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Richard Parmater Pettipiece

Richard Parmater (Parm) Pettipiece (1875 – 10 January 1960) was a Canadian socialist and publisher. He was one of the founders of Socialist Party of Canada, and one of the leaders of the Canadian socialist movement in British Columbia in the early 20th century. Later he moved into the moderate trade union movement, and for many years was a Vancouver alderman.

Richard Parmater Pettipiece
Alderman R.P. Pettipiece c. 1937
Born1875
Died10 January 1960
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
NationalityCanadian
Occupation(s)Socialist, publisher

Early years Edit

Richard Parmeter Pettipiece was born in Ontario in 1875. He was a newspaper vendor in Calgary as a boy, then joined the printing trade in 1890. In 1894 he moved to South Edmonton (later renamed Strathcona), now a part of Edmonton and started a weekly newspaper, the South Edmonton News.[1] Not even 20 years old, he was nicknamed "the boy editor."

His newspaper favoured freer trade with the U.S. Its editorial stance was "an advocate of radical tariff reform while in general principle it will be independent."[2]

The first ice hockey match between the newly formed South Edmonton Shamrocks and the Edmonton Thistles was held on 31 January 1896. Pettipiece was secretary of the Shamrocks, which he supported in his paper.[3] He was also active in the local branch of the Orange Order.[4]

He left South Edmonton in 1896 to found a weekly paper in Revelstoke, British Columbia, but soon sold it.[5]

Pettipiece began to publish the Lardeau Eagle in Ferguson, British Columbia, a miner's journal that published the views of the Canadian Socialist League (CSL).[6][7] In 1900 Pettipiece supported female enfranchisement in the Lardeau Eagle.[8] A strike began in Rossland, British Columbia in July 1901 in response to efforts by the mining companies to break the Western Federation of Miners (WFM) locals.[9] The companies ignored the Alien Labor Law and brought strike-breakers from the United States in large numbers. When the WFM called on the federal government to take action the prime minister Wilfrid Laurier and the justice minister David Mills replied that they did not have jurisdiction. Pettipiece said "the Laurier government is afraid to enforce the provisions of a law placed in the statutes by themselves." The strike had collapsed by November.[10]

In 1901 Pettipiece settled in Vancouver, where he joined the Vancouver Province.[1] In 1902 Pettipiece sold the Lardeau Eagle and bought an interest in Toronto-based CSL organ Citizen and Country, which he moved to Vancouver. With the help of the founder George Weston Wrigley the paper began to appear in July 1902 as the Canadian Socialist.[6]

Starting in July 1902 the Citizen and Country began appearing in Vancouver as the Canadian Socialist. The Canadian Socialist was aligned with the Canadian Socialist League. In October 1902 Pettipiece renamed the paper the Western Socialist.

After the failure of the Rossland strike, a WFM convention was held in Kamloops early in 1902, where socialism was declared the official ideology of the union. Eugene V. Debs launched a successful campaign to destroy the Progressive party and ensure socialist control of the union. In January 1903 Pettipiece was able to write that "in the Kootenays a miners' union meeting is converted into a socialist meeting without turning out the lights."[11]

In January 1903 the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) began a campaign to break the United Brotherhood of Railway Employees (UBRE) local in its freight department in Vancouver, and in late February 1903 the union went on strike, with support from socialist and unions across western Canada.[12] The CPR fought the strike ruthlessly, bringing in strikebreakers from central Canada and the USA, and using spies and special police. The CPR bribed Harold Poore, the UBRE organizer in Canada, to give them union secrets. Special police fatally shot the labor and socialist leader Frank Rogers while he was picketing. Pettipiece wrote, "nowhere else in the British Empire would such a condition be possible, and it has seldom been equaled anywhere in the long and painful history of the tragedy of labor." The courts exonerated the company of responsibility.[13]

Pettipiece renamed his paper to Western Socialist, which then was merged with two other newspapers and appeared on 8 May 1903 as the Western Clarion.[6] The paper was named after the Clarion published by Robert Blatchford in England.[14] The Western Clarion had a guaranteed circulation of 6,000 three days a week. Although privately owned the paper expressed the views of the Socialist Party of British Columbia, but gave coverage to controversies among Canadian socialist groups.[15]

The morale of socialists in British Columbia was boosted by their strong showing in the 1903 provincial election.[16] The party considered that movements in Britain and the United States were not revolutionary enough. The highly developed capitalism in BC had resulted in the most advanced socialist movement in North America. Pettipiece said, "fate has decreed this position in the world's history to us, and we should prove to the workers of the world that we can rise to the occasion; let us stand firm; keep our organization iron-clad, aye "narrow" and see that we shy clear of the rocks of danger which have wrecked so many well-meaning movements."[17]

Socialist leader Edit

In February 1905 Pettipiece attended the first meeting of the Dominion Executive Committee of the Socialist Party of Canada, chaired by John Edward Dubberley, and was named an officer and organizer of the new party.[18] The Western Clarion became the organ of the Socialist Party of Canada. Pettipiece was a committed Marxist, and the paper reflected his views. He was responsible for forming locals of the Western Federation of Miners in British Columbia, and organizing the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada.[14] By 1909 Pettipiece was almost justified in his statement that "British Columbia belongs to the Socialists."[19] He said of the SPC electoral record that "this is a showing that at least cannot be duplicated upon this western continent, if it can anywhere else in the world." The SPC saw itself as the preeminent socialist party in the world. McKenzie said, only partly in jest, "since Marx died nobody was capable of throwing light on [economic] matters except the editor of the Clarion, whoever we may happen to be."[20] Pettipiece ran as SPC candidate for Vancouver City in the provincial elections of February 1907 and November 1909, but was not elected. He ran again as SPC candidate for Ymir in the March 1912 provincial election, and again was defeated.[21]

 
Vancouver City Council (1922) Pettipiece is front row, third from right

Early in 1910 there was a revolt by the moderate and eastern European SPC members in the Prairie provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba. They founded the Social Democratic Party in July that year. The revolt spread to Alberta and British Columbia. Pettipiece was among the trade union socialists who lost faith in the ability of the SPC to lead the working class and left the party at this time.[22] Pettipiece served more than once as president of the Vancouver Trades and Labor Council (VTLC), and as its first permanent secretary. He edited the council's newspaper The Trade Unionist, which combined support for trade unionism with SPC propaganda.[19] Pettipiece edited the British Columbia Federationist (1912–20).[1] This was the organ of the BC labor federation.[23] He gave Helena Gutteridge a weekly page on woman's suffrage in the paper.[24]

During the winter of 1911–12 the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) held a number of street meetings to protest against rising unemployment. James Finlay was elected mayor on a law and order platform, and in January 1912 passed a by-law that banned outdoor meetings. Four men were arrested at a 20 January 1912 meeting organized by the IWW.[25] On 28 January 1912 R.P. Pettipiece spoke to a crowd at Vancouver's O. Powell Street Grounds.[26] He told several thousand people that he had failed to get unemployment relief from the provincial government.[27] Mounted police broke up the meeting.[26] Pettipiece was arrested and all public meetings were banned. In response, the IWW and the Socialist Party launched a committee to fight for free speech.[28] However, within a few days the B.C. Federationist called for an end to street meetings. The trade unions wanted equal treatment under the law, not free speech. The IWW was organizing street meetings to attract unskilled workers and migrants, but the trades unions did not want these people as members.[25]

World War I Edit

Pettipiece wrote against Canadian participation in World War I (1914–18) in the B.C. Federationist. He called the war a "miserable muddle" caused by "certain kings, princes, politicians, financiers and other international scoundrels."[23] In 1915 Pettipiece wrote that the May Day festival would have to be postponed because "the workers are all too busy killing each other."[29] Officially the BC Federation of Labor supported women's suffrage, but doubts began to emerge as women replaced men in industrial jobs.[24] On 14 April 1916 the British Columbia Federationist published an editorial that Pettipiece must have approved and may have written, saying,

The noisy advocates of "votes for women" may rest assured that their pet hobby will go through with flying colors as soon as the war is ended. Industrially emancipated women must needs be armed with political power in order to withstand such assaults as might be directed against her by those masculine workers who might feel sore with her for having invaded those industrial precincts previously held sacred to themselves. The master class will see that she gets the franchise. There is little doubt of that, and with her franchise she will be a bulwark of defense to everything that is conservative in political and industrial life...[24]

The British Columbia Federation of Labor decided in January 1918 to form the Federated Labor Party (FLP) as "a united working class political party ... calculated to enlist the interest and activity of every advanced and progressive thinker." The new party's early leaders included prominent socialists such as Pettipiece, E. T. Kingsley and James Hurst Hawthornthwaite. Pettipiece made the anti-capitalist position of the party clear in a speech in March 1918 when he said, "All shades of opinion are to be represented from the social uplift element to the red-hot revolutionary. The policy of the party hinges upon the property question. The party stands for the collective ownership of the property which is collectively used, and is unalterably opposed to capitalist ownership and control of all such property."[30] However, immediately after the FLP had been founded there was a general swing among BC socialists towards industrial syndicalism and One Big Union (OBU). The BC Federation of Labor and the Vancouver Trades and Labor Council was soon aligned with this industrial action platform.[30]

Postwar career Edit

He served on Vancouver city council 1922-23, 1933-1935, and in 1936, as well as running for a federal seat.

 
Pettipiece in 1937

In 1921 Pettipiece ran in the federal election on a Labour ticket in the New Westminster riding. He won 25% of the citywide vote, and captured seven city polls. He said "we had no money, little organization, and only evening work of volunteers. Despite this handicap we rolled up a vote which cannot be ignored and will be increased."[31]

Pettipiece was a member of the Vancouver city council in 1922 when the city was using proportional representation.[32] He ran for mayor in 1923 but was unsuccessful as the left vote was split over two candidates and transferable votes were no longer in use.[33]

The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) was founded in 1932. Pettipiece represented the CCF in council.[34] From 1933 Pettipiece pushed for abolition of the ward system of election in Vancouver, which did not give fair representation to working class areas.[35] In 1935 Pettipiece was disqualified from being candidate for aldermanic seat and two city officials lost their positions due to this.[36] In December 1936 Pettipiece and A.M. Anderson were elected to the council for the CCF, although for technical reasons Anderson could not take his seat.[37] After Pettipiece questioned CCF policy, the party refused to endorse him in the December 1937 civic elections.[34] Pettipiece ran on the Non-Partisan Association (NPA) platform, and failed to be elected.[38]

Pettipiece was a director of Vancouver General Hospital for 27 years. He was president of the International Typographical Union, founded in 1897, for four terms.[5] Richard Parmater Pettipiece died in 1960, aged about 85.[1]

Views on race Edit

Pettipiece's position on racial matters was ambivalent. In March 1908 he wrote in The Trades Unionist that "In the fastest growing Oriental section of the city every conceivable sort of the rankest kind of "sweat shops" exist; or perhaps thrive would be a better term. And as sort of a refuge for the social garbage as a result of such economic conditions, the Chinese have provided the town with plenty of opium joints, where over 100 white women, social outcasts who have fallen to the last depths of degradation, are imprisoned victims of these monstrous dens of iniquity."[39]

In 1913 Pettipiece was asked about Asiatic immigration in an interview. He said he had no objection, "We aim to unite the laborers of all nations in one solid army against capital ... Let them come in, we say! They will make so many more votes to overthrow capital! It isn't labor that opposes the Oriental. No—you bet! Let 'em come in!" Pressed further, he equivocated, "As a father, I don't want the Hindu in here any more than you do as a woman. Let the Asiatics have separate schools. As a citizen, I do not want the Asiatic. ... You can't assimilate him to our civilization ... [but] labor has found that we might better have the cheap Asiatics come in here and organized into our fighting ranks, than have the cheap products of Asiatic labor come in here and undersell our labor products."[40]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Richard Parmeter Pettipiece, World Socialist Movement.
  2. ^ Monto, Old Strathcona (2012)
  3. ^ Historical Society of Alberta 2001.
  4. ^ Tom Monto. Old Strathcona Edmonton`s Southside Roots. Crang Publishing, Alhambra Books (2012)
  5. ^ a b Brissenden & Loyie 2014.
  6. ^ a b c Milne 1973, p. 1.
  7. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 24.
  8. ^ American Journalism 1997, p. 456.
  9. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 38.
  10. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 39.
  11. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 41.
  12. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 45.
  13. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 46.
  14. ^ a b Hardt & Brennen 1995, p. 187.
  15. ^ Milne 1973, p. 2.
  16. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 32.
  17. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 33.
  18. ^ Milne 1973, p. 10-11.
  19. ^ a b McCormack 1991, p. 62.
  20. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 70.
  21. ^ Richard Parmater Pettipiece, Canadian Elections Database.
  22. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 74.
  23. ^ a b McCormack 1991, p. 119.
  24. ^ a b c Howard 2011, p. 67.
  25. ^ a b Leier 1989, p. 48.
  26. ^ a b Davis 2014.
  27. ^ Bitter & Weber 2011.
  28. ^ O. Powell Street Grounds ... CommunityWalk.
  29. ^ McCormack 1991, p. 120.
  30. ^ a b Mills 1991, p. 72.
  31. ^ Warburton & Coburn 2011, p. 130-131.
  32. ^ Edmonton Bulletin, December 13, 1923
  33. ^ Smith 1982, p. 51.
  34. ^ a b Smith 1982, p. 58.
  35. ^ Smith 1982, p. 54.
  36. ^ Smith 1982, p. 52.
  37. ^ Howard 2011, p. 188.
  38. ^ Howard 2011, p. 190.
  39. ^ Spencer 2005, p. 28.
  40. ^ Chang 2012, p. 145.

Sources Edit

  • American Journalism: The Publication of the American Journalism Historians Association. The Association. 1997.
  • Bitter, Sabine; Weber, Helmut (2011). "January". A Sign for the City. City of Vancouver Public Art Program. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Brissenden, Constance; Loyie, Larry (2014). "Parm (Richard Parmater) Pettipiece". HALL OF FAME. Retrieved 2014-09-10. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Chang, Kornel S. (2012). Pacific Connections: The Making of the U.S.-Canadian Borderlands. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-27168-5. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Davis, Chuck (2014). "Chronology 1912". The History of Metropolitan Vancouver. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Hardt, Hanno; Brennen, Bonnie (1995). Newsworkers: Toward a History of the Rank and File. U of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-2706-6. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Historical Society of Alberta (2001). "'Puck-eaters': hockey as a unifying community experience in Edmonton and Strathcoma, 1894-1905." The Free Library. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Howard, Irene (2011-11-01). The Struggle for Social Justice in British Columbia: Helena Gutteridge, the Unknown Reformer. UBC Press. ISBN 978-0-7748-4287-7. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Leier, Mark (Spring 1989). "Solidarity on Occasion: The Vancouver Free Speech Fights of 1909 and 1912". Labour/Le Travail. 23: 39–66. doi:10.2307/25143135. JSTOR 25143135. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • McCormack, A. Ross (1991). Reformers, Rebels, and Revolutionaries: The Western Canadian Radical Movement 1899-1919. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-7682-3. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Mills, Allen George (1991-01-01). Fool for Christ: The Political Thought of J.S. Woodsworth. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-6842-2. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Milne, J. M. (1973). "History of the Socialist Party of Canada" (PDF). World Socialist Movement. Retrieved 2014-08-30.
  • "O. Powell Street Grounds/ Oppenheimer Park". CommunityWalk. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • "Richard Parmater Pettipiece". Canadian Elections Database. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • "Richard Parmeter Pettipiece". World Socialist Movement. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Smith, André A.B. (1982). "The CCF, NPA, and Civic Change: Provincial Forces Behind Vancouver Politics 1930-1940". BC Studies (53). Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Spencer, David R. (2005). "Race and Revolution Canada's Victorian Labour Press and the Chinese Immigration Question". The Public. 12 (1). Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  • Warburton, Rennie; Coburn, David (2011-11-01). Workers, Capital, and the State in British Columbia: Selected Papers. UBC Press. ISBN 978-0-7748-4317-1. Retrieved 2014-09-10.

richard, parmater, pettipiece, richard, parmater, parm, pettipiece, 1875, january, 1960, canadian, socialist, publisher, founders, socialist, party, canada, leaders, canadian, socialist, movement, british, columbia, early, 20th, century, later, moved, into, mo. Richard Parmater Parm Pettipiece 1875 10 January 1960 was a Canadian socialist and publisher He was one of the founders of Socialist Party of Canada and one of the leaders of the Canadian socialist movement in British Columbia in the early 20th century Later he moved into the moderate trade union movement and for many years was a Vancouver alderman Richard Parmater PettipieceAlderman R P Pettipiece c 1937Born1875North Gower Township Carleton County Ontario CanadaDied10 January 1960Vancouver British Columbia Canada NationalityCanadianOccupation s Socialist publisher Contents 1 Early years 2 Socialist leader 3 World War I 4 Postwar career 5 Views on race 6 References 7 SourcesEarly years EditRichard Parmeter Pettipiece was born in Ontario in 1875 He was a newspaper vendor in Calgary as a boy then joined the printing trade in 1890 In 1894 he moved to South Edmonton later renamed Strathcona now a part of Edmonton and started a weekly newspaper the South Edmonton News 1 Not even 20 years old he was nicknamed the boy editor His newspaper favoured freer trade with the U S Its editorial stance was an advocate of radical tariff reform while in general principle it will be independent 2 The first ice hockey match between the newly formed South Edmonton Shamrocks and the Edmonton Thistles was held on 31 January 1896 Pettipiece was secretary of the Shamrocks which he supported in his paper 3 He was also active in the local branch of the Orange Order 4 He left South Edmonton in 1896 to found a weekly paper in Revelstoke British Columbia but soon sold it 5 Pettipiece began to publish the Lardeau Eagle in Ferguson British Columbia a miner s journal that published the views of the Canadian Socialist League CSL 6 7 In 1900 Pettipiece supported female enfranchisement in the Lardeau Eagle 8 A strike began in Rossland British Columbia in July 1901 in response to efforts by the mining companies to break the Western Federation of Miners WFM locals 9 The companies ignored the Alien Labor Law and brought strike breakers from the United States in large numbers When the WFM called on the federal government to take action the prime minister Wilfrid Laurier and the justice minister David Mills replied that they did not have jurisdiction Pettipiece said the Laurier government is afraid to enforce the provisions of a law placed in the statutes by themselves The strike had collapsed by November 10 In 1901 Pettipiece settled in Vancouver where he joined the Vancouver Province 1 In 1902 Pettipiece sold the Lardeau Eagle and bought an interest in Toronto based CSL organ Citizen and Country which he moved to Vancouver With the help of the founder George Weston Wrigley the paper began to appear in July 1902 as the Canadian Socialist 6 Starting in July 1902 the Citizen and Country began appearing in Vancouver as the Canadian Socialist The Canadian Socialist was aligned with the Canadian Socialist League In October 1902 Pettipiece renamed the paper the Western Socialist After the failure of the Rossland strike a WFM convention was held in Kamloops early in 1902 where socialism was declared the official ideology of the union Eugene V Debs launched a successful campaign to destroy the Progressive party and ensure socialist control of the union In January 1903 Pettipiece was able to write that in the Kootenays a miners union meeting is converted into a socialist meeting without turning out the lights 11 In January 1903 the Canadian Pacific Railway CPR began a campaign to break the United Brotherhood of Railway Employees UBRE local in its freight department in Vancouver and in late February 1903 the union went on strike with support from socialist and unions across western Canada 12 The CPR fought the strike ruthlessly bringing in strikebreakers from central Canada and the USA and using spies and special police The CPR bribed Harold Poore the UBRE organizer in Canada to give them union secrets Special police fatally shot the labor and socialist leader Frank Rogers while he was picketing Pettipiece wrote nowhere else in the British Empire would such a condition be possible and it has seldom been equaled anywhere in the long and painful history of the tragedy of labor The courts exonerated the company of responsibility 13 Pettipiece renamed his paper to Western Socialist which then was merged with two other newspapers and appeared on 8 May 1903 as the Western Clarion 6 The paper was named after the Clarion published by Robert Blatchford in England 14 The Western Clarion had a guaranteed circulation of 6 000 three days a week Although privately owned the paper expressed the views of the Socialist Party of British Columbia but gave coverage to controversies among Canadian socialist groups 15 The morale of socialists in British Columbia was boosted by their strong showing in the 1903 provincial election 16 The party considered that movements in Britain and the United States were not revolutionary enough The highly developed capitalism in BC had resulted in the most advanced socialist movement in North America Pettipiece said fate has decreed this position in the world s history to us and we should prove to the workers of the world that we can rise to the occasion let us stand firm keep our organization iron clad aye narrow and see that we shy clear of the rocks of danger which have wrecked so many well meaning movements 17 Socialist leader EditIn February 1905 Pettipiece attended the first meeting of the Dominion Executive Committee of the Socialist Party of Canada chaired by John Edward Dubberley and was named an officer and organizer of the new party 18 The Western Clarion became the organ of the Socialist Party of Canada Pettipiece was a committed Marxist and the paper reflected his views He was responsible for forming locals of the Western Federation of Miners in British Columbia and organizing the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada 14 By 1909 Pettipiece was almost justified in his statement that British Columbia belongs to the Socialists 19 He said of the SPC electoral record that this is a showing that at least cannot be duplicated upon this western continent if it can anywhere else in the world The SPC saw itself as the preeminent socialist party in the world McKenzie said only partly in jest since Marx died nobody was capable of throwing light on economic matters except the editor of the Clarion whoever we may happen to be 20 Pettipiece ran as SPC candidate for Vancouver City in the provincial elections of February 1907 and November 1909 but was not elected He ran again as SPC candidate for Ymir in the March 1912 provincial election and again was defeated 21 nbsp Vancouver City Council 1922 Pettipiece is front row third from rightEarly in 1910 there was a revolt by the moderate and eastern European SPC members in the Prairie provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba They founded the Social Democratic Party in July that year The revolt spread to Alberta and British Columbia Pettipiece was among the trade union socialists who lost faith in the ability of the SPC to lead the working class and left the party at this time 22 Pettipiece served more than once as president of the Vancouver Trades and Labor Council VTLC and as its first permanent secretary He edited the council s newspaper The Trade Unionist which combined support for trade unionism with SPC propaganda 19 Pettipiece edited the British Columbia Federationist 1912 20 1 This was the organ of the BC labor federation 23 He gave Helena Gutteridge a weekly page on woman s suffrage in the paper 24 During the winter of 1911 12 the Industrial Workers of the World IWW held a number of street meetings to protest against rising unemployment James Finlay was elected mayor on a law and order platform and in January 1912 passed a by law that banned outdoor meetings Four men were arrested at a 20 January 1912 meeting organized by the IWW 25 On 28 January 1912 R P Pettipiece spoke to a crowd at Vancouver s O Powell Street Grounds 26 He told several thousand people that he had failed to get unemployment relief from the provincial government 27 Mounted police broke up the meeting 26 Pettipiece was arrested and all public meetings were banned In response the IWW and the Socialist Party launched a committee to fight for free speech 28 However within a few days the B C Federationist called for an end to street meetings The trade unions wanted equal treatment under the law not free speech The IWW was organizing street meetings to attract unskilled workers and migrants but the trades unions did not want these people as members 25 World War I EditPettipiece wrote against Canadian participation in World War I 1914 18 in the B C Federationist He called the war a miserable muddle caused by certain kings princes politicians financiers and other international scoundrels 23 In 1915 Pettipiece wrote that the May Day festival would have to be postponed because the workers are all too busy killing each other 29 Officially the BC Federation of Labor supported women s suffrage but doubts began to emerge as women replaced men in industrial jobs 24 On 14 April 1916 the British Columbia Federationist published an editorial that Pettipiece must have approved and may have written saying The noisy advocates of votes for women may rest assured that their pet hobby will go through with flying colors as soon as the war is ended Industrially emancipated women must needs be armed with political power in order to withstand such assaults as might be directed against her by those masculine workers who might feel sore with her for having invaded those industrial precincts previously held sacred to themselves The master class will see that she gets the franchise There is little doubt of that and with her franchise she will be a bulwark of defense to everything that is conservative in political and industrial life 24 The British Columbia Federation of Labor decided in January 1918 to form the Federated Labor Party FLP as a united working class political party calculated to enlist the interest and activity of every advanced and progressive thinker The new party s early leaders included prominent socialists such as Pettipiece E T Kingsley and James Hurst Hawthornthwaite Pettipiece made the anti capitalist position of the party clear in a speech in March 1918 when he said All shades of opinion are to be represented from the social uplift element to the red hot revolutionary The policy of the party hinges upon the property question The party stands for the collective ownership of the property which is collectively used and is unalterably opposed to capitalist ownership and control of all such property 30 However immediately after the FLP had been founded there was a general swing among BC socialists towards industrial syndicalism and One Big Union OBU The BC Federation of Labor and the Vancouver Trades and Labor Council was soon aligned with this industrial action platform 30 Postwar career EditHe served on Vancouver city council 1922 23 1933 1935 and in 1936 as well as running for a federal seat nbsp Pettipiece in 1937In 1921 Pettipiece ran in the federal election on a Labour ticket in the New Westminster riding He won 25 of the citywide vote and captured seven city polls He said we had no money little organization and only evening work of volunteers Despite this handicap we rolled up a vote which cannot be ignored and will be increased 31 Pettipiece was a member of the Vancouver city council in 1922 when the city was using proportional representation 32 He ran for mayor in 1923 but was unsuccessful as the left vote was split over two candidates and transferable votes were no longer in use 33 The Co operative Commonwealth Federation CCF was founded in 1932 Pettipiece represented the CCF in council 34 From 1933 Pettipiece pushed for abolition of the ward system of election in Vancouver which did not give fair representation to working class areas 35 In 1935 Pettipiece was disqualified from being candidate for aldermanic seat and two city officials lost their positions due to this 36 In December 1936 Pettipiece and A M Anderson were elected to the council for the CCF although for technical reasons Anderson could not take his seat 37 After Pettipiece questioned CCF policy the party refused to endorse him in the December 1937 civic elections 34 Pettipiece ran on the Non Partisan Association NPA platform and failed to be elected 38 Pettipiece was a director of Vancouver General Hospital for 27 years He was president of the International Typographical Union founded in 1897 for four terms 5 Richard Parmater Pettipiece died in 1960 aged about 85 1 Views on race EditPettipiece s position on racial matters was ambivalent In March 1908 he wrote in The Trades Unionist that In the fastest growing Oriental section of the city every conceivable sort of the rankest kind of sweat shops exist or perhaps thrive would be a better term And as sort of a refuge for the social garbage as a result of such economic conditions the Chinese have provided the town with plenty of opium joints where over 100 white women social outcasts who have fallen to the last depths of degradation are imprisoned victims of these monstrous dens of iniquity 39 In 1913 Pettipiece was asked about Asiatic immigration in an interview He said he had no objection We aim to unite the laborers of all nations in one solid army against capital Let them come in we say They will make so many more votes to overthrow capital It isn t labor that opposes the Oriental No you bet Let em come in Pressed further he equivocated As a father I don t want the Hindu in here any more than you do as a woman Let the Asiatics have separate schools As a citizen I do not want the Asiatic You can t assimilate him to our civilization but labor has found that we might better have the cheap Asiatics come in here and organized into our fighting ranks than have the cheap products of Asiatic labor come in here and undersell our labor products 40 References Edit a b c d Richard Parmeter Pettipiece World Socialist Movement Monto Old Strathcona 2012 Historical Society of Alberta 2001 Tom Monto Old Strathcona Edmonton s Southside Roots Crang Publishing Alhambra Books 2012 a b Brissenden amp Loyie 2014 a b c Milne 1973 p 1 McCormack 1991 p 24 American Journalism 1997 p 456 McCormack 1991 p 38 McCormack 1991 p 39 McCormack 1991 p 41 McCormack 1991 p 45 McCormack 1991 p 46 a b Hardt amp Brennen 1995 p 187 Milne 1973 p 2 McCormack 1991 p 32 McCormack 1991 p 33 Milne 1973 p 10 11 a b McCormack 1991 p 62 McCormack 1991 p 70 Richard Parmater Pettipiece Canadian Elections Database McCormack 1991 p 74 a b McCormack 1991 p 119 a b c Howard 2011 p 67 a b Leier 1989 p 48 a b Davis 2014 Bitter amp Weber 2011 O Powell Street Grounds CommunityWalk McCormack 1991 p 120 a b Mills 1991 p 72 Warburton amp Coburn 2011 p 130 131 Edmonton Bulletin December 13 1923 Smith 1982 p 51 a b Smith 1982 p 58 Smith 1982 p 54 Smith 1982 p 52 Howard 2011 p 188 Howard 2011 p 190 Spencer 2005 p 28 Chang 2012 p 145 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Richard Parmeter Pettipiece Sources EditAmerican Journalism The Publication of the American Journalism Historians Association The Association 1997 Bitter Sabine Weber Helmut 2011 January A Sign for the City City of Vancouver Public Art Program Retrieved 2014 09 10 Brissenden Constance Loyie Larry 2014 Parm Richard Parmater Pettipiece HALL OF FAME Retrieved 2014 09 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Chang Kornel S 2012 Pacific Connections The Making of the U S Canadian Borderlands University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 27168 5 Retrieved 2014 09 10 Davis Chuck 2014 Chronology 1912 The History of Metropolitan Vancouver Retrieved 2014 09 10 Hardt Hanno Brennen Bonnie 1995 Newsworkers Toward a History of the Rank and File U of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 2706 6 Retrieved 2014 09 10 Historical Society of Alberta 2001 Puck eaters hockey as a unifying community experience in Edmonton and Strathcoma 1894 1905 The Free Library Retrieved 2014 09 10 Howard Irene 2011 11 01 The Struggle for Social Justice in British Columbia Helena Gutteridge the Unknown Reformer UBC Press ISBN 978 0 7748 4287 7 Retrieved 2014 09 10 Leier Mark Spring 1989 Solidarity on Occasion The Vancouver Free Speech Fights of 1909 and 1912 Labour Le Travail 23 39 66 doi 10 2307 25143135 JSTOR 25143135 Retrieved 2014 09 10 McCormack A Ross 1991 Reformers Rebels and Revolutionaries The Western Canadian Radical Movement 1899 1919 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 7682 3 Retrieved 2014 09 10 Mills Allen George 1991 01 01 Fool for Christ The Political Thought of J S Woodsworth University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 6842 2 Retrieved 2014 09 10 Milne J M 1973 History of the Socialist Party of Canada PDF World Socialist Movement Retrieved 2014 08 30 O Powell Street Grounds Oppenheimer Park CommunityWalk Retrieved 2014 09 10 Richard Parmater Pettipiece Canadian Elections Database Retrieved 2014 09 10 Richard Parmeter Pettipiece World Socialist Movement Retrieved 2014 09 10 Smith Andre A B 1982 The CCF NPA and Civic Change Provincial Forces Behind Vancouver Politics 1930 1940 BC Studies 53 Retrieved 2014 09 10 Spencer David R 2005 Race and Revolution Canada s Victorian Labour Press and the Chinese Immigration Question The Public 12 1 Retrieved 2014 09 10 Warburton Rennie Coburn David 2011 11 01 Workers Capital and the State in British Columbia Selected Papers UBC Press ISBN 978 0 7748 4317 1 Retrieved 2014 09 10 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Parmater Pettipiece amp oldid 1161194891, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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