Sunday 22 July 2012

1903-07-18


Captain Armstrong, who was police magistrate in this city half a century ago, was an officer in the British navy during the War of 1812, and took part in the storming of Fort Erie and the taking of Chippewa, where he landed the crew of his vessel to assist the soldiers in their fight with their American cousins. At Fort Erie, the gallant captain led the forlorn hope for which he received the thanks of the governor and a commission as a lieutenant in the royal navy. In Hamilton and its vicinity, there was a large number of veterans of the War of 1812, and the old fellows would travel a good many miles in order to have Capt. Armstrong certify to their pension vouchers. The veteran sailor always took a day off to swap yarns with his old comrades, and strict orders were given the police not to interfere with the veterans should they drink once too often to the health of Victoria the Good. The old boys have long since been mustered out.

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          In the month of January, 1854, a morning newspaper in this city advertised for four first class compositors, and none other need apply, to whom the fabulous sum of $8 a week would be paid. The poor fellows were expected to work from twelve to fourteen hours a day. There was less than half a column of telegraphic news set each night, the copy being mainly clipped from exchanges and the foreign papers. In the old paper before us, there is a column report of the proceedings of the City council, in which Brown and McDonald offered the city a large quantity of broken stone at a nominal price, as it was only rubbish and had to be moved from their quarries on the mountain. The poor old mountain was even then being deprived of its rugged beauty, for it not only furnished the stone for building purposes, but also for the lime kilns, of which there were a number along the brow. However, there was a thick growth of timber on the mountain side, which hid from view the work of the iconoclasts.

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          The greatest event in the city of Hamilton occurred on Jan. 19, 1854 when it celebrated the opening of the railway from Niagara Falls to Detroit. The opening of that road was the event in Canadian history, for it was the longest line of railway built in Canada down to that time. And here, as a matter of history, we will report the statement made once or twice before in the Spectator that the first railway built in Canada – and among the first built in the continent of America – was from La Prairie, opposite Montreal to the United States border, some twelve or fifteen miles distant. The Great Western was either the second or third road built in Canada. No wonder then that Hamilton should feel an interest in it, for was not Sir Allan Macnab the father of the project, and was it not through his unceasing efforts that English and United States capitalists were induced to put capital into the enterprise and push the road to completion. Three years from the time the first spade of earth was turned to begin the work of construction, the company had completed 228 miles of first-class road from the Falls to Detroit at a total cost of $10, 821,056. Niagara Falls celebrated the opening from the river to Hamilton, and London had its jubilee when the first passenger train reached that city, and it remained for Hamilton and Detroit to put on the finishing touches and make the grand through opening a memorable occasion. It was a three days’ junket, beginning at Detroit, and ending in Hamilton, and every town, village and hamlet along the entire line added its part. The council of Hamilton appropriated $30,000 to the entertaining of the city’s guests at a banquet and to pay the expenses of the council to Detroit. The fire department asked for $500 to defray the expense of entertaining visiting firemen from the cities along the Great Western line, and for two or three companies from Rochester and Buffalo, but the city fathers had to fight over it, and finally compromised by voting $396. With this amount, the firemen built a triumphal arch at the corner of King and James streets, hired a band, gave a banquet to 350 visiting firemen and finished the day with a torchlight parade. When the bills were audited, each company had to call on its members to make up the deficit. That is about the spirit in which the City Council of other days used to treat the old fire fighters. But the celebration was a success, and Hamilton was proud of the result. There was a grand procession in the forenoon, led by Capt. Booker’s artillery, followed by the police, the St. George, the St. Andrew and the St. Patrick societies. The Highlanders were out in uniform, but as a January day in Canada was a little too cool for bare legs, they had to wear tartan breaks. The greatest disappointment to the Highlanders was that they had to march to common, everyday band music, as Mr. Grant, the only piper in the city was sick in bed. Counting the visiting companies and the home department over 600 firemen were in the line of march, and they were the centre of attraction. In the carnival parade, on Aug. 17 next, less than half a dozen of the old fire-fighters who marched on Jan. 19, 1854 will be in line with the Veteran Firemen. They are grey-headed old boys now, but they are as young in spirit as when they manned the drag ropes half a century ago.

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          In 1854, the City Council revised the schedule of official salaries, and gave each one a small advance. Prior to that time, some of the officers were paid by fees, but it was decided to put all on a regular salary basis. It may be interesting to compare the salaries then paid with what are paid now. The salary of police magistrate was fixed at $1,000 a year; chamberlain, $900; clerk, $900; high bailiff, $400 and a house, light and fuel; chief constable, $420; street inspector, $500; superintendent of cemeteries, $400; superintendent of hospital, $300; city messenger, $320; clerk of wood market, $400; policeman, $360. Poor salaries were paid, but some official made up the shortage in his pay by re-selling city debentures that had been redeemed but not cancelled. There was quite a breeze in the council when the stealing was made public; but the city had to lose the amount as the officer had never given an official bond. The only consolation one of the aldermen could offer was that the official did not steal more, having had large amounts of redeemed checks and certificates in his hands, which he failed to cancel. Life tenure of office is not always the safest. Occasional changes tend to a closer auditing of accounts.

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          The firm of Lawson Brothers, the principal clothing manufacturers in Hamilton in the early ‘50’s gave employment to fifty or more tailors. When sewing machines first came into use in the tailoring trade, the Lawsons introduced them in Hamilton. The tailors would have none of them, and after repeated demands made to the firm to throw out the obnoxious machines, which were refused, they went out on strike. In those days, labor saving machinery was looked upon with suspicion by all classes of wage earners, the argument against them being that every machine would take the place of at least half a dozen men, and ruin and starvation be the result. The Lawsons advertised for “fifty tailors who are not afraid of machinery,” and one evening the required number came from the States by the Great western railway. The striking tailors were at the station to meet them, and when it was explained that a strike was on, the Yankee disciples of the goose and needle turned their faces toward the Stars and Stripes and left the Hamiltonians to fight it out with the Lawsons. The introduction of Sewing machines was fought to a finish, leaving the machine triumphant. If the clothing of the present day were all made by hand, it would be impossible to supply the demand. As it is, the manufacturers find it a difficult matter at times to fill orders. The journeymen tailors earn better wages now than they did half a century ago, and men dress better on less money.

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          The first Printers’ union was organized in Hamilton on the 6th of March, 1854. Thomas Rolston was elected president; John Christian, vice-president; R. L. Gay, treasurer; James Nixon, D. G. Mitchell and W. F. Campbell, vigilance committee. Gay lives in Toronto and Cliff in Hamilton; the others are dead. This organization of printers was to secure a price for work, the rate of wages varying from $4 to $6 a week.

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          The first cotton mill in Upper Canada was built at Newmarket in 1854. From a description given of the mill, it was 150 feet long, 50 feet wide, four stories high, with a capacity of 120 looms and 5,000 spindles. The estimated cost of the mill, machinery, repair shop, and twelve houses for the workingmen was $50,000, and the working capital $35,000. The output of the mill was estimated at 200,000 yards of 36 inch cloth, which was then selling at ten cents a yard. Even in that faraway day, Canada afforded a protection of 12 ½ per cent on cotton manufacturers, which was counted a great profit in those days.

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          In the good old days of ’53, when corporations had not yet learned to dilute their stock, the fare from Niagara Falls to New York City was $7 first class, and if money was more an object than style, one could make the trip in a second class coach for $5. To Boston from Niagara Falls was $11, taking the Fall River line of boats at New York. It took about 32 hours to make the trip from the Falls to new York. There were no palace or sleeping cars, and when night came, if the cars were not crowded, the passenger curled upon the seat and spent long hours wishing for daylight. While passenger rates were low, the company made up the shortage by high rates on freight. For first class 86 cents a hundred was charged, second class 64 cents, and for third class 48 cents.

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