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Arthur "Slim" Evans

Arthur Herbert "Slim" Evans (April 24, 1890 – February 13, 1944) was a leader in the industrial labor union movement in Canada and the United States.[1] He is most known for leading the On To Ottawa Trek. Evans was involved in the Industrial Workers of the World, the One Big Union, and the Worker's Unity League. He was a member of the Communist Party of Canada.[2]

Arthur "Slim" Evans
Arthur "Slim" Evans, c. 1911
Born
Arthur Herbert Evans

(1890-04-24)April 24, 1890
DiedFebruary 13, 1944(1944-02-13) (aged 53)
Occupation(s)Trade Unionist, carpenter
Organizations
Known forLeading the On to Ottawa Trek
Political partyCommunist Party of Canada

Personal life edit

Evans was born in Toronto in 1890. At age 13, he left school to support his family. He worked numerous jobs, including horse driver and carpenter. Evans travelled west in 1911 and worked in various places, first as a farmer, then worked again as a carpenter in Winnipeg, Minneapolis and Kansas City.[3]

On August 4, 1920, Arthur "Slim" Evans married Ethel (last name unknown) who he had met while organizing miners in Drumheller, Alberta. On April 13, 1922, the couple had their first child, a son named Stewart. Stewart Evans died in 1925 during the diphtheria epidemic in Vancouver. They had a second child, Jean Stewart Evans, on February 12, 1927. Jean would go on to write "Work and Wages!", a biography of her father.

Wobblies edit

In Minneapolis he became involved with the Industrial Workers of the World, (IWW, or "Wobblies"). He led an IWW free speech rally in Minneapolis where he was arrested for participating and sentenced to three years in jail. Evans later recalled: "All I did was read it. I was too shy and too nervous at that time to make up any speech of my own."[4] In 1912, he led a strike of political prisoners resulting in his release.

He was present at the 1913 miners' strike in Ludlow, Colorado. There he met IWW leaders "Big" Bill Haywood, Frank Little, and the legendary Joe Hill. Two days after Evans arrived, strikebreakers hired by John D. Rockefeller, owner of the coal mines, attacked the striker's camp, killing 20 people including 12 children in the Ludlow Massacre.[5] Evans was shot in the leg with a machine gun. He walked with a limp for the rest of his life as a result.[6]

Evans returned to Canada and continued his union activism. He was the leader of the One Big Union local of coal miners in Drumheller, Alberta. He led a strike of 6,300 One Big Union miners during the Canadian Labour Revolt in 1919. It was there he met his future wife Ethel, daughter of a Drumheller miner who had been involved in organizing the union.[3] The strike was suppressed by anti-union mercenaries hired by the mining company. Because the One Big Union was not a recognized union, and workers were official organized within the United Mine Workers, Evans had technically organized a 'wild cat' strike without permission. Evans used UMWA funds for the strike, he was accused of embezzlement and sentenced to a three year prison term.[7] Upon a petition from the workers he supposedly embezzled from, Evans was released.[1]

Evans, along with other former wobblies, became a member of the Communist Party of Canada after it formed in 1921. Evans officially became a party member in 1926.[8]

Worker's Unity League edit

The Worker's Unity League was the official trade union centre of the Communist Party of Canada. Like the IWW and OBU which Evans had previously organized in, the Worker's Unity League was an industrial union.[9] Evans was a major organizer within the union.[10]

Princeton coal miner's strike edit

In 1932, coal miners saw their wages cut by 10% in Princeton, British Columbia. The miners contacted the Worker's Unity League, which sent Evans to organize a union for them in September 1932.[11] The company refused to negotiate with the union, so the workers voted to strike. Evans advised the workers to wait until December to strike, because the demand for coal would be much higher. The strike began on December 22. British Columbia's attorney general dispatched a crops of 40 RCMP officers to monitor Evans and suppress the strike. Officers assaulted the striking miners with batons, along with their families, while they were picketing. The Ku Klux Klan burned crosses, beat strikers, and sent threatening letters, in the name of anti-communism.[12]

Evans was arrested under Section 98, which allows arbitrary detainment of suspected communists,. He was imprisoned in far off Oakella Prison where he did hard-labour before being released on bail. During his imprisonment, his wife and daughter were evicted from the home Evan's had built for them.[13] Following his release, Evans was kidnapped by off duty police constables and klansmen. A convoy of armed cars took him to Vancouver.[14] The kidnappers threatened: "take warning and move on or suffer the consequences". Evans immediately booked a train back to Princeton, where he led the strike to success, winning workers higher pay and improved workplace safety.[15] Evans was once again arrested under Section 98, and sentenced to one year in prison without bail. He rejected the legitimacy of the trial and instead of defending himself he sang The Internationale.[16]

On-to-Ottawa trek edit

In 1935 Evans led the On-to-Ottawa Trek. Communist activists including Evans had organized workers in the government relief camps into the Relief Camp Workers' Union three years previously in 1932. Relief camp workers struck on April 4, 1935, when they went to Vancouver, where they stayed and pressed their demands until the Trek began on June 3.[17] The first batch of strikers left Vancouver, riding on boxcars, and were joined by many others in Kamloops, Field, Golden, Calgary and Moose Jaw.[18] By the time they reached Regina, Saskatchewan their numbers had climbed to over 2,000. Evans led a delegation to go ahead of the strikers and meet with the prime minister, R. B. "Iron Heel" Bennett. The two leaders engaged in a heated exchange, when Bennett accused Evans of being an embezzler. Evans' response received much publicity:

You are a liar. I was arrested for fraudulently converting these funds to feed the starving, instead of sending them to the agents at Indianapolis, and I again say you are a liar if you say I embezzled, and I will have the pleasure of telling the workers throughout Canada that I was forced to tell the premier of Canada he was a liar. Don't think you can pull off anything like that. You are not intimidating me a damned bit.[19]

The meeting accomplished little more than to illustrate the intransigence of the government and the determination of the strikers, and the delegation left Ottawa to rejoin the strikers in Regina.

Evans and other Trek leaders were arrested at a large demonstration of strikers and supporters on July 1, 1935, (Dominion Day, or Canada Day, as it is now called), which precipitated the Regina Riot. The federal government had decided that the Trek would be forcibly stopped in Regina because of fears that it would gain momentum if allowed to reach Winnipeg that could turn it from a protest into a revolutionary movement.[20]

Evans was charged under Section 98, the section of the Criminal Code, which had been added in the aftermath of the Winnipeg General Strike outlawing membership in revolutionary organizations. An exhaustive government inquiry was held into causes of the riot, and its conclusions paved the way for reforming the relief camp system. This outcome and the overwhelming defeat of R. B. Bennett are two indicators that the strike was a success, even though the Trek was crushed.[21][22]

Later organizing edit

Evans continued his union activism, organizing the miners and smelter workers in Trail, British Columbia, into the CIO union, Mine, Mill, and Smelters Union. While organizing the smelters, his car was torched by the mine owners.[23] He also led fundraising drives for the Mackenzie-Papineau Battalion, the volunteer contingent from Canada that fought the fascists during the Spanish Civil War. His last union position was as the shop steward at the Vancouver Shipyards.[24]

Death edit

He died in Vancouver on February 13, 1944, aged 53. After leaving a street car, he was struck by a motorist crossing between streets Kingsway and Joyce.[25]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "EVANS, ARTHUR "SLIM" (1890–1944)". The Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved May 29, 2022.
  2. ^ "Arthur Evans". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  3. ^ a b Laszlo, Krisztina. "Research Guides: Labour History and Archives: Arthur H. Evans fonds". guides.library.ubc.ca. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  4. ^ "Evans Slim". ABC BookWorld. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  5. ^ Jean Evans Sheils and Ben Swankey, "Work and Wages"! A Semi-Documentary Account of the Life and Times of Arthur H. (Slim) Evans . Vancouver: Trade Union Research Bureau, 1977, 10.
  6. ^ Jean Evans Sheils and Ben Swankey, "Work and Wages"! A Semi-Documentary Account of the Life and Times of Arthur H. (Slim) Evans. Vancouver: Trade Union Research Bureau, 1977, 6.
  7. ^ ""For We Are Coming!"". The Chesterfield. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  8. ^ Jean Evans Sheils and Ben Swankey, "Work and Wages"! A Semi-Documentary Account of the Life and Times of Arthur H. (Slim) Evans. Vancouver: Trade Union Research Bureau, 1977, 32.
  9. ^ "Workers Unity League". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  10. ^ Brown, Lorne (1987). When freedom was lost : the unemployed, the agitator, and the state. Black Rose Books. OCLC 645872570.
  11. ^ Endicott, Stephen (2012). Raising the Workers' Flag: The Workers' Unity League of Canada, 1930–1936'. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781442612266. JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctt2tv3b7.
  12. ^ "Communism, kidnapping and the KKK: Book recounts hysteria of Princeton's 1930s miners' strike". CBC News. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  13. ^ "Vancouver house has Slim history". Vancouver Is Awesome. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  14. ^ Palmer, Bryan D. "Fighting the Klan". Literary Review of Canada. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  15. ^ Manley, John (February 9, 2006). "Canadian Communists, Revolutionary Unionism, and the 'Third Period': The Workers' Unity League, 1929–1935". Journal of the Canadian Historical Association / Revue de la Société historique du Canada. 5 (1): 167–194. doi:10.7202/031078ar. ISSN 1712-6274.
  16. ^ Hannant, Larry (2016). "Soviet Princeton: Slim Evans and the 1932–33 Miners' Strike by Jon Bartlett and Rika Ruebsaat". Labour / Le Travail. 78 (1): 336–337. doi:10.1353/llt.2016.0070. ISSN 1911-4842.
  17. ^ "Archival Find Confirms 1935 Golden Tale from 'On-to-Ottawa' Trek – Working People Built BC". www.labourheritagecentre.ca. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  18. ^ Horn, Michiel; Howard, Victor (1987). ""We Were the Salt of the Earth!" A Narrative of the On-to-Ottawa Trek and the Regina Riot". Labour / Le Travail. 19: 177. doi:10.2307/25142781. ISSN 0700-3862. JSTOR 25142781.
  19. ^ Ronald Liversedge, Recollections of the On-to-Ottawa Trek, ed. Victor Hoar, Toronto: McLelland and Stewart, 1973, 210–211.
  20. ^ "On to Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  21. ^ "On to Ottawa Trek". cbc.ca. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  22. ^ "Relief Strikes: The On-to-Ottawa Trek and Bloody Sunday – The Mackenzie-Papineau Battalion". onlineacademiccommunity.uvic.ca. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  23. ^ Wilbur, Richard; Abella, Irving Martin (June 1976). "Nationalism, Communism, and Canadian Labour: The CIO, the Communist Party, and the Canadian Congress of Labour, 1935–1956". The American Historical Review. 81 (3): 697. doi:10.2307/1852654. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 1852654.
  24. ^ Gollan, Robin; Avakumovic, Ivan (1976). "The Communist Party in Canada: a History". Labour History (31): 97. doi:10.2307/27508243. ISSN 0023-6942. JSTOR 27508243.
  25. ^ Waiser, Bill (2003). All Hell Can't Stop Us: The On-to-Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot. Calgary: Fifth House. p. 273.

arthur, slim, evans, other, people, named, arthur, evans, arthur, evans, disambiguation, arthur, herbert, slim, evans, april, 1890, february, 1944, leader, industrial, labor, union, movement, canada, united, states, most, known, leading, ottawa, trek, evans, i. For other people named Arthur Evans see Arthur Evans disambiguation Arthur Herbert Slim Evans April 24 1890 February 13 1944 was a leader in the industrial labor union movement in Canada and the United States 1 He is most known for leading the On To Ottawa Trek Evans was involved in the Industrial Workers of the World the One Big Union and the Worker s Unity League He was a member of the Communist Party of Canada 2 Arthur Slim EvansArthur Slim Evans c 1911BornArthur Herbert Evans 1890 04 24 April 24 1890Toronto CanadaDiedFebruary 13 1944 1944 02 13 aged 53 Vancouver CanadaOccupation s Trade Unionist carpenterOrganizationsIndustrial Workers of the WorldOne Big Union Canada Workers Unity LeagueKnown forLeading the On to Ottawa TrekPolitical partyCommunist Party of Canada Contents 1 Personal life 2 Wobblies 3 Worker s Unity League 3 1 Princeton coal miner s strike 3 2 On to Ottawa trek 3 3 Later organizing 4 Death 5 ReferencesPersonal life editEvans was born in Toronto in 1890 At age 13 he left school to support his family He worked numerous jobs including horse driver and carpenter Evans travelled west in 1911 and worked in various places first as a farmer then worked again as a carpenter in Winnipeg Minneapolis and Kansas City 3 On August 4 1920 Arthur Slim Evans married Ethel last name unknown who he had met while organizing miners in Drumheller Alberta On April 13 1922 the couple had their first child a son named Stewart Stewart Evans died in 1925 during the diphtheria epidemic in Vancouver They had a second child Jean Stewart Evans on February 12 1927 Jean would go on to write Work and Wages a biography of her father Wobblies editIn Minneapolis he became involved with the Industrial Workers of the World IWW or Wobblies He led an IWW free speech rally in Minneapolis where he was arrested for participating and sentenced to three years in jail Evans later recalled All I did was read it I was too shy and too nervous at that time to make up any speech of my own 4 In 1912 he led a strike of political prisoners resulting in his release He was present at the 1913 miners strike in Ludlow Colorado There he met IWW leaders Big Bill Haywood Frank Little and the legendary Joe Hill Two days after Evans arrived strikebreakers hired by John D Rockefeller owner of the coal mines attacked the striker s camp killing 20 people including 12 children in the Ludlow Massacre 5 Evans was shot in the leg with a machine gun He walked with a limp for the rest of his life as a result 6 Evans returned to Canada and continued his union activism He was the leader of the One Big Union local of coal miners in Drumheller Alberta He led a strike of 6 300 One Big Union miners during the Canadian Labour Revolt in 1919 It was there he met his future wife Ethel daughter of a Drumheller miner who had been involved in organizing the union 3 The strike was suppressed by anti union mercenaries hired by the mining company Because the One Big Union was not a recognized union and workers were official organized within the United Mine Workers Evans had technically organized a wild cat strike without permission Evans used UMWA funds for the strike he was accused of embezzlement and sentenced to a three year prison term 7 Upon a petition from the workers he supposedly embezzled from Evans was released 1 Evans along with other former wobblies became a member of the Communist Party of Canada after it formed in 1921 Evans officially became a party member in 1926 8 Worker s Unity League editThe Worker s Unity League was the official trade union centre of the Communist Party of Canada Like the IWW and OBU which Evans had previously organized in the Worker s Unity League was an industrial union 9 Evans was a major organizer within the union 10 Princeton coal miner s strike edit In 1932 coal miners saw their wages cut by 10 in Princeton British Columbia The miners contacted the Worker s Unity League which sent Evans to organize a union for them in September 1932 11 The company refused to negotiate with the union so the workers voted to strike Evans advised the workers to wait until December to strike because the demand for coal would be much higher The strike began on December 22 British Columbia s attorney general dispatched a crops of 40 RCMP officers to monitor Evans and suppress the strike Officers assaulted the striking miners with batons along with their families while they were picketing The Ku Klux Klan burned crosses beat strikers and sent threatening letters in the name of anti communism 12 Evans was arrested under Section 98 which allows arbitrary detainment of suspected communists He was imprisoned in far off Oakella Prison where he did hard labour before being released on bail During his imprisonment his wife and daughter were evicted from the home Evan s had built for them 13 Following his release Evans was kidnapped by off duty police constables and klansmen A convoy of armed cars took him to Vancouver 14 The kidnappers threatened take warning and move on or suffer the consequences Evans immediately booked a train back to Princeton where he led the strike to success winning workers higher pay and improved workplace safety 15 Evans was once again arrested under Section 98 and sentenced to one year in prison without bail He rejected the legitimacy of the trial and instead of defending himself he sang The Internationale 16 On to Ottawa trek edit Main article On to Ottawa Trek In 1935 Evans led the On to Ottawa Trek Communist activists including Evans had organized workers in the government relief camps into the Relief Camp Workers Union three years previously in 1932 Relief camp workers struck on April 4 1935 when they went to Vancouver where they stayed and pressed their demands until the Trek began on June 3 17 The first batch of strikers left Vancouver riding on boxcars and were joined by many others in Kamloops Field Golden Calgary and Moose Jaw 18 By the time they reached Regina Saskatchewan their numbers had climbed to over 2 000 Evans led a delegation to go ahead of the strikers and meet with the prime minister R B Iron Heel Bennett The two leaders engaged in a heated exchange when Bennett accused Evans of being an embezzler Evans response received much publicity You are a liar I was arrested for fraudulently converting these funds to feed the starving instead of sending them to the agents at Indianapolis and I again say you are a liar if you say I embezzled and I will have the pleasure of telling the workers throughout Canada that I was forced to tell the premier of Canada he was a liar Don t think you can pull off anything like that You are not intimidating me a damned bit 19 The meeting accomplished little more than to illustrate the intransigence of the government and the determination of the strikers and the delegation left Ottawa to rejoin the strikers in Regina Evans and other Trek leaders were arrested at a large demonstration of strikers and supporters on July 1 1935 Dominion Day or Canada Day as it is now called which precipitated the Regina Riot The federal government had decided that the Trek would be forcibly stopped in Regina because of fears that it would gain momentum if allowed to reach Winnipeg that could turn it from a protest into a revolutionary movement 20 Evans was charged under Section 98 the section of the Criminal Code which had been added in the aftermath of the Winnipeg General Strike outlawing membership in revolutionary organizations An exhaustive government inquiry was held into causes of the riot and its conclusions paved the way for reforming the relief camp system This outcome and the overwhelming defeat of R B Bennett are two indicators that the strike was a success even though the Trek was crushed 21 22 Later organizing edit Evans continued his union activism organizing the miners and smelter workers in Trail British Columbia into the CIO union Mine Mill and Smelters Union While organizing the smelters his car was torched by the mine owners 23 He also led fundraising drives for the Mackenzie Papineau Battalion the volunteer contingent from Canada that fought the fascists during the Spanish Civil War His last union position was as the shop steward at the Vancouver Shipyards 24 Death editHe died in Vancouver on February 13 1944 aged 53 After leaving a street car he was struck by a motorist crossing between streets Kingsway and Joyce 25 References edit nbsp Organized labour portal a b EVANS ARTHUR SLIM 1890 1944 The Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan Retrieved May 29 2022 Arthur Evans The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 28 2021 a b Laszlo Krisztina Research Guides Labour History and Archives Arthur H Evans fonds guides library ubc ca Retrieved February 28 2021 Evans Slim ABC BookWorld Retrieved February 28 2021 Jean Evans Sheils and Ben Swankey Work and Wages A Semi Documentary Account of the Life and Times of Arthur H Slim Evans Vancouver Trade Union Research Bureau 1977 10 Jean Evans Sheils and Ben Swankey Work and Wages A Semi Documentary Account of the Life and Times of Arthur H Slim Evans Vancouver Trade Union Research Bureau 1977 6 For We Are Coming The Chesterfield Retrieved February 28 2021 Jean Evans Sheils and Ben Swankey Work and Wages A Semi Documentary Account of the Life and Times of Arthur H Slim Evans Vancouver Trade Union Research Bureau 1977 32 Workers Unity League The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 28 2021 Brown Lorne 1987 When freedom was lost the unemployed the agitator and the state Black Rose Books OCLC 645872570 Endicott Stephen 2012 Raising the Workers Flag The Workers Unity League of Canada 1930 1936 Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 9781442612266 JSTOR 10 3138 j ctt2tv3b7 Communism kidnapping and the KKK Book recounts hysteria of Princeton s 1930s miners strike CBC News Retrieved February 28 2021 Vancouver house has Slim history Vancouver Is Awesome Retrieved February 28 2021 Palmer Bryan D Fighting the Klan Literary Review of Canada Retrieved February 28 2021 Manley John February 9 2006 Canadian Communists Revolutionary Unionism and the Third Period The Workers Unity League 1929 1935 Journal of the Canadian Historical Association Revue de la Societe historique du Canada 5 1 167 194 doi 10 7202 031078ar ISSN 1712 6274 Hannant Larry 2016 Soviet Princeton Slim Evans and the 1932 33 Miners Strike by Jon Bartlett and Rika Ruebsaat Labour Le Travail 78 1 336 337 doi 10 1353 llt 2016 0070 ISSN 1911 4842 Archival Find Confirms 1935 Golden Tale from On to Ottawa Trek Working People Built BC www labourheritagecentre ca Retrieved February 28 2021 Horn Michiel Howard Victor 1987 We Were the Salt of the Earth A Narrative of the On to Ottawa Trek and the Regina Riot Labour Le Travail 19 177 doi 10 2307 25142781 ISSN 0700 3862 JSTOR 25142781 Ronald Liversedge Recollections of the On to Ottawa Trek ed Victor Hoar Toronto McLelland and Stewart 1973 210 211 On to Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 28 2021 On to Ottawa Trek cbc ca Retrieved February 28 2021 Relief Strikes The On to Ottawa Trek and Bloody Sunday The Mackenzie Papineau Battalion onlineacademiccommunity uvic ca Retrieved February 28 2021 Wilbur Richard Abella Irving Martin June 1976 Nationalism Communism and Canadian Labour The CIO the Communist Party and the Canadian Congress of Labour 1935 1956 The American Historical Review 81 3 697 doi 10 2307 1852654 ISSN 0002 8762 JSTOR 1852654 Gollan Robin Avakumovic Ivan 1976 The Communist Party in Canada a History Labour History 31 97 doi 10 2307 27508243 ISSN 0023 6942 JSTOR 27508243 Waiser Bill 2003 All Hell Can t Stop Us The On to Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot Calgary Fifth House p 273 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur 22Slim 22 Evans amp oldid 1208602353, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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