文件 022 - Agendas, 1966-1978

标题和责任声明版块

正题名

Agendas, 1966-1978

总体资料名称

    并列标题

    其他标题信息

    标题 责任声明

    标题说明

    • 正题名来源: Title based on content.

    描述层级

    文件

    参考代码

    CA MUA MG4269-H-022

    版本版块

    版本声明

    版本责任声明

    资料细节等级版块

    比例说明(地图的)

    投影说明(地图的)

    坐标说明(地图的)

    比例说明(建筑的)

    发行方管辖权和名称 (集邮的)

    创建日期版块

    日期

    • 1966-1978 (创建)
      创建者
      Parent, Madeleine, 1918-2012

    物理描述版块

    物理描述

    11 agendas

    出版社连续出版物版块

    出版社连续出版物的正题名

    出版社连续出版物的并列标题

    出版社连续出版物的其他标题信息

    与出版社连续出版物相关的责任声明

    出版社连续出版物编号

    对出版社连续出版物的说明

    文献著录版块

    创建者名称

    (1918-2012)

    传纪历史

    Madeleine Parent (1918-2012) was born in Montreal, Quebec, to Rita Marie-Anne Hogue and John B. Parent. As part of her early education, Parent attended the l’Académie St. Urbain, Villa-Maria, and Trafalgar School for Girls. In 1940, Parent graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in sociology from McGill University. Her first collective action campaign was with the Canadian Students Assembly (CSA). The campaign was to improve the availability of financial assistance for students from low-income families. While a student activist, Parent met her first husband, Valdimar Bjarnason, whom she married in 1941 and divorced in 1951. Both Parent and Bjarnason worked together as labour organizers for the American international union United Textile Workers of America (UTWA) and the Canadian Textile Council (CTC).

    Upon graduation from university, Parent began to dedicate her time to improving working conditions in Quebec. By 1942, she was the technical secretary and organizer for the American Federation of Labour’s (AFL) Quebec campaign to organize war industry workers and consumer industry workers. Within the same year, she began to work as a labour organizer with Robert Kent Rowley for cotton and woollen-mill workers in Quebec. Parent became the Secretary-Treasurer for the UTWA’s Canadian District, while Rowley served as Vice President and Canadian Director. In 1946, Parent and Rowley were key organizers of a workers strike at Dominion Textile Company Limited plants in Montreal and Valleyfield, Quebec. Labour organizers of the 1946 strike faced backlash from the provincial government of Maurice Duplessis, which led to the arrests of both Parent and Rowley. Parent was arrested again after a 1947 strike at Ayers Woollen Mills in Lachute, Quebec, and charged with seditious conspiracy.

    A 1952 Dominion Textile workers strike served as an impetus for the Canadian District of the UTWA to seek independence from the American-led union. Both Parent and Rowley were at the forefront of this movement. Leaders and organizers of the Canadian District wanted to break from the influence of the AFL, with which the UTWA was affiliated, and advocated for Canadian representation for Canadian workers. Out of this movement, the CTC was founded by Parent and Rowley in 1952, later to become the Canadian Textile and Chemical Union (CTCU). The CTC planned to remain affiliated with the AFL, however, it became an independent national trade union instead. Parent served as Secretary-Treasurer and Rowley as President of the CTC. A year after the founding of the CTC, in 1953, Parent and Rowley got married.

    Throughout her career, Parent continued to advocate for Canadian unionism. In 1969, Parent and Rowley became founding members of the Confederation of Canadian Unions (CCU), originally called the Council of Canadian Unions, a federation of Canadian independent unions to subvert the influence of American-based international unions on Canadian labour movements. Parent served as the Eastern Vice-President of the CCU, and Rowley served as Secretary-Treasurer until he died in 1978.

    After founding the CTC, Parent spent her time in Quebec and Ontario. Post-1967, she moved to Ontario and only returned to Quebec after she retired from union work in 1983. From the start of her career, Parent was a strong advocate for women’s rights and immigrants’ rights, which she saw as integral to labour activism. In 1972, Parent became a founding member of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women (NAC) and was active in the organization well after her retirement. Post-1983, Parent continued her work with social justice and women’s activism, including advocating for indigenous rights. She was an active supporter of the reinstatement of Mary Pitawanakwat, an Ojibway woman, unjustly dismissed from her position with the Canadian federal civil service. Parent received recognition for her dedication to labour and social justice activism through awards and honorary degrees from several Canadian universities.

    保管历史

    范围和内容

    说明版块

    物理条件

    藏品直接来源

    整理

    资料的语言

      资料文字

        原件位置

        其他格式的可用性

        检索限制

        控制使用, 复制, 和发布的术语

        索引指南

        相关资料

        相关资料

        增加

        备选标识符

        标准书号

        标准书号

        检索点

        主题检索点

        地点检索点

        名称检索点

        体裁检索点

        控制版块

        著录记录标识符

        机构标识符

        规则或惯例

        状态

        细节层级

        创建, 修改以及删除日期

        描述语言

          著录文字

            来源

            登记版块