diaspora, has challenged the "long and doleful historiography"
that Canadians adopted from an "American model." (24) Akenson
objected in particular to Pentland's caricature of the Irish of
Canada as "Catholic in religion, urban in residence, unskilled in
occupation ... a lumpen proletariat who were unequipped to deal with a
modernizing economy." (25) The ethnocentric flaw in Pentland's
account of proletarianization and the want of local empirical evidence
were roundly criticized by labor historians. (26) Stanley Ryerson
reformulated the critical questions about relations of property and
labour on a Canada-wide canvas (27) and Bleasdale and Way have since
created entirely new accounts of labour on the public works, founded on
a richer documentation. (28) Lamonde develops the interplay between
demands for self-government in Canada and in Ireland, tracks the
connections between O'Connell's supporters and the Patriote
leaders, and examines how in the 1840s the Irish Catholics of Lower
Canada "imposeront leur presence dans la vie politique et
electorale de meme que dans des formes culturelles comme la presse et
les associations." (29)
Why then have scholars so long hesitated to put to use the one
comprehensive source available to us, the census of 1842? That census
has been ignored, first because of contemporary dissatisfaction with its
implementation in outlying regions. No tables were published, and even
the manuscript register of households does not contain the full name and
age of each individual member, that is, the data that would provide
secure identifications to satisfy genealogists and historical
demographers. (30) Work with this census shows it to be nevertheless a
valuable source for Montreal, with complete coverage of city and
urbanized fringes in the embrace of the Parish of Montreal. (31) The
data can be checked for internal consistency and compared with several
other contemporary sources, notably a taxroll of tenants, a city
directory, and parish registers of high quality. Its street-by-street
organization, in conjunction with the detailed 1846 map of surveyor
James Cane, provides cues to residential patterns that influenced
interactions among the four groups. (32) Most important, the
household-centred structure of the census offers insights into
organization of the labour force: the household was the primary
workplace and was backed by force of law as an institution for the
management and discipline of the urban workforce.
After a brief discussion of present-day understandings of labour
force segmentation, and a review of the methods I employed for
specifying ethnicity of households and handling complementary sources, I
shall report the distinctive economic profiles of the four communities,
make a tentative interpretation of their relative social status, and
highlight the differences in household structure and residential pattern
which framed a social space. (33)
The Logic of Segmentation
Labour market studies in the quarter-century just ended have
demonstrated how global pressures restructure urban economies, with
massive international transfers of workers and realignments of their
bargaining power. Understanding labour markets as segmented by gender
and ethnicity has stimulated new discussion of the evolution of factory
labour since the late 19th century, and some of these ideas can be
usefully applied to a commercial city of the 1840s. (34) Edwards, Reich,
and Gordon in 1975 shaped a distinction between primary and secondary
labour markets, essentially "good jobs" and "bad
jobs." They argued that the two do not necessarily converge to a
single market, and that their persistence as distinct arenas for
wage-setting is made possible by social distinctions. (35) They showed
how "ethnics" were confined to the bad jobs: non-union jobs
defined as unskilled, subordinate, and subject to high turnover, with
confined lines of promotion. (36) Mechanisms that allow the
compartmented structure to persist depend upon distancing some workers
by racial or ethnic typing. The basic message of analysts of segmented
labour markets of the 1970s, useful in the study of any era, is this
recognition: "The market is a social and not an exclusively
economic institution." (37)
Feminist scholars pursued the analysis of segmentation by
dissecting its gendered basis. (38) More difficult is interpretation of
the interactions between ideologies of ethnicity and gender, but the
empirical findings of Reitz et al. on the partition of work roles in
Toronto in the 1970s are widely applicable: "The specific
occupations in which women are segregated are not the same for each
ethnic group." (39) Their interpretation has been reinforced by
recent studies of the international division of labour, and of immigrant
roles in New York and London. Because labour force segmentation is
multi-dimensional, an understanding of "otherness" must take
into account the interplay of ideologies of gender, race, religion, age,
origin, and place. (40) Helpful in this respect is Frager's concept
of interlocking hierarchies that ensure that labour market segmentation responds to shifts in ethnic balance and technological change. (41) Such
shifts, familiar in the 1970s and 1980s, also occurred in Montreal in
response to the massive arrivals of immigrants in the late 1840s.
An important feature of a segmented system is the vulnerability of
workers in the secondary market. Even at the best of times and in the
wealthiest of societies, people who hold the bad jobs live close to the
margin of subsistence and whenever the economy as a whole is brought
under stress, this group is pushed below the line of humane existence.
Others who find their circumstances reduced attempt to transfer the
pressures downward, and find a justification in othering the group they
perceive as not quite human, or, in 19th-century parlance,
"undeserving." This is the utility (for some) of the ideology
behind segmentation, and it is the spring of resistance, militancy, and
mobilization that perennially bring the system into question.
Economic stresses may arise from various causes--deflationary,
political, ecological, or military--and despite brief speculative
bonanzas in flour, timber, and real estate, the seven or eight years
following the census of 1842 imposed severe pressures on the urban
economy. Commerce was still subject to persistent scarcity of specie and
a two-year turnover time for merchant capital, vulnerable to any
collapse of credit in Britain or the us. Leading up to Christmas 1842,
six months after the census, a broker noted in his journal: "18th
(November) first snow this fall. 21 Radenhurst Tumbull & co failed
this day. 22 Patterson & Co do. John Collins do ... at night snow
and all 1st December fell snow. 13 December Bigelow & co failed. 26
December Bagg & Campbell stopt. 24 Playfair stopt. 29 John Willock stopt. Great fall snow at night, 30 snowed all day." (42) He added
in a letter of 4 January, "Money at present is very scarce here,
scarcely any persons paying their bills, nothing but failures daily.
Numbers of our butchers are making great sacrifices to keep their credit
good at the banks.... Sales of property ... very low indeed." (43)
In October 1843, the engineer of Public Works had already proposed to
take full advantage of the squeeze on labour: "In consequence of
the large immigration, as well as in consideration of the then existing
low rates of provisions, and other necessaries, upon the prices of which
the cost of public works greatly depends, it was deemed advisable ...
that no time should be lost in commencing with, as many as possible, of
these works...." (44)
While such a public works program might today be envisioned as a
countercyclical policy, this was not its object, and appeals to the
Crown argued that channel-dredging and canal-building were critical to
the future of British North America as a commercial colonial enterprise.
At this point entered into the equation the much-debated effects of
freer trade: the Canada Corn Act 1841, reduction of timber duties,
suspension of of the Corn Laws January 1847, and the passage of the US
Drawback Act. (45) The repeal of protection, which dampened timber
exports and diverted shipments of grain through New York instead of
Montreal, affected the value of property. The Governor, in a letter of
23 April 1849 echoed the brokers: "Property in most of the Canadian
towns, and more especially in the Capital, has fallen 50p.ct in value
within the last three years. Three fourths of the commercial men are
bankrupt." (46) All of these factors combined to produce a
political crisis among Canadian merchants, provincial deficits in 1848
and 1849, and a crisis in municipal finance that involved draconian
restructuring. (47)
These disruptions were aggravated by seasonal stresses. The winter
of 1846-1847 had been more harrowing than usual, and the drama of March
1847 when a hundred emigrant ships were waiting off shore for a late
spring to break up the ice in the St Lawrence, brings into a single
frame the ecological disaster in Ireland, the cruelty of its management,
the transfer of human freight, and the intense seasonality of the
Montreal economy. Between mid-May and mid-October, tens of thousands of
immigrants were landed at Quebec or its quarantine station at
Grosse-Ile. The survivors were forwarded in boatloads to the docks of
Montreal, in all a number larger than the population of the city. Over
the unusual warm spell of 50 days in July and August, 1,200 deaths from
typhus were recorded at the immigrant sheds at Montreal, 400 orphans
were under care, and in the winter of 1848 the Grey Nuns were still
issuing 72 buckets of soup daily to Irish and French Canadians in
alternate shifts. (48)
The first small breakthroughs towards overcoming the annual
freeze-up of the urban economy were observed at the end of the summer of
1847, when La Minerve reported the "three marvels of the
century"--steam railway, canal, and telegraph--visible from the
Lachine road: "d'un cete cette file de chars pousses par la
vapeur et qui franchissent l'espace avec la rapidite de la fleche,
pendant que de l'autre cete on apercoit les steamboats et les
autres vaisseaux charges de produits qui descendent et remontent dans le
canal, et dans le centre, la ligne de telegraphe." (49) But the
crisis persisted, aggravated by an equally massive immigration in the
summer of 1849, another hot summer, and an epidemic of cholera.
The economic pressures were interwoven with outbreaks of violence,
notably electoral violence in March 1841, March 1842, April 1844 (a
stabbing), December 1844 (two deaths), April 1845, and April 1846 (two
deaths). (50) Violence accompanied repression of strikes on the
Beauharnois canal works in 1843 (eleven deaths), and, closer to
Montreal, on the Lachine canal works in January and March 1843, April
and August 1844, followed by canallers' "outrages" in
October. (51) Oratory and journalism were exceptionally virulent from
February through August 1849, and provocations by the Anglo-Protestant
merchant elite reached a peak with the firing of the hall of Legislative
Assembly 25 April 1849. (52) In each incident where a life was lost and
a formal inquest was held, contemporaries identified ethnic rivalries as
a factor: French versus British, French versus Irish, Catholic versus
Protestant, or Connaught versus Cork. (53)
Much work remains to be done to understand the relationship between
these episodes, class formation in 1840s Montreal, and the significance
of those processes for shifts in the ethnic balance. The objective in
this paper is a modest preliminary: merely to use the census of 1842 as
an X-ray of ethnic partition of the work force. From the bare skeleton
we may be able to identify some deformations which point to stresses in
the economic environment. At the outset, we need to frame our questions
in a straightforward way: What ethnic components can be distinguished in
the urban population? How were workers grouped into households? What
clues are offered to the status of a household? How were the households
distributed over the urban space? Finally, how were the layers of status
and the differentiated spaces of the city constituted in ethnic terms?
Methods of Inquiry
In order to answer those questions, we shall need, within the
constraints of available sources, to define categories of ethnicity used
in classifying households. It is necessary to establish who belonged to
the labour force, to categorize economic sectors and status indicators,
and to make a meaningful districting of the city. One of the advantages
of the census manuscript is that it covers only the urbanized area of
the Parish of Montreal. This can be seen in Table 1, where my tallies
from the surviving manuscript census for 1842 are matched with a table
published for Montreal County in 1844. The 1842 document contains only
half as many households, very few farms or cows, and a much smaller
proportion of French Canadians and a higher proportion of people of
other origins. Of 6,250 households in the 1842 document (excluding
vacant dwellings and businesses), only 83 reported that they occupied or
cultivated any land; about 12 per cent possessed at least one cow, 13
per cent at least one horse, but only one third of those (about 250
households) had as much as a cow and a team of two horses.
Use of the manuscript census is constrained also by a framework
that assigned a personal identity and occupational role to only one
individual as "head of household," and situated the household
in a particular street but without a "house number." (54)
Because the household is the basic unit, the census taker recorded
counts of its members in various categories: the numbers of servants, of
sheep, or of persons by country of birth, by religious denomination, and
by gender.
To arrive at classifications consistent with social meanings of the
time, I explored the tags used by the press for "placing"
actors in the system of social relations. Journalists of the 1840s, in
reporting fires, thefts, deaths, accidents, or freakish or comic
episodes, systematically pegged individuals into a four-dimensional
frame: first, a trade or occupation, second, cues to language and
religion; third, a role in a household such as "father of a young
family," "Mrs Smith's lodger," or "apprentice
to Mr Beaudry," and fourth, a street-comer location for the event,
residence, or workplace. While any interpretation of a system of social
relations must remain tentative, journalists' tags coincide with
the conceptual structure of census questionnaires. Journalists'
ethnic references were exacerbated by editors' prejudices: the
Protestant Witness, for example, like Dun's credit agent, was
untrusting of "those of Irish persuasion." (55) My decision to
aggregate seventeen categories of religions, for example, into two
(Catholic and Protestant), follows the rough and often repugnant guidance of those contemporary discriminations.
Ethnicity Inferred
In order to sort households into four cultural communities, I
cross-referenced the members of each household from the manuscript tally
of their birthplaces and religions. The procedure required some
intuitive leaps, and I obtained additional cues to linguistic
affiliation by inference from names and origins. I assumed, for example,
that in a merchant family of five, such as Thomas Day's (in Table
2), the report of one born in England refers to one of the parents, the
two "Anglo Canadians" to a spouse and child, and the two
servants were probably the two Roman Catholics and the two of French
Canadian origin. The remainder of the analysis is based on the 6,044
households that could be classed in the four principal groups (97 per
cent). From such awkward assumptions a particular household may well be
wrongly classified, (56) but each of the resulting four groups, as shown
in Table 3, possess a reasonable homogeneity, sufficient to reveal
strong group differences.
In the set of 2,522 households classed as French Canadian, 97 per
cent of members were Catholics and 94 per cent were reported as French
Canadian; indeed, 5 out of 6 of those households were composed entirely
(100 per cent) of French Canadians, 93 per cent entirely of Catholics.
In the other groups mixing was slightly more common, with about 10 per
cent of household members on the other side of the Catholic/Protestant
religious divide from the assigned identity. In households classed Irish
Catholic, the membership included, therefore, one Protestant among every
ten persons. We find 60 per cent born in Ireland, with another 9 per
cent born in England, Scotland, or the us; 27 per cent were the
Anglo-Canadians I have presumed to be their children, and 4 per cent
French Canadians. Households classed as Irish Protestant resembled them:
62 per cent born in Ireland, with 29 per cent more their Anglo-Canadian
children. Among households classed "Other Protestant," a
greater diversity reflects a larger share of older and longer-settled
couples: over half born in the British Isles, with a larger share (one
third) designated Anglo-Canadians.
"Irish Catholic" and "Irish Protestant"
households, as populations of more recent arrival, more often included a
religious mix. Of the former, three-quarters were composed entirely of
Catholics (78 per cent); of the latter, 69 per cent entirely of
Protestants. "Other Protestant" households, which contained
larger numbers of servants, were less often "pure," only 60
per cent entirely Protestant. The other 40 per cent correspond closely
to the 42 per cent in which a servant was present. Thus, the number of
Catholics present in "Other Protestant" households was about
one in eight overall, or, in the mixed households, one in five.
As one might expect, the array of Protestant religious
denominations reflects levels of religious activity in their regions of
origin (Table 4). In households inferred Irish Protestant, close to half
the members were Anglican (48 per cent), the remainder Scotch Church or
British Wesleyan. In "Other Protestant" households, of rather
mixed national origins, primarily English and Scottish (37 per cent), we
find fewer Anglicans (36 per cent), a comparable share of Scotch and
other Presbyterian, and a greater variety of Methodist, Congregational,
and Baptist.
The logic of shared language or religion, as diagrammed in Figure
1, is apparent in the household data, illustrating the polarity of the
"French" or "English party" and the zones of
greatest fraternization and greatest tension: French Canadians with
Irish Catholics, Irish Catholics with Irish Protestants, and Irish
Protestants with other Protestants. This structure is still apparent in
census and news media twenty years later. It is important to note the
inclusion among "Irish Catholics" of some Catholics born in
Scotland, England, or the us. (57) In certain years, presence of a
regiment containing Irish Protestant soldiers was especially favourable
to cross-religion marriages. (58) For the 1840s we have more hints at
the tensions and intensity of religious feeling, with numerous
abjurations, mixed marriages, clerical pronouncements, vigorous
revivalism, and proselytizing activities. (59) Since the Irish-born
amounted to a third of all English-speaking Protestants, we need to know
more about their lines of communication with Irish Catholics (60) and
with the governing Anglican leadership in the newly chartered municipal
Corporation (1840), the courts, the colonial government, the Legislative
Council, and Legislative Assembly. (61) Montreal's role as the seat
of government of a "United Canada" in the years 1843-1849
reinforced a strong resonance among all these institutions.
Complementary Sources
In order to take full advantage of the 1842 census, I shall refer
to several other sources, each with its own logic and its own bias. The
most important is the municipal taxroll where rental value provides an
estimator of purchasing power for every household. The local taxroll is
unusual because, in principle, it enrolled all tenant householders and
business occupants as well as owners, and the rental values can
therefore be used to rank occupation titles by relative economic status.
(62) A city directory published by Lovell in 1848 is often useful for
confirming an address or differentiating households of father and son,
but the census alone permits an adequate multivariate definition of
ethnicity.
As part of teams studying infant survival and urban ecology, I have
in fact cross-referenced the three sources--the census of 1842, the city
directory of 1848, and the taxroll of 1848--in an iterative process of
matching surnames, first names, streets of residence, and occupations.
Of 5,192 residential entries in the rental taxroll, 75 per cent can be
matched to the directory, 45 per cent to the census 5 years earlier, and
41 per cent to both sources. Although annual moves were a local habit,
concentrated by French-regime standardization of leases to the first day
of May, (63) the large number of non-matches does not necessarily imply
removals out of the city. Sources five years apart are affected by
deaths (higher than usual in 1847) and by rearrangements of household
membership; but even sources of the same month (like the taxroll and
directory) may differ as a result of alternative reporting of household
head. (64) Where a second household occupied the attic of a "one
and a half," or, in a "two and a half," the dwelling over
the shop, we can sometimes confirm a directory entry with a second
address around the corner. In a household with two or three incomes and
diversified economic activities, or with a widowed mother present, the
name of only one person appears in the taxroll, only one in the census,
while one or more may appear in the directory.
The matching efforts provided some insights into the meaning of
occupational titles, the logic of missing records, and local practices
in a bilingual society, such as ambiguities among printer, typographer,
or compositor; the contemporary calque of garde-magasin for storekeeper;
as well as a degree of interchangeability that reflected
"real" identities or nuances, terms such as grocer, innkeeper or tavernkeeper, policeman or constable, and carpenter or joiner. Of
greater importance to an interpretation of occupations are biases of
selection. The commercial directory was more likely to include
shopkeepers, professionals, and artisans who sought easy access by their
customers, and were less likely to capture day labourers, a practice
which in turn implied underrepresentation of the Irish. (66) While some
families were missed in a census or a taxroll, the bias against
labourers was not, it appears, as systematic as it was in the directory.
To the census data I made one important adjustment: the male
household heads whose occupations are not specified are treated as
labourers. This was a conclusion reached after a thoughtful series of
tests by Robert Lewis, who compared the data, street by street, with the
taxroll of 1848. Census takers in Queen's Ward (later divided into
Sainte-Anne and Saint-Antoine wards), appear to have interpreted the
question "profession or trade" to exclude those unskilled or
unspecialized, who worked by the day. (67) Because Irish Catholics were
numerous in Queen's ward, the adjustment increases the number of
labourers in that community by 150 per cent, in other communities by 100
per cent. Throughout the analysis, confrontation of sources is
essential, to tease out the significance of the labouring sector to the
story, to uncover its ethnic partition, its sensitivity to economic
stress, and its susceptibility to political agitation.
Economic Sectors
Just as I assumed that everyone possessed an ethnic identity, in
estimating the labour force I treated everybody over fourteen years of
age as "working." The census, however, reported occupation or
profession for only two sets of people: male household heads and their
"servants," male or female. The estimates (Table 5) of ethnic
concentrations in various sectors of the economy are based on
occupations of household heads, but this demands further exploration
into household composition. Neglect of the 2,005 female servants
(discussed later), the 4,056 other unmarried women, and the 5,202
unmarried men would introduce serious biases of age, gender, and marital
status into analysis of the labour force. The unmarried sons,
apprentices, and 671 male servants together amounted to one-fifth of the
pool of labour over 14 years of age, the unmarried women one quarter.
Neglect of that family labour component would eliminate the whole of the
personal service sector, as well as hundreds of seamstresses essential
to the clothing sector, and the apprentices and journeymen who were
present in rough proportion to artisan heads and who contributed to
various sectors of production. (68) Of butcher Thomas Day's two
servants, for example (Table 2), the male, separately classed in the
original source, was probably an apprentice butcher. As we shall see,
the proportions of such workers differed among the four cultural
communities.
The most intractable problem, as in most North American censuses
and other Montreal sources to the end of the century, is the absence of
information about women's roles in production. (69) All of these
sources are affected by a gendered conception of occupations and a
gendered definition of household head. One household in eight was
reported as headed by a woman, but her occupation is rarely explicit:
she appears in the census merely as "Widow Aussem," "Mrs
McCready," or "Miss Telfer." A few milliners, midwives,
grocers, and marchandes publiques were designated, but other sources,
such as inventories, seizures of property, and market registers, tell us
that most women householders (775 persons) were generating income, and
that many wives and daughters, in addition to keeping house, were
managing a family business or operating a shop or boardinghouse. (70)
Market licenses and petitions show numerous French Canadian and Irish
Catholic women among the stallholders, and arrests identify regrattieres
(hawkers). A well-known hotel keeper, Mme St-Julien, recorded merely as
"widow, "was on the night of the census heading a household of
35 persons of diverse origins, likewise Mme Provandier (28) and Mrs
Bellamy (25). Since the percentage of female heads varied little among
the four cultural groups (slightly higher for Irish Protestants), it has
no statistical effect on my overall measurements of ethnic concentration
in occupations and economic sectors, but the economic roles of the women
householders may have varied in ways we cannot discover.
Table 6 displays male occupational status as six categories, with
merchants at the top, professionals (equivalent to a petite
bourgeoisie), clerks, skilled, semi-skilled, and, at the bottom,
labourers. To generate this classification, the 68 reported occupational
titles were sorted by their median rental values, as calculated
(independently) from the rental taxroll. (71) Rental valuations provide
a good estimator of household purchasing power, since they were based
upon floor area, corresponded closely with market rents, and implied
proportional outlays on fuelwood and labour for cleaning and
maintenance. (72) Using either this measure or the more conventional
categories of Hershberg et al. we discover large differences of ethnic
concentration only in the very highest and lowest ranks, that is, the
top 10 per cent who were merchants or professionals (rent groups A and
B) and the bottom 30 per cent who were labourers (rent group F). (73)
This is the "one big thing" that characterized the pecking
order in 1842. Of that lowest 30 per cent, Irish Catholics made up 38
per cent, present in nearly twice the numbers one would anticipate (this
is the meaning of the concentration quotient of 1.87). In stark
contrast, French Canadians and Other Protestants were less often
recorded as labourers: Other Protestants only half as often as one might
expect (a quotient of 0.51). At the other extreme, in the top 10 per
cent, we find 62 per cent "Other Protestant," with a notable
contingent of Presbyterians of Scottish origins; nearly three-quarters
Protestant overall (74 per cent). The top 10 per cent contained families
who controlled real wealth and were visible and powerful in the politics
of the new United Canada. Their ranks included individuals who styled
themselves gentleman, inspector, honourable, or esquire, and who managed
the municipal corporation as councillors and justices of the peace. (74)
Let us look more closely at the middle ranks. In trade--and
Montreal was still an essentially commercial city--occupational titles
were nuanced. While the term merchant (negociant) was reserved for the
"big fish," the term trader more often (but not always)
referred to small operators: pedlars or dealers in secondhand goods who
were overwhelmingly French Canadian. Storekeepers and commercants were
of middling scale, while the term marchand was somewhat broader and less
indicative. Among the middling and smaller fish, the several cultural
groups were represented in due proportion, with concentration quotients
close to 1.00. In food processing it is not always possible to
distinguish crafts and manufactures from services and trade. Butchers,
who were licensed by the municipal Corporation to specific outlets and
hours, and well networked by kinship and marriage, were two-thirds
French Canadian. Some Irish Catholic merchants and traders were
successful in their Atlantic connections and their familiarity with
butter, pork, cattle, and horses. Individuals reporting themselves as
innkeeper or tavernkeeper (aubergiste) were more often Irish Catholic
than expected, but grocers, who also sold liquor, were two-thirds
Protestant. The census was taken at a time of especially vigorous
temperance campaigns, and tavern licenses confirm that grocer was often
a euphemism for the liquor dealer, who was supplied at wholesale by the
highest-ranking merchants. (75)
Immigrants from England and Ireland were favoured by their higher
rates of literacy and schooling, as well as by colonial structures that
imposed the use of English in trade, government, military affairs,
public works, and intercity transport by steamboat. Among the handful of
printers (eleven reported) there were both French and English shops.
Clerks, 61 per cent Protestant (nearly half Other Protestant), were
primarily pen-pushing clerks in service of merchants and public
authorities. (76) French Canadians accounted for 20 out of 25 notaries
who interpreted the French customary law, and 13 of 19 doctors, while
English-speaking Protestants dominated other professional and
white-collar occupations.
In the middle 60 per cent, cultural differences were woven into a
more elaborate segmentation of craft networks that differed in terms of
ladders of upward mobility. Within each were further nuances of
entrepreneurial scale, clientele, and neighbourhood. (77) In the display
of economic sectors in Table 5, modeled on summary tabulations of later
censuses, (78) French Canadians were overrepresented in the sectors of
largest employment: wood-working (12 per cent of household heads),
construction (10 per cent), shoe and leather (7 per cent), and hauling
(7 per cent), where they occupied the identifiable skilled, artisanal,
and entrepreneurial roles. Irish Catholics were decidedly
underrepresented in the tabulations, but were present on every worksite
in the supporting cast of labourers who were massively employed in
construction, excavation, hauling, and dock labour. Since labourers were
largely occupied with moving earth and loading ships, rafts, and carts,
the construction and transport sectors were in fact larger than the
table suggests, and Irish Catholic participation in them was
considerable. (79) In transport, carters were reported 79 per cent
French Canadian, as were all of the boatmen, navigators, and river
pilots. Invisible are the French and Irish youth who rivaled as
shantymen in the woods, and the Irish rattsmen who were spring visitors
to the city on a massive scale. (80)
Despite the size of the construction sector and its overall
concentration of French Canadians (quotient 1.31), the building trades
seem to have been segmented. There were, for example, more Irish
Catholics than we would expect among plasterers. Bricklayers were few,
nearly all Protestant, but stone masons and stonecutters were
predominately French Canadian. (81) Joiners, ship carpenters, and
carpenters were heavily French Canadian, and other wood-workers as well:
sawyers, coopers, carriage-makers, and carvers. Segmentation in the
crafts was perpetuated by apprenticeship and kinship. Among shoemakers,
saddlers, tanners, and other leather trades, the strong French Canadian
presence was based on traditions and kinship networks centred in
villages just outside the city limits, but Irish Catholics were
represented in normal proportions, Irish Protestants in exceptional
numbers, while Other Protestants were more often importers or retailers
of shoes. (82) The size of the clothing sector is understated: of 200
tailors, one-third were Irish Catholic (concentration quotient 1.41),
but in addition to the milliners and dressmakers who headed households
or their own shops, there were much larger numbers of women who worked
at home and daughters who worked as seamstresses, apprentices, and
servants in the shops, many of them of Irish origins. (83)
A closer look at specific occupational titles suggests further
distinctions in the cultural economy, but the small numbers require
caution. Prior to the important advance of steam power in the 1850s,
metal-workers, machinists, mechanics, founders, or boilermakers were few
in numbers. For French Canadians, the crafts of tinsmith, roofer,
carriagemaker, and wheelmaker provided springboards into mechanical
work. Surprisingly few Irish Catholics were recorded in metal-working,
carting, and other sectors where they emerged in greater numbers by
1861. (84) Ten out of fifteen millers were Other Protestant. No soap
boilers were enumerated among French Canadians, but they were present
among the Irish as an adjunct of their dealings in animals and animal
products such as butter and lard. In the selection of policemen, where
stature and reputation for brawn were criteria more prized than
literacy, the census reports a concentration of Irish Catholics, as in
Boston, Toronto, and New York: eight out of eighteen, with three others
Irish Protestants.
Those niches of economic activity imply a meshing of gears such
that the four groups dealt with one another on a daily basis in kitchen
and garden, across the shop counter, at the butchers' stalls in the
markets, on the "beach" where firewood was measured and sold,
and on the docks where gangs were hired to unload a ship and carters to
remove the goods to warehouses. They negotiated prices and sureties in
the notary's office, at Her Majesty's Commissariat, or, more
often, in the tavern, and the extent of their interactions created a
need for agents and intermediaries who had achieved a minimal
bilingualism. (85) Irish Catholic women, through apparently marginal
roles as servants, penetrated upper-class homes and all the commercial
places of greatest sociability and intercultural exchange; they also
show higher rates of intermarriage with the three other groups. (86)
While partners in mixed marriages were often regarded (notably by the
clergy) as cultural deserters or transfuges, many such couples responded
with resilience to the contradictions and assumed gatekeeper functions
in society. (87)
Social Status
To supplement my rankings of occupations from the rental taxroll,
the census provides several alternative indicators of status. In the
mercantile city, property ownership was a prime distinction, and the
privileges of voting and holding office were determined by the value of
the property one owned. Whether there was a "working class" is
debatable, but there certainly was a "propertied class." The
census taker reported whether the household head owned the property in
which the family resided, and some significance can be attached to the
differentials: 27.5 per cent of French Canadian household heads, 18.5
per cent of Other Protestant, 12 per cent of Irish Protestant, and 8 per
cent of Irish Catholic. Such figures understate the true number of
property owners, since it was common enough for a wealthy family to be
at once tenant and landlord to others, (88) and one obtains more
reasonable and more uniform values by adding the percentage who, not
being owners of their dwellings, were nevertheless entitled to vote
(Table 7). Under the charter of 1845, this included the owner or
occupant of a house that yielded 8 [pounds sterling] yearly rent. (89)
From 20th-century patterns we might expect a correlation of social
status with homeownership. This was not the case. Although French
Canadian Montrealers have a reputation for tenancy, in 1842 their
ownership of the dwellings they occupied (27.5 per cent) was
substantially higher than Protestants, and Irish Catholics'
exceptionally low. (90) The phenomenon arose from other features of what
Bourdieu refers to as "cultural and social capital," (91)
notably French Canadian ownership of the rural lots into which urban
growth was spilling, and French Canadian predominance in masonry and
wood-working skills adapted to a house-by-house scale of building (Table
6). (92) Their owner occupancy was concentrated in very small houses on
the urban fringe. Among wealthier French Canadians, investments in real
estate were employed, under the Custom of Paris, to secure marriage
contracts and inheritances, virtually the only forms of life insurance
on which to found a family. (93) While colonial land grants in the rural
townships were the basis for slow and erratic development, a
fast-growing city offered immense scope for speculative gains in land
development, and the four groups vied for these opportunities. (94)
The class selection of schooling was so great that we cannot in
1842 distinguish among the various aspects of socio-economic status:
income, wealth, status, and education. Incentives and educational
resources were directed toward men: 85 per cent of Anglo-Protestant men
were able to sign the marriage register in the 1840s, 71 per cent of
Irish Catholics, and 27 per cent of French Canadians. Rates were much
lower among women: 65, 20, and 18 per cent respectively. The penal laws
that braked literacy in Ireland and pushed Catholic schoolteachers
underground, had, in response, provoked a high value on schooling and
writing.
Since living standard was determined by command over services
rather than consumption of fabricated goods, the number of servants may
be the best indicator of status, as shown in Table 7 and discussed
below. (95) The sharp distinctions of purchasing power can be grasped
from the set of rents and contract wages typical of a neighbourhood of
four or five houses in the east end. The owner of a grocery and tavern
hired a clerk-manager at 35 [pounds sterling] a year. His neighbour,
also a trader, let a brand new two-story brick house for 36 [pounds
sterling] a year. A dyer took his younger brother as partner "to
learn the trade," and the elder brother took two-thirds of the
profits on the understanding that his wife would reside in the house
"making herself useful in receiving and giving out goods for work
for the firm;" and the two brothers agreed to pension their widowed
mother at 10 [pounds sterling] per year. Another merchant, with his
wife, operated a straw bonnet factory and millinery shop in a wood house
with shopfront and four rooms (25 [pounds sterling] a year). He hired
Mary Lavery, "spinster of age" from "Bellycastle"
(County Antrim) as a sewing girl in the straw-breaking business. He paid
Mary 6 [pounds sterling] a month in winter and 9 [pounds sterling] in
summer (an 11 versus 13-hour day), paid his journeyman dyer 15 [pounds
sterling], started a 16-year-old male apprentice at 4 [pounds sterling]
with the promise of a fourth and final year at 11 [pounds sterling].
Hannah, a thirteen-year-old girl to whom he provided board but no pay,
was withdrawn from her apprenticeship when her father found her
"doing servant's work" and being beaten by the wife. (96)
Transparent in the examples is the slimness of earnings in the
initial phase of entry to the labour force. Apprenticeship or clerkship
involved training and implied several years investment on the part of
the apprentice in anticipation of a future "family wage." This
was precisely the zone of tension characteristic of the bad jobs and the
population under governance. In the same neighbourhood, labourers who
headed households were renting at 6 [pounds sterling], 7 [pounds
sterling], or 8 [pounds sterling] a year, at the threshold of voter
status. On a major construction site active in 1843-1847, a labourer
with reasonably steady work was probably earning 20 [pounds sterling] a
year, comparable to the rent paid by the artisan or storekeeper in the
smallest combination of dwelling and workplace: a shop with a room
behind. (97)
If we combine rent-paying capacity with the number of mouths to
feed, and set a poverty line at 35 shillings "per person
per-year" (or 7 [pounds sterling] for a family of four), the
taxroll suggests that one quarter of all households fell below a living
wage: one third of French Canadians, one fifth of the Irish (whether
Protestant or Catholic), and one eighth of Other Protestants. (98) The
same disproportion among the several communities would emerge even if we
set the threshold a little higher in view of the number of doubled-up
households in the taxroll, or a little lower to match the appraisal of
the Grand Jury in February 1847, that 1,100 families, or 1 in 5,
"languissent dans la derniere indigence ... se couchent plusieurs
fois par semaine sans feu et sans souper, ayant a peine de quoi se
couvrir." (99) A simpler distribution at three levels of
occupational status is sufficient to convey the distinctive balance in
each cultural community, and, weighted by mean rent, to indicate their
relative purchasing power (Figure 2). This illustrates the situation of
economic privilege of Other Protestants relative to French Canadians,
the large mass of labourers among Irish Catholics, and the curious mix
of privilege and poverty among Irish Protestants. In this situation, the
alignment of relatively small numbers of Irish households would have a
strong influence upon the balance of power between status fractions or,
in the short term, upon the polarization around a particular religious
or linguistic issue.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
Age and Household Structure
Since the household was the fundamental work site, household
structure provides an indication of labour power. Day or night, houses
were never empty, since scarcity of space and high costs of building
favoured intensive occupancy, and round-the-clock supervision was
advantageous in response to the risks in a harsh climate and a city
built of wood. In 1848 one household in six was assessed for a shop or
workshop on premises adjoining the dwelling. The teacher lived over her
school room, clerks slept in a garret under the dome of the bank, the
distinguished geologist had a dwelling over the survey office and
museum, jailers lived on the premises, the head doctor and nurses in the
General Hospital, and each church was flanked by a modest dwelling for
the sexton and, for the clergy, a rectory designed to impress.
As a consequence, it is virtually impossible to distinguish spaces
of production from spaces of consumption or reproduction. For each
married man identified by an "occupation" there were three
more adults over fourteen (see Table 8), and it is reasonable to infer
that the labour force internal to the household amounted to
three-quarters of its gross domestic product. Homes and yards were sites
of scrubbing, boiling laundry, sewing on contract, paid hospitality,
baking, butchering, horseshoeing, selling, chopping wood, hauling water,
and moving snow, manure, or slops. While there were numerous exceptions
to idealized gender roles, both the appearance of respectability and the
need for brawn to defend it compelled a gendered constitution of the
household, and 94 per cent reported the presence of both a woman and a
man over 14. In terms of reproductive demands, 44 per cent of households
contained at least I child under 5, and in all 4 groups a married woman
under 40 bore a child every 2 years. (100) Earlier marriage among French
Canadian men and women contributed to greater economic stress in these
households. (101)
The presence of servants can be interpreted as a redistribution of
labour power. The differences of purchasing power among the four
cultural communities therefore generated differences in household
structures, as shown in Tables 7 and 8. One-quarter of households
reported a servant, but there were wide gaps between the communities: 1
in 6 or 7 of Catholic families, 1 in 4 of Irish Protestants (27 per
cent), and 42 per cent of Other Protestants. A larger house required
labour to keep the fires burning, trim the candles for evening
entertaining, tend the garden and fruit trees, clear ice from roof and
gutters, and handle the horse and carriage. Since the merchant, butcher,
or artisan-entrepreneur was operating a household as a unit of
production, his servants included male apprentices, journeymen, and shop
assistants, and, in proportion to the live-in male personnel, female
labour to handle the contractual meat and drink, boarding, washing, and
mending. (102) Other Protestant households (28 per cent of all) kept
one-half of the servants. Turnover in the servant population was
characteristic of the bad jobs, and their assignment as unskilled and
subordinate. During the 1840s, the Irish Catholic proprietor of a
boardinghouse recorded in his daybook the hiring of a new Liza or Maggie
on average every four weeks. (103)
The smaller size of Irish Catholic households overall, their
smaller proportions of children 5-13 (inclusive), single men 14-21, and
single women (14 and over), all reflect the export of their young people
into Protestant households. As anticipated in my rules for assigning
ethnicity, the total number of Catholics present in "Other
Protestant" households approximates the numbers of servants they
contained. (104) Transfers were greatest in the case of young women
14-29, and their social significance considerable. (105) This reflects a
stress associated with migration and aggravated in the famine
generation; their offspring subsequently showed strong avoidance to
domestic service. Despite the personal costs of their vulnerability, the
transfers facilitated education and assimilation; they permitted some
accumulation of savings and transfer of know-how between communities.
Earlier acceptance of vaccination in the Irish community is suggestive
of the lines of communication and education involved with the mobility
of women in households of greater resources. (106) A comparable export
of young people occurred within the French Canadian community, as young
women especially came from the villages to the city to help their
sisters or sisters-in-law with their growing families. The exchange of
labour within an extended family is not apparent from the census, but
can be inferred from sample cases and from the high rate of marriages of
rural-born women in the city. (107)
Of large households (the 15 per cent with ten or more persons),
most belonged to distinct types of economic structures. Among French
Canadians, one-third were homes of carters, sawyers, or construction
entrepreneurs who housed their work force, while among Protestant
households they included numbers of merchant heads and
"gentlemen," as well as bakers, founders, and teachers. Among
Irish Catholics, units as large as 25 people were headed by men who
reported themselves as labourers and functioned as foremen or brokers
for labour teams, and whose wives were managing a boardinghouse.
Construction shanties ranged up to 100 persons, among them a
shipbuilding site. Sixty-seven inns and boarding houses reported ten to
twenty-five persons each, and the largest workplaces as well as the
largest residences were eight institutions: jail, hospitals, schools,
and orphanages. In addition to washing and personal care for infants and
indigent sick or handicapped on the premises, the nunneries provided
laundry services for households of male clergy such as the Bishop's
household of 22. The largest "family" not included in the
census was the barracks in the east end of the Old City, where 1,200
soldiers were accommodated in an average year, usually in 12-man rooms.
Outside the canvassed zone were the largest public works, which reached
peak sizes in 1843, about 2,000 employed on the Lachine Canal (within a
few kilometers of the City) and 2,000 on the Beauharnois Canal, lodged
in construction shanties. (108)
The conception of such an entreprise as a "household" was
recognized also in the application of the Masters and Servants Act,
founded on medieval practice, integrated into municipal by-laws, and
enforced by justices of the peace. Thus the ideology of the private
"family" under male governance was backed up by formidable
legal sanctions to regulate the least visible components: a work force
of women and an adolescent proletariat of unmarried minors of either
gender (109) As we have seen, these amounted to three-quarters of the
labour force, none of whom earned what was at the time understood as
"a family wage." (110) More variable was the situation of the
labourers who constituted 30 per cent of household heads in the city,
plus those quartered at nearby public works. As Bettina Bradbury has
shown for a slightly later date, their problem was the day-to-day,
week-to-week, and month-to-month variability of their income, and the
vulnerability of their households to illness, injury, or layoff of the
"breadwinner." (111) There was no work on construction sites
when the weather was rough or the ground frozen. Although labourers on
the Lachine Canal works were initially paid three shillings a day, in
January 1843 they were reduced to two shillings, and the city was paying
1/3 to 1/8 for stone-breaking, essentially relief work. (112)
All three of these work force components--women, youth, and
labourers hired by the day--were vulnerable, limited in their ability to
give testimony, and confined to the bad jobs: low-paid, subordinate, and
subject to high turnover. The four ethnic communities were incorporated
to different degrees in the good or the bad jobs, and we have noted the
specific export of labour power by the Irish Catholic community to the
governance of Irish Protestant and Anglo-Protestant communities, net
capture of labour value by the Anglo-Protestant community, and strong
seasonal transfers between economic sectors. These are the sectors in
which a "living wage" was a persistent issue, seasonally
acute, and further aggravated in years of financial crisis. The
recurrent signs of stress in the 1840s are apparent from the census
x-ray, arising from the relative sizes of the populations living at the
margin between a viable household and "la derniere indigence."
Spatial Arrangements
As in other commercial cities, the residential space of Montreal in
1842 was highly polarized, with wealth at the centre and poverty on the
rim. (113) In this respect also, it is useful to have a better-etched
portrait (Figure 3 and Table 9), since the combined effects of
conflagrations and a major industrial boom changed the picture
considerably in the 1850s. The "old city," whose walls were
crumbling by 1800 and were demolished by 1810, was distinguished in 1842
by its concentration of merchants--the big fish--in nearly five times
the numbers we would expect, also professionals, religious and civic
institutions, and activities of printing and publishing. Wholesalers and
warehouses were concentrated along the waterfront (Commissioners and
Saint-Paul Streets), the finest retail shops and residences parallel on
the higher ground of Notre-Dame Street, with the governor's office,
courts, and military headquarters in the east end, public markets at
either end, and in the west end the markethouse that was being renovated
with wood paneling and gas chandeliers for the Legislative Assembly of
United Canada.
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
Specialization of economic activities in Old Montreal explains the
larger households (mean size 7.4 versus 6.3 elsewhere) as attributable
to the presence of more servants: at least 1 servant in 71 per cent of
households in Centre ward (the kernel), 61 per cent in flanking East and
West wards; as well as larger-than-average numbers of servants per
household. Indeed, only one-eighth of all households lived in the old
centre, but well over one-third of all live-in servants. This accounts
also for the higher percentage of single women in the old town (23 per
cent of its population), double their concentrations elsewhere in the
city. Even when hospitals, hotels, and inns are excluded, the old town
contained fewer two and three person households than in the city as a
whole, and more eight and nine person households. The centre was already
being built up to four stories, and by 1860 would empty to become a
non-residential "hole in the doughnut."
Centre-city characteristics extended along the "main
streets" of Quebec Suburb, St Lawrence Suburb, and St Joseph
(Recollet) Suburb. (114) Farmers' traffic to city markets justified
commercial activities along these tentacles of the commercial core, and
in view of their relatively dense settlement fin act of 1845 specified
fireproof materials. Throughout the 19th century the three main streets
retained a distinctive pattern of development, land use, rents, and
mixed occupancy, as well as an impressive solidity of stone facades.
(115) In St-Lawrence Suburb in particular, clusters of artisans and
their apprentices had sprung from roots a generation earlier, (116) and
the district was advantageously situated relative to the rim of new
construction, the country homes of the wealthy, and the "New
Town" or "Golden Square Mile" suburb under development
(later Saint-Antoine ward). (117)
The several cultural communities shared a single economic space.
Despite a strong degree of residential segregation between Catholic and
Protestant, all four cultural communities were present in all districts.
Concentrations of French Canadians were as high as four-fifths in two
districts (24 and 19), two-thirds in several more, and fewer than
one-quarter in three others. Irish Catholic households reached one-third
in Griffintown, at the mouth of the Canal, and in an east end district
with one-quarter Irish Protestants (28). Wherever "Other
Protestants" made up a strong minority (40 per cent in Old Montreal
05 and its flanking neighborhoods 08 and 14), the district figures show
higher mean rents, more single women, and more horses.
While the three wards of the Old City had populations about the
same size, they differed somewhat in ethnic composition: West ward was
55 per cent Protestant and 95 per cent English-speaking, Centre was 52
per cent and 80 per cent, East ward was only 45 per cent and 66 per
cent, in other words the majority was Catholic. Irish Catholics were
politically prominent in West ward, French Canadians in East ward. The
nuances pinpoint homelands from which the several communities were
expanding into the western or eastern suburbs, producing political
divisions which remained in 1900 (known as the Western and Eastern
Districts of municipal administration), despite a boundary zone of
greater diversity on either side of St Lawrence Main. (118)
Within the elaborate differentiation, the Irish Catholic community
was decidedly less segregated than in many cities, and this seems to
have been a factor important in its integration into the economy. (119)
The ethnic distribution across the urban space, with subdominants in
various districts, added to the political salience of Irish Catholics,
who could deliver to their allies a swing vote in several electoral
districts. In the spring of 1841 Sydenham redrew the urban boundaries,
in what Ryerson has termed "a colossal gerrymander" to reduce
the representation of French Canadians and the partisans of
"responsible government." (120) Both he and the next governor
(Metcalfe) employed "as instruments in the electoral process"
intimidation by the troops, provocations at the polls, and roving gangs
armed with axe-handles. In 1845, 1846, and 1847, Reform candidates
obtained support from canal workers, largely Irish, both Catholic and
Protestant. (121) The census of 1842, by uncovering the spatial
variations in the interplay of ethnicity with wealth, points to key
sources of the violence in the electoral politics of Montreal. (122)
Conclusion
The manuscript census of 1842, treated as an x-ray of the labour
force, brings into view the articulations between ethnicity and
occupational status. When the data are re-compiled and subjected to
analysis to estimate the relative weights of the city's four
cultural communities, they reveal the tensions inherent in an unstable
situation. Stresses experienced in the economy during the years
1843-1849 were transmitted to labouring segments as a compression of the
"living wage." But the census itself, in its treatment of
households as the fundamental units of the economy with household heads
as the bearers of status and authority, masked the segmentation of
labour consistent with a firm ideology of family and gender. Unequal
bargaining power in the four communities was reflected in the transfer
of youth, in particular of single women and Irish Catholic youth, into
household-structured enterprises of the economically dominant group.
Systematic underpayment of female labour was associated with recurrent
seasonal and cyclical appeals for charity to widows and orphans, while
campaigns against oisivete or "idleness," backed by the legal
requirement that minors and persons without property be forced to work,
kept wages low for the bad jobs.
In a city of formidable religious and linguistic cleavages, the
position occupied by Irish Catholics was strategic. In each decade,
including the most strenuous years of famine arrivals, the newcomers
were sustained by an articulate and well-organized community of Irish
Catholics who preceded them, as well as a French Canadian leadership
prepared to negotiate alliances as a Catholic majority. Also sustaining
them was a Protestant 61ite prepared to court the votes of
English-speaking Catholics, to leverage their own votes by hiring the
bare-fisted, and, when that failed, to direct the firepower of the state
at those who claimed a right to a living wage.
From the pivotal situation of the Irish in 1842, it is possible to
grasp the power of negotiation that favoured their subsequent social
advancement. The incentives to coalition hint at the pressures for
instant assimilation of Irish-born Protestants and for the more gradual
and more uncomfortable alignment of Irish Catholics with the loyalism of
a broader English-speaking community. The variables of social status
suggest reasons for the volatility of coalitions based on cultural
affiliation. The intersection of ethnic with economic categories
provides a foundation for understanding a certain opportunism and the
experimentation so characteristic of the political reconstruction of the
1840s.
The lines of cleavage and the balance of power established in that
decade framed the social space for a first surge of industrialization in
the 1850s, in which the city tripled in size, the Irish Catholic
population increased from 20 to 25 per cent, French Canadian from 41 to
48 per cent, while Protestants (Irish or Other) diminished from 37 to 27
per cent. Despite the new proportions and the changes concomitant with
steam power, there was only a modest shift in the ethnic partition of
the labour force: in 1861 Protestants were still four times as likely to
be merchants, bankers, or professionals, and they still dominated the
fast-growing printing and metal trades; Irish Catholics moved into
hauling (1.0) and metalwork (1.2), but remained twice as likely to be
labourers. (123) Change in the ethclass structure was gradual because
upward mobility was essentially intergenerational, and, judging from a
small longitudinal sample, the labourer remained a labourer to
life's end. (124)
While the census of 1842 provides new evidence of the ethnic
partition of labour at that moment and sharpens our awareness of the
pivotal role of the Irish in the cultural balance, there is a need for
more thorough research on several fronts. Sources may be slim for
exploring the violent and emotionally-freighted incidents of the
election of 1832, the Rebellion, (125) the canal strikes, and the
Rebellion Losses Bill, but much more can be learned about the rapid
assimilation of Irish Protestants into the Protestant community of
Montreal, about Irish Catholic lay leadership in the 1840s, and about
the ways in which both English- and French-speaking personnel and
clienteles were integrated into the several religious orders. The
cultural triangulation of the 1840s generated the social space for
reception of all subsequent waves of immigrants and
"allophones." (126) To write the Irish fully into the labour
history of Quebec, (127) and to examine the position of succeeding waves
of immigrants, we need a more comprehensive and contrapuntal treatment
of the historical sociology of education, (128) since institutions
structured in the 1840s incubated leadership in the next generation,
metred social mobility, and ensured those interlocks of gender,
language, religion, and origin that have continued to segment markets
for labour, both locally and globally.
Table 1 Montreal censuses of 1842 and 1844 compared
Parish 1842 County 1844
Houses
Inhabited 4402 9233
Households (dwellings)
Total 6250 11725
Proprietors of real property 1208 3307
Tenants entitled to vote 1150 1763
Persons (household members)
All, male or female, now resident 39809 64306
Temporarily absent 852 591
By birthplace
Natives of England 2989 3532
Natives of Ireland 8804 12293
Natives of Scotland 2582 3155
Natives of Canada of French origin 16700 33903
Natives of Canada of British origin 7395 10682
Natives of Continent of Europe or other 661 242
Natives of USA 543 791
Other 483 --
By religions
Church of England 6587 7616
Church of Scotland 4340 5618
Church of Rome 25123 47072
Methodists * 1714 1994
Presbyterians outside Church of Scotland 1040 1227
Congregationalists or Independents 434 638
Baptists and Anabaptists + 352 430
Jews 91 112
All other religions 28 190
Enumeration of servants
Farm servants employed 7 526
Other male servants in private families 748 1362
Female servants in private families 2182 3013
Agriculture
Acres or arpents of land occupied 1386 120246
Neat cattle 1230 16416
Horses 1273 7732
Sheep 36 12610
Hogs 756 6984
Ratio '42/'44
Houses
Inhabited 0.48
Households (dwellings)
Total 0.52
Proprietors of real property 0.35
Tenants entitled to vote 0.65
Persons (household members)
All, male or female, now resident 0.62
Temporarily absent 1.61
By birthplace
Natives of England 0.85
Natives of Ireland 0.72
Natives of Scotland 0.82
Natives of Canada of French origin 0.49
Natives of Canada of British origin 0.69
Natives of Continent of Europe or other 2.73
Natives of USA 0.69
Other --
By religions
Church of England 0.86
Church of Scotland 0.77
Church of Rome 0.53
Methodists * 0.86
Presbyterians outside Church of Scotland 0.85
Congregationalists or Independents 0.68
Baptists and Anabaptists + 0.82
Jews 0.81
All other religions 0.15
Enumeration of servants
Farm servants employed 0.03
Other male servants in private families 0.55
Female servants in private families 0.72
Agriculture
Acres or arpents of land occupied 0.01
Neat cattle 0.08
Horses 0.16
Sheep 0.01
Hogs 0.11
Sources: 1842 Census of Lower Canada, 1844 Journal of Legislative
Assembly vol. 5 (1846), App. DD
Notes: Excludes vacant houses and houses under construction
* British Wesleyan (preponderant), Canadian Wesleyan, Methodist
Episcopal, other Methodist
+ Includes 10 Lutherans, Quakers, Moravians, or Tinkers
Table 2 Selected household tallies in census manuscript
Household head Ethnicity Occupation Hhd
assigned size
Dufort, Joseph FC Joiner 8
Berube, Elie FC Labourer 12
Day, Thomas OP Butcher 5
Sinclair, James IP Labourer 5
Crozier, Robert IP Labourer 4
Dempsey, Dominick IC Storekeeper 4
Meredith, Widow OP Widow 3
O'Brien, Thomas IC Innkeeper 6
Laidley, Widow IP Widow 3
Household head Birthplace Orig
Eng Ire Sct FC AC
Dufort, Joseph - - - 8 -
Berube, Elie - - - 12 -
Day, Thomas 1 - - 2 2
Sinclair, James - 5 - - -
Crozier, Robert - 4 - - -
Dempsey, Dominick - 2 - - 2
Meredith, Widow - - 1 - 2
O'Brien, Thomas - 3 - - 3
Laidley, Widow - 1 - - 2
Household head Religion Owns Servant
property present
RC An Sc
Dufort, Joseph 8 - - n -
Berube, Elie 12 - - n -
Day, Thomas 2 3 - y 2
Sinclair, James - 5 - n -
Crozier, Robert - 4 - n -
Dempsey, Dominick 2 2 - n -
Meredith, Widow - - 3 - -
O'Brien, Thomas 6 - - y 1
Laidley, Widow - - 3 - -
Source: Manuscript Census of Lower Canada, 1842
Table 3 Membership of households by ethnic category 1842
French Irish Irish Other
Canadian Catholic Protestant Protestant
N N N N
Households 2522 1246 579 1697
Persons 16277 7452 3724 11017
By place of birth
French Canadian 15289 292 60 452
Anglo Canadian 280 2004 1072 3762
England 105 224 133 2471
Ireland 287 4483 2298 1532
Scotland 89 281 95 2075
USA 58 60 34 364
Europe 137 72 19 235
Other 90 34 23 282
By religion
Catholic 15759 6699 376 1305
Sum French Irish Irish
Canadian Catholic Protestant
% % %
Households 6044 41,7 206 96
Persons 38470 100.0 100.0 100.0
By place of birth
French Canadian 16093 93.9 3.9 1.6
Anglo Canadian 7118 1.7 26.9 28.8
England 2933 .6 3.0 3.6
Ireland 8600 1.8 60.2 61.7
Scotland 2540 .5 3.8 2.6
USA 516 .4 .8 .9
Europe 463 .8 1.0 .5
Other 429 .6 .5 .6
By religion
Catholic 24139 96.8 89.9 10.1
Other
Protestant
%
Households 28.1
Persons 100.0
By place of birth
French Canadian 4.1
Anglo Canadian 34.1
England 22.4
Ireland 13.9
Scotland 18.8
USA 3.3
Europe 2.1
Other 2.6
By religion
Catholic 11.8
Source: Derived from manuscript Census of Lower Canada, 1842
Excludes 206 households of other cultural identities
Table 4 Religions of members in households classed as Protestant 1842
Number of persons
Irish Other
Protestant Protestant
Roman Catholic 376 1305
Anglican 1791 3946
Scotch 731 3128
Presbyterian 149 854
Wesleyan * 649 951
Congregational 31 387
Baptist 25 320
Other religions 5 22
Members reporting 3757 10913
Percentage of persons
Irish Other
Protestant Protestant
Roman Catholic 100 120
Anglican 477 362
Scotch 195 287
Presbyterian 40 78
Wesleyan * 173 87
Congregational 8 35
Baptist 7 29
Other religions 1 2
Members reporting 1,000 100,0
Source: Derived from manuscript Census of Lower Canada, 1842
* British Wesleyan (preponderant), Canadian Wesleyan, Methodist
Episcopal, and Other Methodist.
Table 5 Household heads by economic activity and ethnicity 1842
Household heads
Economic sector n %
Construction 518 9,6
Transport (carters) 347 5,7
Services, food 181 3,0
Services, personal
and protective 39 0,6
Merchants (wholesale) 305 5,0
Other trade (retail) 358 5,9
Professionals 208 3,4
Other white collar 146 2,4
Manufacturing
Printing 30 0,5
Metalwork 248 4,1
Wood, furniture, carmaking 626 10,4
Food & tobacco 310 5,1
Shoe & leather 368 6,1
Clothing 191 3,2
Other crafts & mfg 64 1,1
Labourers 1273 21,1
Unassigned % (widows) 756 12,5
Total households n 6038 100,0
Concentration quotients
French Irish
Economic sector Canadian Catholic
Construction 1,18 1,03
Transport (carters) 1,81 0,49
Services, food 0,83 1,27
Services, personal
and protective 1,16 2,11
Merchants (wholesale) 0,47 0,35
Other trade (retail) 1,00 1,02
Professionals 0,72 0,57
Other white collar 0,65 0,53
Manufacturing
Printing 0,56 0,80
Metalwork 0,89 0,85
Wood, furniture, carmaking 1,32 0,53
Food & tobacco 1,16 0,54
Shoe & leather 1,11 0,89
Clothing 0,51 1,38
Other crafts & mfg 0,25 0,80
Labourers 0,90 1,86
Unassigned % (widows) 0,95 1,02
Total households n 2522 1246
Concentration quotients
Irish Other
Economic sector Protestant Protestant
Construction 0,57 0,85
Transport (carters) 0,46 0,37
Services, food 1,20 1,00
Services, personal
and protective 1,37 1,42
Merchants (wholesale) 1,33 2,24
Other trade (retail) 0,93 1,03
Professionals 0,85 1,79
Other white collar 1,29 1,71
Manufacturing
Printing 1,72 1,76
Metalwork 0,98 1,27
Wood, furniture, carmaking 0,68 0,96
Food & tobacco 0,71 1,10
Shoe & leather 1,48 0,90
Clothing 1,41 1,34
Other crafts & mfg 1,27 2,00
Labourers 1,01 0,50
Unassigned % (widows) 1,22 0,98
Total households n 579 1697
Source: Derived from manuscript Census of Lower Canada, 1842
Note: Financial sector is included with merchants.
Table 6 Relative weight of ethnic group 1842, by population, rent, and
occupational status of head
[1] Number of households in group
FC IC IP OP Total
A 126 48 59 314 547
B 134 79 55 99 367
C 245 129 63 179 616
D 593 232 135 377 1337
E 636 158 78 307 1179
F 767 585 184 300 1836
Sum 2501 1231 574 1576 5882
[2] Column percentage
FC IC IP OP Total
A 5.0 3.9 10.3 19.9 9.3
B 5.4 6.4 9.6 6.3 6.2
C 9.8 10.5 11.0 11.4 10.5
D 23.7 18.8 23.5 23.9 22.7
E 25.4 12.8 13.6 19.5 20.0
F 30.7 47.5 32.1 19.0 31.2
Sum 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
[3] Mean rent ($ / year)
FC IC IP OP
A 172 192 230 220
B 148 117 134 146
C 74 83 104 116
D 62 87 92 100
E 48 66 86 86
F 45 54 61 76
Sum
[4] Aggregate rentsof group ($/year)
FC IC IP OP Sum
A 21672 9216 13570 69080 113538
B 19832 9243 7370 14454 50899
C 18130 10707 6552 20764 56153
D 36766 20184 12420 37700 107070
E 30528 10428 6708 26402 74066
F 34515 31590 11224 22800 100129
Sum 161443 91368 57844 191200 501855
[5] Group as percent of households
FC IC IP OP Sum
A 2.1 0.8 1.0 5.3 9.3
B 2.3 1.3 0.9 1.7 6.2
C 4.2 2.2 1.1 3.0 10.5
D 10.1 3.9 2.3 6.4 22.7
E 10.8 2.7 1.3 5.2 20.1
F 13.0 10.0 3.1 5.1 31.6
Sum 42.5 20.9 9.8 26.8 100.0
[6] Group as percent of rents
FC IC IP OP Sum
A 4.3 1.8 2.7 13.8 22.6
B 4.0 1.8 1.5 2.9 10.1
C 3.6 2.1 1.3 4.1 11.2
D 7.3 4.0 2.5 7.5 21.3
E 6.1 2.1 1.3 5.3 14.8
F 6.9 6.3 2.2 4.5 20.0
Sum 32.2 18.2 11.5 38.1 100.0
Source: Derived from manuscript Census of Lower Canada, 1842
Note: Occupations are classified by their median rents into six groups
(taxroll 1848), corresponding to status of Merchants (A),
Petite bourgeoisie (B), Clerks (C), Skilled workers (D), Semi-skilled
(E), and Labourers (F).
Table 7 Household characteristics 1842, by ethnicity and occupational
status of household head: Size, tenure, voter rights, and presence of
servant
Percentage of households French Irish Irish
in status group Canadian Catholic Protestant
Occupational status
1 High status 9,1 7,9 18,3
2 Medium 60,2 44,6 50,0
3 Low 30,7 47,6 32,1
(Sum 100%)
Mean household size
1 High status 7,63 6,21 7,91
2 Medium 6,26 6,15 6,27
3 Low 6,77 6,16 6,00
Percent with servant
1 High status 59,6 53,6 66,7
2 Medium 15,4 17,3 24,9
3 Low 4,0 4,9 6,9
Percent who own or vote,
of male household heads
1 High status 48 28 33
2 Medium 46 30 31
3 Low 30 24 30
Percentage of households Other Total Old
in status group Protestant households City
Occupational status
1 High status 29,1 15,3 46,0
2 Medium 53,0 53,9 38,4
3 Low 17,9 30,7 15,6
(Sum 100%)
Mean household size
1 High status 7,03 7,18 7,48
2 Medium 6,28 6,26 7,49
3 Low 6,33 6,46 6,00
Percent with servant
1 High status 73,5 67,3
2 Medium 33,7 21,8
3 Low 13,0 6,0
Percent who own or vote,
of male household heads
1 High status 41 40,6
2 Medium 40 40,2
3 Low 27 28,0
Source: Derived from manuscript Census of Lower Canada, 1842
Note: Occupational status groups based on median rent for household
heads of each occupation Excluded are households of widows who could
not be classed by occupational status.
The research was conceived in collaboration with Patricia Thornton
of Concordia University, with support from the Social Science Research
Council of Canada (Ottawa); and with Jean-Claude Robert, with support
from the Fonds FCAR (Quebec) and the Centre interuniversitaire
d'Etudes quebecoises (Laval and Trois Rivieres). I am grateful for
the assistance of the Parishes of Notre-Dame and Saint Patrick's,
the Hospital Sisters of Saint-Joseph (Hotel-Dieu), Cimetiere
Notre-Dame-des-Neiges, the Mount Royal Cemetery Company, numerous
archivists, research assistants, and colleagues.
(1) For example the analyses of Evelyn Kolish,
"L'introduction de la faillite au Bas-Canada: conflit social
ou national?" Revue d'histoire de l'Amerique francaise,
40 (automne 1986), 215-35; Evelyn Kolish, "Imprisonment for Debt in
Lower Canada 1791-1840," McGill Law Journal, 32 (May 1986-87),
603-35; Evelyn Kolish, Nationalismes et conflits de droits: Le debat du
droit prive au Quebec 1760-1840 (Montreal 1994); Murray Greenwood,
Legacies of Fear: Law and Politics in Quebec in the Era of the French
Revolution (Toronto 1993); Jean-Marie Fecteau, Un nouvel ordre des
choses: la pauvrete, le crime, l'etat au Quebec, de latin du XVIIIe
siecle a 1840 (Montreal 1989); Fernand Ouellet, Elements d'histoire
sociale du Bas-Canada (Montreal 1972); and Allan Greer, Peasant Lord and
Merchant: Rural Society in Three Quebec Parishes 1740-1840 (Toronto
1985).
(2) Exceptional in their recognition of the "crucial
decade" are J.L. Little, State and Society in Transition: The
Politics of Institutional Reform in the Eastern Townships 1838-1852
(Montreal 1997), 3, 6, 238-39; and Bruce Curtis, True Government by
Choice Men: Inspection, Education, and State Formation in Canada West (Toronto 1992). The vexed issue of "responsible government" is
reviewed by Stanley B. Ryerson, Unequal Union: Confederation and the
roots of conflict in the Canadas, 1815-1873 (Toronto 1973), 137-39. For
the winter roads issue as an insight into public opinion see Stephen
Kenny, "'Cahots' and Catcalls: an Episode of Popular
Resistance in Lower Canada at the Outset of the Union," Canadian
Historical Review, 65 (June 1984), 184-208.
(3) Allan Greer and Leon Robichaud, "La Rebellion de 1837-1838
au Bas-Canada: une approche geographique," Cahiers de geographie du
Quebec, 33 (December 1989), 345-77.
(4) Jean-Claude Robert, "Reseau routier et developpement
urbain dans l'Ile de Montreal au XIXe siecle," in Horacio
Capel and P.A. Linteau, eds., Barcelona-Montreal: Desarollo urbono
comparado / Developpement urbain compare (Barcelona 1998), 99-115;
Jean-Claude Robert, Atlas historique de Montreal (Montreal 1994), 98-99;
and Serge Courville, Entre ville et campagne (Sainte-Foy 1990).
(5) Gerald J.J. Tulchinsky, The River Barons: Montreal Businessmen
and the Growth of Industry and Transportation (Toronto 1977), 203-31.
(6) While earlier accounts of Union politics presume a reduction of
tensions after 1839, recent local accounts emphasize "increasing
ethnic and social hostilities" in the 1840s. See, Brian Young, The
Politics of Codification: The Lower Canadian Civil Code of 1866
(Montreal 1994), 8.
(7) Brian Young, In its Corporate Capacity: The Seminary of
Montreal as a Business Institution, 1816-1876 (Montreal 1986); Young,
The Politics of Codification, 43-65; and Kolish, Nationalismes et
conflits de droits.
(8) Seigneurial tenure in Lower Canada was partially extinguished
in 1840 when censitaires in the Sulpician seigneuries of Montreal,
Deux-Montagnes, and Saint-Sulpice were permitted to commute their dues
for censet rentes, lods et ventes into a fixed capital. See Young, In
its Corporate Capacity, 55. The Seigneurial Commission of 1843 further
exposed the crumbling.
(9) Young, Politics of Codification, 186-7.
(10) The Common School Bill of 1841, Registry Ordinance of 1841,
and bankruptcy reforms of 1842 and 1846. See Young, Politics of
Codification, 44-45, xvi.
(11) Also by act of the Special Council, 1840. See Robert,
"Reseau routier."
(12) Young, Politics of Codification, 13-14; and Guy Bourassa,
"Les elites politiques de Montreal: de l'aristocratie a la
democratie," Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science,
31 (February 1965), 35-51.
(13) Donald Fyson, "Les structures etatiques locales a
Montreal au debut du XIXe siecle," Les Cahiers d'histoire, 17
(Spring 1997), 57. On the way in which the Montreal Constitutional Party
ensured that the agenda of the Special Council corresponded with their
own see Steven Watt, "Authoritarianism, Constitutionalism and the
Special Council of Lower Canada, 1838-1841," MA thesis, McGill
University, 1997.
(14) Elinor Kyte Senior, British Regulars in Montreal: An Imperial
Garrison, 1832-1854 (Montreal 1981); Elinor Kyte Senior, Roots of The
Canadian Army: Montreal District 1846-1870 (Montreal 1981); and H.
Senior, "Quebec and the Fenians," Canadian Historical Review,
48 (March 1967), 37.
(15) Municipal restructuring to sink the debt was carried out by
E.R. Fabre, and has been examined only by his biographer Jean-Louis Roy
in his book Edouard-Raymond Fabre libraire et patriote canadien
1799-1854 (Montreal 1974); and his earlier work, "Edouard-Raymond
Fabre, bourgeois patriote du Bas-Canada, 1799-1854," PhD thesis,
McGill University, 1972.
(16) Yvan Lamonde, Histoire sociale des idees au Quebec 1760-1896
(Montreal 2000).
(17) Little, State and Society in Transition, 31; and Stephane
Kelly, La petite loterie: comment la Couronne a obtenu la collaboration
du Canada francais apres 1837 (Montreal 1997).
(18) Little, State and Society in Transition, 13; and Caroline
Andrew et al., Dislocation et permanence: l'invention du Canada au
quotidien (Ottawa 1999).
(19) Central are the municipal acts of 1845 and 1847, and the
school acts of 1845, 1846, and 1849. See Andree Dufour, Tous a
l'ecole, Etat, communautes rurales et scolarisation au Quebec de
1826 a 1859 (Ville LaSalle 1996); Huguette Lapointe-Roy, Charite bien
ordonnee: le premier reseau de lutte contre la pauvrete a Montreal au
19e siecle (Montreal 1987); Little, State and Society in Transition.
(20) An exception is Rene Hardy, Controle social et mutation de la
culture religieuse au Quebec, 1830-1930 (Montreal 1999).
(21) painstaking documentation is now embodied in the Dictionary of
Canadian Biography, with insights into networks such as the Molson,
McCord, Fabre, Viger, and Papineau families, but they cannot be traced
into the ranks of labour nor its domestic management. Family studies
still lack a foundation in structure of households and families, despite
new explorations of gender and abuse. See, for example, Tamara Myers,
Kate Boyer, Mary Anne Poutanen, and Steven Watt, eds., Power, Place and
Identity: Historical Studies of Social and Legal Regulation in Quebec
(Montreal 1998); and Mary Anne Poutanen, "'To indulge their
carnal appetites': Prostitution in Early Nineteenth-Century
Montreal," PhD thesis, McGill University, 1997.
(22) Estimates vary, they suggest a rising trend of arrivals at
Grosse-Ile, peaks may have approached 50,000 in 1831, 100,000 in 1847,
and again in 1849. The best guide to earlier sources is Robert J. Grace,
The 1fish in Quebec, An Introduction to the Historiography (Quebec
1993), and to the problems of estimating numbers Donald Akenson,
"Ontario: Whatever Happened to the Irish?" in Gerald
Tulchinsky, ed., Immigration in Canada: Historical Perspectives (Toronto
1994), 86-134. Responses to the massive arrivals of 1847 are reported in
Robert O'Driscoll and Lorna Reynolds, eds., The Untold Story: The
Irish in Canada (Toronto 1988); and Marianna O'Gallagher, Grosse
Ile: Gateway to Canada, 1832-1937 (Quebec 1984). On assertiveness in
Quebec City, see Marianna O'Gallagher, St Patrick's Quebec
(Quebec 1981).
(23) Patricia Thornton and Sherry Olson, "The Irish Challenge
in Nineteenth-Century Montreal," forthcoming in Histoire sociale /
Social History.
(24) Donald Harman Akenson, The Irish in Ontario: A Study in Rural
History (Montreal 1999). In his 1999 preface to the second edition, xv,
Akenson identifies as the single most influential article Kenneth
Duncan, "Irish Famine Immigration and the Social Structure of
Canada West," Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 2
(February 1965), 19-40.
(25) Akenson is referring to H.C. Pentland, "The Development
of a Capitalistic Labour Market in Canada," Canadian Journal of
Economics and Political Science, 25 (November 1959), 450-61.
(26) The debate is summarized by Paul Phillips in his foreword to
H.C. Pentland, Labour and Capital in Canada, 1650-1860 (Toronto 1981).
(27) Ryerson, Unequal Union.
(28) Ruth Bleasdale, "Unskilled Labourers on the Public Works
of Canada, 1840-1880," PhD dissertation, University of Western
Ontario, 1983; and Peter Way, Common Labor, Workers and the Digging of
North American Canals, 1780-1860 (Baltimore 1993).
(29) Lamonde, Histoire sociale des idees, 135, also 196-204,
214-16, 227, 251. On Irish models of schooling influential in Lower
Canada see Little, State and Society in Transition; and Bruce Curtis,
"Revolution gouvernementale et savoir politique au
Canada-Uni," Sociologie et Societes, 24 (printemps 1992), 169-79.
(30) For Upper Canada a table was published as Appendix FF to
Journals of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada (hereafter JLAPC), 1843; and Donald Akenson has expressed the need for a
new compilation: "Ideally, the 1842 census should be reprocessed in
its entirety." See Atkinson, The Irish in Ontario, 16. The
commissioner, Joseph-Charles Tache, claimed in the 1860s: "There
have been no statistics worthy of the name ever collected, and none at
all published," as cited by D.A. Worton, The Dominion Bureau of
Statistics, Montreal 1998, 4-8. While I agree entirely, the several
efforts at census-taking were regarded as more successful in Lower
Canada, and the flaws (notably underreporting of births, deaths, and
annual product) do not undermine the usefulness of the nominative manuscript. Grace found the census of 1842 more complete for Quebec City
than those of 1851 and 1861. For further details of the census see Bruce
Curtis, The Politics of Population, State Formation, Statistics and the
Census of Canada, 1840-1875 (Toronto 2000).
(31) Jean-Claude Robert supplied a digital version, created in
preparation of his "Montreal, 1821-1871: Aspects de
l'urbanisation," Paris, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en sciences
sociales, these de 3e cycle, 1977. The same raw data was collected and
re-coded by Sherry Olson, Robert Lewis, and Rosalyn Trigger, and we have
compared the two sets.
(32) In a joint program with a dozen scholars, Robert Sweeny
(Memorial University of Newfoundland) has created from the Cane map an
electronic framework, and we anticipate further analysis of the spatial
occupancy.
(33) For interpretations, from several disciplines, of the
construction of a social space see Walter Benjamin, Reflections (New
York 1986); D.I. Davies and Kathleen Herman, Social Space: Canadian
Perspectives (Toronto 1971); Bill Hillier and Julienne Hanson, The
Social Logic of Space (Cambridge 1984); Henri Lefebvre, Le droit a la
ville: suivi d'Espace et politique (Paris 1972); Gaston Bachelard,
Politique de l'espace (Paris 1958); and Pierre Sansot, Politique de
la ville (Paris 1973).
(34) For example Charles Sabel, Work and Politics: The Division of
Labor in Industry (Cambridge 1982).
(35) This undermined the conventional assumption of economic
theorists who assumed a perfect market and therefore a single arena for
wage setting.
(36) R.C. Edwards, M. Reich, and D. Gordon, Labor Market Segmentation (Lexington, MA 1975). For more recent literature see Frank
Wilkinson, The Dynamics of Labour Market Segmentation (London 1981).
(37) Bryn Jones, "The Social Constitution of Labour Markets,
Why Skills Cannot Be Commodities," in Rosemary Crampton et al.,
eds., Changing Forms of Employment, (London 1996), 110. The argument is
consistent with the earlier work of Karl Polanyi, The Great
Transformation (Boston 1957).
(38) See for example, Louise A. Tilly and Joan W. Scott, Women,
Work and Family (New York 1989); Ava Baron, ed., Work Engendered."
Toward a New History of American Labor (Ithaca 1991); Sonya O. Rose,
"Gender and Labor History: the Nineteenth-Century Legacy,"
International Review of Social History, 38 (Supplement 1 1993), 145-62;
and David J. Maume, jr., "Glass Ceilings and Glass
Escalators," Work and Occupations, 26 (November 1999), 483-509;
Leah F. Vosko, Temporary Work: The Gendered Rise of a Precarious
Employment Relationship (Toronto 2000).
(39) Jeffrey G. Reitz, Liviana Calzavara, and Donna Dasko,
"Ethnic Inequality and Segregation in Jobs," University of
Toronto Centre for Urban and Community Studies Research Paper, 123
(1981), 45.
(40) For a century-long historical application, see Agnes Calliste,
"Sleeping Car Porters in Canada, an Ethnically Submerged Split
Labour Market," in Laurel Sefton MacDowell and Ian Radforth, eds.,
Canadian Working-Class History: Selected Readings (Toronto 2000),
596-615. Calliste draws her schematic from Edna Bonacich, "A Theory
of Ethnic Antagonism: The Split Labor Market," American
Sociological Review, 37 (October 1972), 547-59.
(41) Ruth A. Frager, Labour History and the Interlocking
Hierarchies of Class, Ethnicity, and Gender: A Canadian
Perspective," International Review of Social History, 44 (August
1999), 217-47.
(42) Daybook, Bartholomew O'Brien Papers (McCord Museum of
Canadian History). For legibility I have corrected spelling of names,
abbreviations, and punctuation.
(43) O'Brien Papers, Letter to William Bowen, Frankford, 4
January 1843.
(44) Canada, Sessional Papers, 1843, Appendix Q, 13 October,
"First Annual Report of the Board of Works," unpaginated.
(45) Gilbert N. Tucker, The Canadian Commercial Revolution,
1845-1851 (1936; Toronto 1970); Michael S. Cross, Free Trade,
Annexation, and Reciprocity, 1846-54 (Toronto 1971); and Alfred Dubuc,
"La crise economique au Canada au printemps de 1848: quelques
considerations tirees de la correspondance d'un marchand,"
Recherches sociographiques, 3 (septembre-decembre 1962), 317-27.
(46) Elgin to Grey, Private Correspondence, as cited by Tucker,
Canadian Commercial Revolution, 178, footnote 4.
(47) On the municipal financial crisis see Roy, Edouard-Raymond
Fabre; and on provincial finances, Tucker, The Canadian Commercial
Revolution, 47-62.
(48) Soeur Estelle Mitchell, Mere Jane Slocombe (Montreal 1964).
Among the dead were the mayor, six priests, and seven nursing sisters.
(49) La Minerve, 22 November 1847. By the end of the century, with
railway bridges across the St Lawrence, rail connections to year-round
ports, trans-Atlantic telegraph, and experiments in ice-breaking, we see
the emergence of new concepts of unemployment. See Peter Baskerville and
Eric W. Sager, Unwilling Idlers: The Urban Unemployed and their Families
in Late Victorian Canada (Toronto 1998).
(50) See JLAPC, 1843, Appendix JJ; and JLAPC 1844, Appendix EEE.
(51) At Lachine, Montreal Gazette, 14, 16, 25, and 28 March 1843;
Minutes of Sessions of the Peace, Archives nationales du Quebec,
Montreal, (hereafter ANQM), 23 October, 2 and 21 December 1844; JLAPC,
vol. IV, Appendix Y, Appendix 1; and vol. V, Appendix N. For strikes on
the Beauharnois canal works parallel with those on the Lachine works see
tables in Way, Common Labor.
(52) On the mayoralty election of late April 1846 see JLAPC, vol. V
(20 March to 9 June 1846), Appendix AA, also Appendix EEE (6 June); on
the outrages of October 1844, vol. IV (28 November to 29 March 1845),
Appendix Y; and on the burning of Parliament in the wake of the signing
of the Rebellion Losses Bill see contemporary accounts published and
annotated by Gaston Deschenes, ed., Une capitale ephemere, Montreal et
les evenements tragiques de 1849 (Montreal 1999).
(53) Way in Common Labor argues from numerous examples that
proletarianization could occur only where ethnic "otherness"
was fostered. He points to the segmentation of three geographical
markets: the southern US, the Atlantic seaboard states, and the belt
straddling the Great Lakes and the US-Canada border.
(54) I have made little use of the distinction between households
occupying the same "house," and suspect imprecision in the
identification of where a "street" begins or ends.
(55) John I. Cooper, "The Early Editorial Policy of the
Montreal Witness, "Canadian Historical Association Report of the
Annual Meeting 1947, 53-62; and R.G. Dun Credit Ledgers (National
Archives of Canada).
(56) Judging from complementary data and small samples of parish
records (a preferable source for confirming cultural affiliations), of
households labeled French Canadian perhaps 1 in 50 or 100 is
misclassified, for names of English or Irish consonance 1 in 25 to 50 is
misclassified. The 206 households excluded from analysis were primarily
Jewish families from England, Catholics of German and Italian origins,
and cases of fragmentary data.
(57) They amount to one in eleven, and might include individuals of
influence such as the bookseller James Sadlier and his novelist wife, or
the nun Jane Slocombe. See Mitchell, Mere Jane Slocombe.
(58) See Andre Duchesne, "A Study of the Garrison Families in
Montreal and Quebec City, 1855-1865," Shared Spaces / Partage de
l'espace, 11 (1990), 1-31; Senior, British Regulars; and Senior,
Roots of the Canadian Army. Announcements in the Recollet chapel, as
recorded in a Cahier des prones now in the hands of St Patrick's
Church, referred in 1843 to men from the 8th, 43rd, 85th, and 83rd
regiments.
(59) See Hardy, Controle social. Evangelical revivalism, as at the
Bay of Quinte in 1846 and in upper New York state, was countered by
Catholic missions of renewal and temperance, notably the missions of
Forbin-Janson (Bishop of Nancy), the Oblates, and Charles Chiniquy. See
Louis Rousseau and Frank W. Remiggi, Atlas historique des pratiques
religieuses, Le Sud-Ouest du Quebec au XIXe siecle (Ottawa 1998), 70-73;
fictional work of Maria Monk; and registers of adult baptisms by the
Jesuits and abstracts of "the secret book" from parish
registers of Notre-Dame (ANQM).
(60) The Irish Benevolent Society, for example, originally included
the Irish-born of both groups, and clergy fostered confessional
separation of the St Patrick Society in the 1840s. See Rosalyn Trigger,
"The Role of the Parish in Fostering Irish-Catholic Identity in
Nineteenth-Century Montreal," MA thesis, McGill University, 1997.
(61) Kolish, Nationalismes et conflits de droits; and Kelly, La
petite loterie.
(62) As the second compiled in an annual series, the rental taxroll
has the flaws of a pilot project; and the one pertinent here is the
practice of accepting (in many cases) a single respondent from a house
that contained two dwellings, or a dwelling and a shop. The sum of their
rents is correct, but doubles the value attributed to the one family in
whose name it is registered. By 1854 nearly every tenant household was
separately registered, and the taxroll is the most reliable source for
spellings and for matching the maiden name and married name of a widow.
(63) On the adaptive advantages of rental status and household
moves in the 19th century see Jason Gilliland and Sherry Olson,
"Claims on Housing Space in Nineteenth-Century Montreal,"
Urban History Review, 26 (March 1998), 3-16.
(64) The birth cohort studies demonstrate the high rate of
attrition by death. A closely controlled exercise that tracked a smaller
sample over the decade of the 1860s showed substantial reorganization of
one-third of households in the several cultural communities. Of French
Canadians, more than 30 per cent of those who reached marriageable age (20 years) died before age 50, which suggests that as many as 60 per
cent of marriages were ruptured before the end of the wife's
childbearing period, as reported by Sherry Olson and Patricia Thornton,
"La croissance naturelle des Montrealais au XIXe siecle,"
Cahiers quebecois de demographie, 30 (Automne 2001), 191-230.
(65) Publishers of the directory made some standardisations in
spelling and alphabetizing. The French Canadian surname Mathieu, for
example, in 1848 was anglicized and the families were listed among the
Mathews; no spelling of Matthews was retained. Since the directory was
compiled from house-to-house inquiry as well as handwritten subscription
forms, one finds some curious phonetic spellings such as the first names
Isaac, Isaie and Ignace entered as "E," as well as the kinds
of mistakes in "reading" the record that we ourselves make in
reading a handwritten taxroll or census, mistaking Majean for Majeau, or
confusing Beau with Bean, and Savoie with Lavoie. Double names such as
"Brien dit Desrochers," rather common in the 1840s, were often
entered in full by notary or priest (10 per cent among 1859 Catholic
baptisms), but are rarely acknowledged in directory, census, or taxroll.
They occasionally appear as a "first name," for example
"Desrochers, Jos. B." Individuals in the Anglo-Protestant
community often employed initials or added a middle initial; but the
middle initial was rarely retained by the compiler of the taxroll.
(66) Comparing infant deaths, Quoc Thuy Thach appraised the
underestimation of the Irish at 10 per cent in 1859. See Quoc Thuy Thach
"Social class and Residential Mobility: The Case of the Irish in
Montreal 1851-1871," Shared Spaces / Partage de l'espace, 1
(May 1985), 1-30.
(67) The attribution was tested against the frequencies of one- and
two-family houses, and against occupations reported in the earliest
rental taxrolls and the 1848 directory. Householders recorded
"without professions" were more often tenants than owners,
were often listed in the directory as labourers, or were entirely
missing from it. For details see Robert D. Lewis, "Homeownership
Reassessed for Montreal in the 1840s," Canadian Geographer, 34
(Summer 1990), 150-52, where he corrects earlier estimates of
homeownership and social class first published in S. Hertzog and R.D.
Lewis, "A City of Tenants: Homeownership and Social Class in
Montreal, 1847-1881," Canadian Geographer, 30 (Winter 1986),
316-33. The work was carried out in conjunction with research on
enterpreneurial activities as reported by Robert Lewis, Manufacturing in
Montreal, the Making of an Industrial Landscape, 1850 to 1930 (Baltimore
2000).
(68) Mary Anne Poutanen, "For the Benefit of the Master: the
Montreal Needle Trades During the Transition, 1820-1842," MA
thesis, McGill University, 1986.
(69) See for example Susan B. Carter and Richard Sutch,
"Fixing the Facts: Editing of the 1880 U.S. Census of Occupations
with Implications for Long-Term Labor Force Trends and the Sociology of
Historical Statistics," Historical Methods, 29 (Winter 1996), 5-24.
(70) See Sherry Olson, "Feathering Her Nest in
Nineteenth-Century Montreal," Histoire sociale / Social History, 31
(May 2000), 1-35; and Sherry Olson,'" Pour se creer un
avenir', Strategies de couples montrealais au XIXe siecle,"
Revue d'histoire de l'Amerique francaise, 51 (hiver 1998),
357-89.
(71) The 68 titles retained cover 96 per cent of all individuals
reporting an occupation. Some unique titles such as Post Master or Clerk
of the Markets were grouped as "Superintendent."
(72) To confirm the correlation of rental valuations with floor
area ([r.sup.2]=.99), we measured 30 houses as described in David Hanna
and Sherry Olson, "Metiers, loyers et bouts de rues:
l'armature de la societe montrealaise, 1881 a 1901 ," Cahiers
de Geographie du Quebec, 27 (September 1983), 255-75. I have since
compared the contractual values reported in two samples of several
hundred leases each and they match.
(73) Theodore Hershberg, Michael Katz, Stuart Blumin, Laurence
Glasco, and Clyde Griffen, "Occupation and Ethnicity in Five
Nineteenth-Century Cities: a Collaborative Inquiry," Historical
Methods Newsletter, 7 (June 1974), 174-216.
(74) It makes little difference whether we use the Katz
classification of five grades (discussed in Hershberg et al.,
"Occupation and Ethnicity") or apply values derived from
median rents of household heads of various occupations as reported in
taxroll of 1861 (six grades), since the various classifications sort out
the same occupations at top and bottom. It is not wise to create a
distinct scale from rents in the Montreal taxroll of 1847 or 1848
because of the large share of double households. The scale Katz devised
for Hamilton, Ontario, in the 1850s, is applicable to 1840s Montreal,
while the locally grounded measure of median rent is more satisfactory
for the end of the 19th century in view of the increasing diversity of
occupational titles. On the general problem of occupational
classification see Robert M. Hauser, "Occupational Status in the
Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries," Historical Methods, 15 (Summer
1982), 111-26; and Jeremy Atack and Fred Bateman, "U.S. Historical
Statistics: Nineteenth-Century U.S. Industrial Development Through the
Eyes of the Census of Manufactures," Historical Methods, 30 (Fall
1997), 173-81.
(75) Tavern licenses are systematically reported in Minutes of
Sessions of the Peace (hereafter ANQM).
(76) The term commis was later extended to shop clerks, but in 1842
such helpers were still called servants and were usually unmarried youth
rather than household heads.
(77) Daniel Bertaux and Paul Thompson, eds., Pathways to Social
Class: A Qualitative Approach to Social Mobility (Oxford 1997).
(78) The categories employed in Table 6 roughly match Charles
Booth's design for the British census and earlier efforts at
analysis of 19th-century manufacturing. See W.A. Armstrong, "The
Use of Information About Occupation," in E. Wrigley, ed.,
Nineteenth Century Society (Cambridge 1972); they reappear in modern
industrial classifications. A more precise hierarchical coding scheme on
sectorial principles is now available for comparative work. See M. van
Leeuwen, I. Maas, and A. Miles, eds., HISCO, Historical International
Standard Classification of Occupations (Leuven 2002).
(79) See Margaret Heap, "La greve des charretiers a Montreal,
1864," Revue d'histoire de l'Amerique francaise, 31
(decembre 1977), 371-95.
(80) Oblate Father Bourassa reported 6,000 young French Canadians
on the Ottawa shanties, La Minerve, 14 May 1847, reprinted from Melanges
religieux. See also Michael Cross, "The Dark Druidical Groves: The
Lumber Community and the Commercial Frontier in British North America to
1854," PhD thesis, University of Toronto, 1968.
(81) It is possible that many of them laid brick or treated the
title macon as generic. On the emergence of brick construction in the
1830s and 1840s see Paul-Louis Martin, A la Facon du temps present,
Trois siecles d'architecture populaire au Quebec (Sainte-Foy 1999);
and on localized kinship networks of builders, Francois Lachance,
"Apprentissage, famille et cheminement des savoir-faire chez les
maitres d'oeuvre du batiment en Mauricie et au Centre du Quebec,
1780-1880," paper presented at Congres d'histoire de
l'Amerique francaise, Montreal, October 2000.
(82) Joanne Burgess, "L'industrie de la chaussure a
Montreal: 1840-1870, Le passage de l'artisanat a la fabrique,"
Revue d'histoire de l'Amerique francaise, 31 (septembre 1977),
187-210; and Joanne Burgess, "Work, Family and Community: Montreal
Leather Craftsmen, 1790-1831," PhD thesis, Universite du Quebec a
Montreal, 1986.
(83) Poutanen, "For the benefit of the master."
(84) As a full tabulation of the census of 1842, Table 6 provides
more reliable results for the Irish Catholic population than the sample
of 92 households I employed in an earlier study, and it can be compared
with tables for 1861, 1881, 1901, 1931, and 1971, based on larger
samples. See Sherry Olson, "Ethnic strategies in the urban
economy," Canadian Ethnic Studies, 33 (Spring 1991), 39-64.
(85) Irish laymen, for example, negotiated with the head of the
Sulpician order at O'Neill's & Orr's hotel on Place
d'Armes, as recounted in Alan Hustak, Saint Patrick's of
Montreal, The Biography of a Basilica (Montreal 1998).
(86) An estimate of 5 per cent of marriages across the language
divide and 2.5 per cent across the religious divide is doubtless low;
the decisive component is Irish Catholic women participants.
(87) Numerous examples of influential mixed marriages are noted by
Serge Gagnon, Mariage et famille au temps de Papineau (Sainte-Foy 1993);
Senior, British Regulars; Senior, Roots of The Canadian Army; Raymond
Montpetit, "La construction de l'eglise Notre-Dame de
Montreal: quelques pistes pour tree interpretation
socio-historique," in J.-R. Brault, ed., Montreal au XIXe siecle
(Montreal 1990), 149-98.
(89) See Robert Sweeny, "Apercu d'un effort collectif
quebecois: La creation au debut du XXe siecle d'un marche prive et
institutionnalise de capitaux," Revue d'histoire de
l'Amerique francaise, 49 (ete 1995), 35-72; Robert Sweeney and
Grace Laing Hogg, "Land and People: Property Investment in Late
Pre-Industrial Montreal," Urban History Review, 24 (October 1995),
44-53; Robert Sweeney with Grace Laing Hogg and Richard Rice, Les
relations ville/campagne: le cas du bois de chauffage (Montreal 1988).
(88) The rules excluded a boarder or lodger who did not own his
"outer door," but included a taxpaying co-partner in warehouse
or shop. 3 Victoria c. 36 and 4 Vict c. 32, An Act to amend and
Consolidate the Provisions of the Ordinance to Incorporate the City and
Town of Montreal (Montreal 1845).
(90) Gilliland and Olson, "Claims on Housing Space";
Baskerville and Sager, Unwilling Idlers; and Marc H. Choko,
"Ethnicity and Home Ownership in Montreal, 1921-51," Urban
History Review, 26 (March 1998), 32-41.
(91) Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction: A Social Critique of the
Judgement of Taste (Cambridge, MA 1984).
(92) David B. Hanna, "Montreal, A City Built by Small
Builders, 1867-1880," PhD thesis, McGill University, 1987; and
Martin, A la facon du temps present.
(93) Bettina Bradbury, Wife to Widow: Class, Culture, Family and
the Law in Nineteenth-Century Quebec (Montreal 1997); and Bettina
Bradbury et al., "Property and Marriage: the Law and Practice in
Early Nineteenth-Century Montreal," Histoire sociale/Social
History, 26 (May 1993), 9-39.
(94) Homeownership did not have the same meanings as the ideology
promoted since the early 20th century in France, Britain, US, and
Canada. Only after World War I did homeownership develop in Britain as a
distinguishing "middle-class" pattern and ambition. See
Bertaux and Thompson, Pathways to Social Class.
(95) The rental valuations form great stairsteps in the 1840s and
1860s. By 1871 log transformation approximates a normal curve, and at
the end of the century assumes the form of a continuous gradient of
puchasing power. See Hanna and Olson, "Metiers, loyers et bouts de
rues," 255-75.
(96) ANQM, Archives notariales, acts of George Busby: for Doyle the
merchant-milliner 17 May, 4 July, and 1 August 1844, and 30 July 1846;
McCloskey the dyer 31 August and 14 September 1846, 19 October 1847, 30
March 1848, 20 December 1850; and Cochrane the grocer 12 September 1846.
(97) From records in the archive of St Patrick's, a labourer
was paid 2/6 a day, a man with cart and horse 4/6, a foreman 5 shillings
(1 dollar), the carter 3p a load for removal of earth. In the mid 1820s
labourers on the Lachine canal averaged 20 days work each month of the
favorable season (see Bagg Papers, McCord Museum), and I have assumed 8
months per year.
(98) Thirty-five shillings per person per year corresponds with
half the mean rent for French Canadians, one-third the mean rent of
Protestants, and the value is consistent with the perception of canal
strikers and their neighbours that 3 shillings a day (60c) was the limit
of survival: "Below that a family can not live." I have
followed as closely as possible the method of John A. Ryan, A Living
Wage: Its Ethical and Economic Aspects (New York 1906). For the 1860s
Bettina Bradbury estimates a survival line at a difference of 25c a day,
see Bradbury, Working Families: Age, Gender, and Daily Survival in
Industrializing Montreal (Toronto 1993).
(99) La Minerve, 15 February 1847. The report followed discovery of
two children "morts de faim, de froid et de misere."
(100) The assertion is based on analysis of the birth cohort of
1859, where 40 per cent of households had a child under 3 present, and
there was little difference in marital fertility among French Canadian,
Irish Catholic, and Anglo-Protestant women. See Patricia Thornton and
Sherry Olson, "Family Contexts of Fertility and Infant Survival in
Nineteenth-Century Montreal," Journal of Family History, 16
(October 1991), 401-417.
(101) Olson and Thornton, "Croissance naturelle."
(102) Covered in acts of apprenticeship, as found in repertories of
notaries Andre Jobin, 27 October 1838 and 19 April 1841; and Joseph
Belle, 14 February 1842 (ANQM).
(103) Daybook, O'Brien Papers.
(104) A somewhat higher proportion of children under five in Irish
Catholic families may reflect the presence of more young couples,
recently arrived or recently married, as well as lower infant mortality.
The picture is different from what we observe later when Irish Catholic
households were generally larger than the others (1861, 1881, and 1901).
(105) Young males were employed also in the shanties, rural
environs, and on "the works" such as canals. For context of
domestic service in the Old World see Edward Higgs, "Domestic
Servants and Households in Victorian England," Social History, 8
(May 1983), 201-10; and in the New World see David M. Katzman, Seven
Days a Week: Women and Domestic Service in Industrializing America (New
York 1978).
(106) See Michael Farley, Peter Keating, and Othmar Keel, "La
vaccination a Montreal dans la second moitie du XIXe siecle: pratiques,
obstacles et resistances," in Marcel Fournier et al., eds., "
Sciences et medecine au Quebec, Perspectives sociohistoriques (Quebec
1987), 87-127. On conditions of domestic servants in Montreal see
Claudette Lacelle, Les domestiques en milieu urbain au debut du XIXe
siecle (Ottawa 1980). A similar effect was noticed by marketing
specialists in the transfer of high-income consumer preferences into the
black community of Baltimore in the 1970s.
(107) Olson, "Strategies de couples."
(108) For a comparable description of this habitat from the census
of 1851 see Jean-Pierre Kesteman, "Les travailleurs a la
construction du chemin de fer dans la region de Sherbrooke
1851-1853," Revue d'histoire de l'Amerique francaise, 31
(mars 1978), 525-45.
(109) Hogg, "Legal Rights of Masters"; Paul Craven,
"The Law of Master and Servant in Mid-Nineteenth-Century
Ontario," in David H. Flaherty, ed., Essays in the History of
Canadian Law Volume I (Toronto 1981), 175-211.
(110) On the synchronisation of marriage with achievement of master
status among artisans see Alan M. Stewart, "Settling an 18th
Century Faubourg: Property and Family in the Saint-Laurent Suburb,
1735-1810," MA thesis, McGill University, 1988. For discussion of a
"family wage" over the next half century see Bradbury, Working
Families; and Baskerville and Sager, Unwilling Idlers.
(111) Bradbury, Working Families.
(112) Statement of Henry Mason, contractor, published in Montreal
Gazette, 25 March 1843.
(113) See for example Richard Dennis, English Industrial Cities of
the Nineteenth Century, A Social Geography (Cambridge 1984).
(114) These are now known respectively as Notre Dame Street East,
St Lawrence Main (running north), and Notre Dame Street West.
(115) Compilation of the Bye-Laws and Police Regulations in Force
in the City of Montreal, With an Appendix Containing Extracts from
Provincial Enactments (Montreal 1842); and An Act to Amend and
Consolidate the Provisions of the Ordinance to Incorporate the City and
Town of Montreal (Montreal 1845), 37.
(116) See Stewart, "Settling an 18th Century Faubourg."
(117) Roderick MacLeod, "Salubrious Settings and Fortunate
Families: The Making of Montrral's Golden Square Mile,
1840-1895," PhD dissertation, McGill University, 1997; and David B.
Hanna, "The New Town of Montreal, Creation of an Upper Middle Class
Suburb on the Slope of Mount Royal in the Mid-Nineteenth Century,"
MA thesis, McGill University, 1977.
(118) For discussion of spatial organization in Montreal 1860-1900
see Hanna and Olson, "Metiers, loyers et bouts de rues";
Sherry Olson, "Occupations and Residential Spaces in
Nineteenth-Century Montreal," Historical Methods, 22 (Summer 1989),
81-96; Olson and Hanna in Historical Atlas of Canada, Volume 111
(Toronto 1990), Plate 30; Olson and Hanna in Historical Atlas of Canada,
Volume II (Toronto 1993), Plate 49; and Patricia Thornton and Sherry
Olson, "A Deadly Discrimination Among Montreal Infants
1860-1900," Continuity and Change, 16 (May 2001), 95-135.
(119) The dispersion of Irish Catholics contrasts sharply with what
we know of Boston, Buffalo, Lowell, New York City, and Quebec City; and
the politics of concentration are well portrayed by Sallie A. Marston,
"Neighbourhood and Politics: Irish Ethnicity in Ninteenth Century
Lowell, Massachusetts," Annals of the Association of American
Geographers, 73 (September 1988), 414-432. See also Lynn Lees, Exiles of
Erin: Irish Migrants in Victorian London (Ithaca 1979); and Roger Swift
and Sheridan Gilley, eds., The Irish in Victorian Britain: The Local
Dimension (Dublin 1999). The Montreal figures for 1842, as well as
subsequent evidence from Olson and Thornton samples at the end of the
century, imply less segregation than is suggested in popular conceptions
of Griffintown, the Lachine canal area or the Point, or inferred from
the localized study of H.B. Ames, City Below the Hill (1902; Toronto
1972).
(120) Ryerson, Unequal Union, 141.
(121) Ryerson's interpretation of the political position of
the Montreal Irish (Unequal Union, 157-58) is based on A. Grrin-Lajoie;
and provocations at the polls are detailed in JLAPC (note 52 above).
(122) See France Galarneau, "L'election partielle du
quartier-ouest de Montreal en 1832: analyse politico-sociale,"
Revue d'histoire de l'Amerique francaise, 32 (mars 1979),
565-84; JLAPC, 1843, Appendix TTT; in light of Donald Akenson's
comment: "The Irish were familiar with how a British-derived system
of representative government worked and knew how to find the hidden
levers of power." See Atkinson, The Irish in Ontario, 5.
(123) Olson, "Ethnic Strategies."
(124) The longitudinal sample, amounting to about 0.5 per cent of
the population, is described in Thornton and Olson, "The Irish
challenge." For comparable tables, based on a sample of fathers of
3300 newborns of the year 1859, see Sherry Olson, Patricia Thornton, and
Quoc ThuyThach, "Dimensions sociales de la mortalite infantile a
Montreal au milieu du XIXe siecle," Annales de Demographie
historique 1988, 299-325. For the notion of ethclass, see Claire
McNicoll, Ville multiculturelle (Paris 1993), and Milton M. Gordon,
Assimilation in American Life (New York 1964).
(125) Lamonde, Histoire sociale des idees; and Maurice Lemire,
"Les Irlandais et la Rebellion de 1837-8," British Journal of
Canadian Studies, 10 (Summer 1995), 1-9.
(126) See Rosalyn Trigger, "The Geopolitics of the
Irish-Catholic Parish in Nineteenth-Century Montreal," Journal of
Historical Geography, 27 (October 2001).
(127) Characteristic of the treatment of the strikes as isolated
events are Raymond Boily, Les Irlandais et le Canal de Lachine, La greve
de 1843 (Montreal 1980); and Herman Van Ommen, "Labour Riots in
Quebec 1857-59," The Register, 1 (March 1980), 50-67. Exceptional
in setting a wider context are Peter Bischoff, "Une relation
aigre/douce: les Irlandais, les Canadiens francais et la Societe
bienveillante des journaliers de navires de Quebec, 1858 a 1901,"
paper presented to Canadian Historical Association, Sainte-Foy, 30 May
2001 ; and Peter Bischoff, "La formation des traditions de
solidarite ouvriere chez les mouleurs montrealais: la longue marche vers
le syndicalisme, 1859-1881," Labour / Le Travail, 21 (Spring 1988),
9-42.
(128) The notion of such a counterpoint is cited by Patrick Glenn,
Legal Traditions of the World (Oxford 2000), 32, from Edward Said,
Culture and Imperialism (New York 1993), xxv. Suggestive of the
diversity in the religious orders is the treatment of class by Marta
Danylewycz, Taking the Veil in Montreal, 1840-1920: An Alternative to
Marriage, Motherhood, and Spinsterhood in Quebec, 1840-1920 (Toronto
1987). We can anticipate a history of Protestant school commissions in
Quebec by Roderick McLeod and Mary Ann Poutanen, forthcoming from
McGill-Queen's University Press.
Sherry Olson, "Ethnic Partition of the Work Force in 1840s
Montreal," Labour/Le Travail, 53 (Spring 2004), 159-202.