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Saint Monday and the Fishery in Newfoundland and Labrador (Part 3 of 3)

Saint Monday and the Fishery in Newfoundland and Labrador (Part 3 of 3)

Newfoundland Cod Fishing

Cod fishing on the Newfoundland Banks (Source: Wikipedia, Public Domain).

In Britain, the veneration for Saint Monday played a significant role in strengthening the rights of people working in the numerous industries which burgeoned with the industrial revolution. Regardless, the fishery was one industry where Saint Monday had little to no effect. Why was that?

By the eighteenth century, when the industrial revolution was gaining ground, Britain had also profited from its migratory fishery in Newfoundland and Labrador1 for a couple of centuries.

This is a brief discussion focussing on Newfoundland and Labrador, one of the places in the world where the fishery has defined all aspects of life. Yet, it was a place where Saint Monday failed to lay its mark.

At its heart, Saint Monday was essentially a means by which the people could express their dissatisfaction with their waning rights. As we know, it was the Saturday half-holiday and other efforts to improve the lives of the people that witnessed the decline of Saint Monday.

The Newfoundland and Labrador fishery evolved without the contribution of activities such as Saint Monday. Although. as the fishery developed, is it possible there were means by which the fishers were able to improve their rights without the aid of Saint Monday?

Brief Evolution of the Newfoundland and Labrador Fishery

The fishery evolved in Newfoundland and Labrador from 1497, when John Cabot first sailed along its shores, astonished by the vast abundance of cod. Upon his return to Britain, the news of the discovery no doubt passed from port to port.

Afterwards, fishing crews from around Europe, French and Portuguese as well as from the Basque Country descended on the treasure-filled waters of the New World. The English and Spanish soon followed, equally keen to plunder the newly discovered resources.

Basque Rowboat

A Basque rowboat recovered from the Red Bay site, exhibited at the local museum (Source: Magicpiano – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0).

This generally became known as the migratory fishery. In this instance, the fishers arrived in Newfoundland and Labrador, undertook their fishing, returning thereafter to their homes in Europe.

Already at this point in its development in the 16th century, the fishery had developed differently from the industries most commonly associated with the later industrial revolution. Simply to complete the work efficiently, the approach to fishery was factory-like. Different workers undertook varying tasks, thus dividing the labour, an approach typical of the industrial revolution that would develop in a couple ofcenturies.

Treaty of Utrecht

With the Treaty of Utrecht, the peace treaty which brought an end to the War of the Spanish Succession rewarded Newfoundland to Britain (Source: Wikipedia By Abraham Allard, Public Domain).

In time, Britain, after hard-fought means and methods largely tied to war, had emerged as the sole holder of the fishery in Newfoundland and Labrador. By the seventeenth century, efforts were underway to actually settle. Initially, this was in the form of sponsored settlement.

Although, over time, more and more people from Britain and Ireland arrived simply a seeking better life in Newfoundland and Labrador. The families who settled would increasingly fish for their personal use, but largely for the purposes of selling their catches to merchants based in Britain.

Method of Fishing

By the nineteenth century, the people who had settled in Newfoundland and Labrador undertook the fishery . At this time, a cashless economy undergirded the fishery.

Known as the truck system, fishers would rely on merchants for all their needs—clothes, fishing gear, foodstufffs. The products would be given on credit. Then, at the close of the fishing season, merchants would establish the price of the fish, as well as the goods based on what they expected to receive for the fish on the international market. Often, the merchant could manipulate prices to ensure a profit.

Newfoundland Fishery

Source: Wikipedia. Painting by Charles Napier Hemy – oil on canvas 46 × 61 cm (18.1 × 24 in), Public Domain.

The system was readily open to manipulation for the benefit of the merchant. In the Amulree Commission Report in 1933, Lord Amulree summed up the challenges of the truck system.

“Money did not change hands; indeed, it could have been said with truth only a few years ago that there were families in Newfoundland who had never seen money in their lives. Under this system, very similar to the old truck system in England, large fortunes were made by the merchants; the fishermen, though saved from the danger of destitution, were little more than serfs with no hope of becoming independent.”

Uncertain Position of Merchants

While this generally reflected the nature of the relationship between fisher and merchant, there were additional details to bear in mind.

David A. MacDonald examined the further intricacies of the relationship in the fishery of the nineteenth century, revealing greater complexity than Lord Amulree’s interpretation suggested.

In “They Cannot Pay us in Money,” MacDonald focussed on Newman and Company, a firm headquartered in London, with three depots in Newfoundland. As any business would readily acknowledge, it’s best to establish a monopoly. As such, it would be a situation where a single merchant monopolises the catches obtained by various fishers. This was the goal. As MacDonald explained, “Through the supplying system Newmans struggled to control producers and to establish monopsonistic2 power, but they never fully succeeded.”

Perhaps at a certain time, it was readily possible for a merchant to be assured sole access to the catches. However, this did not take into account the competition resulting from other nations who were all too keen to garner the catches of Newfoundland fishers. These other nations sold the codfish on its own or as bait to catch other fish in the ‘bait fishery.’

Newman and Company tried other methods to alleviate the problems they faced. The company placed stipulations on the fishers, stating all the fish caught by the fishers must be delivered to Newmans. Moreover, fishers were to obtain all their goods from Newmans’ stores. Fishers would also only obtain goods based on the average catch over three years.

Overall, the attempts of Newmans to better control trade with the fishers failed. Bad debts eventually overwhelmed the company. Rival traders tempted the fishers with credit for the supplies they required. Then, to combat this, Newmans’ agents would give out more supplies on credit. But given the uncertainty, the company set itself up for a loss. Balancing of their books in the autumn increasingly left them in the red.

In some of their depots, they could no longer afford to advance winter supplies upon receiving the catch in the autumn. Furthermore, Newman and Company made other changes. With the upcoming winter, goods would no longer be given on the basis of credit, but on barter. So, the trade was now based on an actual product rather than the promise of one as with credit. Nonetheless, by 1898, Newmans simply wanted to be out of the trading business.

Added Leverage

While this example was only based on one particular company, there’s no reason to believe the situation was not a common approach simply due to the competition amongst the merchants. This gave the fishers added leverage.

If the fishers were unable to obtain credit from one merchant, it was more than possible to obtain it from another. Likewise, there was no reason to not seek the best deal for their fish amongst the various merchants. Competition amongst the merchants had increased.

So, in a sense, for fishers, there really was no need for a Saint Monday. Perhaps initially, the use of credit granted to the fisher in exchange for fish to “repay” the merchant bound them together, leaving the fisher at a disadvantage.

Although, as the fishery expanded, it came to include multiple merchants who would be more than accepting of methods that would undermine their fellow merchants. For example, the merchants could offer fishers a better price for the fish. Ultimately, fishers were able to benefit from the competition.

Bearing this in mind, fishers were able to obtain a better deal for their fish, something for which they were fully in their rights to do. Thus, the underlying goal of Saint Monday could be achieved. Perhaps this is why, in the end, for the fishery, there was no need to celebrate Saint Monday.

Sources

Angus, Ian 2024 “Intensive Fishing and the Birth of Capitalism, Part 1” https://climateandcapitalism.com/2021/02/03/intensive-fishing-and-the-birth-of-capitalism/

Angus, Ian 2024 “Intensive Fishing and the Birth of Capitalism, Part 2” https://climateandcapitalism.com/2021/03/08/intensive-fishing-and-the-birth-of-capitalism-part-2/

Angus, Ian 2024 “Intensive Fishing and the Birth of Capitalism, Part 3” https://climateandcapitalism.com/2021/04/05/intensive-fishing-and-the-birth-of-capitalism-part-3/

Angus, Ian 2024 “Intensive Fishing and the Birth of Capitalism, Part 4”

Heritage of Newfoundland and Labrador 2024 “Settling In” https://www.heritage.nf.ca/nl-studies-2205/chapter-3-topic-1.pdf

Hong, Robert 2024 “Amulree Report Project” https://www.heritage.nf.ca/articles/politics/pdf/amulee-report-1933.pdf

MacDonald, David A. 1989 “https://www.erudit.org/en/journals/acadiensis/1989-v19-n1-acadiensis_19_1/acad19_1rn01.pdf.”

Acadiensis, 19(1), 142–156.

Endnotes

1This region would’ve been known solely as Newfoundland.

2 A market situation in which the product or service of several sellers is sought by only one buyer (The Free Dictionary).

Sharing Moments of Grace

Sharing Moments of Grace

Source: Adi K at Pexels

He looked with shock at her face, their eyes fixed on one another. Looking at him coolly, she had but a few words. “Go clean out your desk. I don’t know, just leave.” Shelby turned to her computer, certain he’d take the less than subtle hint she was finished. He did and quietly closing the door, a click she heard distinctly.

She slammed her fist onto the desk, a residual expression of anger bubbling to the surface. Whether it was from what she’d just done or the papers lying on her desk stating the divorce was final, shadows darkened her mood. No matter. She turned her attention beck to the work she wanted to complete before they took a break over the Christmas holidays. Her head turned to the door when she heard a familiar knock.

“Yes Peter,” she said. He opened the door, just standing there staring at her. She matched his glare.

“What is it?”

“You know you can’t do what you just did.”
“Why not? I just did do it,” she said, a hint of defiance in her tone.

“Do you really think, of all people, Ben’s first stop won’t be his lawyer?” he said, sitting down.

“So what? I had my reasons for getting rid of him and that’s that.”

“Yes, he tends to overstep the mark at times. But who among us doesn’t do that? In a more favourable light, it’d be called, taking the initiative. If he makes a formal complaint, I mean this could go all the way to the top. Is that what you want?” Peter said with a touch of sympathy smoothing his words. “Come on. You do realise it’s a few days from Christmas and well, it’s a bit Scrooge-like to be firing someone now, don’t ya think?” Shelby looked up at him, her face hardening to any words urging supplication.

“Well, he’s free to make his stance with Elliot. I can fully justify the reasoning behind my actions.”

“Yes, you’re friends with Elliot. But he’s still the CEO and will have to abide by decisions for the sake of his company. And we all know, however much his ways can sometimes be an irritant, Ben is an unquestionable asset to the company. Don’t you think Elliot is going to bear that in mind?” Shelby sat listening, nervously clenching and unclenching her hands.

She looked up at him, her face taut. Lifting her hands to her head and smoothing back her hair, Shelby pushed back her chair and rose. “Okay. I’ve gotta get out of here.” Closing her laptop, she put on her jacket. “If there are any problems, I’m sure you can take care of them. Anything of earth-shattering importance, you can phone me. I’ll be around, she said, holding her door open for Peter to leave before she locked it.

Walking out, she kept her head down, sure eyes would be on her as she left. At the moment, Shelby couldn’t care less whether they were all wounded by the apparent injustice bestowed on the heavenly Ben. “Give me a break,” she thought, pressing the button to call the elevator.

Getting into her car, Shelby wondered whether she should stop at the service centre and get them to check her tires. Closing her eyes, all she could think about was getting out of the city. Right now, all she wanted was for the world to leave her alone. Turning on the heat, she drove off.

Thinking of her now ex-husband, she couldn’t resist hoping the worst for him and his new young bit of fluff that had turned his head. Shelby was certain they’d soon hear wedding bells. Then in a few years, when Miss Bit of Fluff started sagging and showing the inevitable signs of age, off she’d go. But Shelby thought, there was little doubt little Miss Bit of Fluff would exert every means by which to hold back time—dye job, gym membership, some strategic cosmetic surgery.

Here it was almost Christmas and she had nothing to show for it. Since Mum and Dad were both gone, she couldn’t go there for the holidays. Her younger brother always went to his wife’s family. She rolled her eyes. “Whatever,” she thought, turning the radio volume up. In the end, she just went home and thought she’d drive through the night and into the morning. She should be able to get to her older brother’s place in Twillingate by nine or so in the morning.

Shelby wasn’t entirely sure what she’d do about her tire. Although, she figured she’d be able to stop in at the next service centre, do something there. She just wanted to leave. Her mind kept returning to her ex-husband’s transgressions. But what did he care. There was nothing to roughen his path. Besides, he’d just been promoted. Didn’t matter. So what if everything was wonderful for him.

She quietly prepared for her journey. Preferring to travel in the wee hours, she was sure to have the road to herself. After pouring some tea into her travel mug, she turned up the radio and set off. There were hardly any cars on the road allowing her to drive in peace.

She was listening to an audiobook when she heard a thump, thump, thump and Shelby slowed down, moving off to the side of the road. Coming to a stop, she rested her head back, shutting her eyes tightly. “Damn it! Just what I need,” she said to herself. There was a bit of snow on the ground here, but not much. Getting out of the car, she looked at her tires and then found the culprit.

She got back into the car, pausing for a moment. “Okay, no problem. It’ll just take about twenty minutes to change and then I can get to the service place by my brother,” she said to herself. Putting on her jacket and grabbing her flashlight, Shelby got out. She unlocked the back of the car, taking out everything she needed to put on the spare tire.

Jacking up the car, her mind wandered to what she’d done in the morning. But she sternly resisted thinking she’d overreacted. Another one of the workers had complained about him and so, that’s never good. She began to unscrew the lugnuts, standing up to use her full weight.

Looking up, she saw a truck pull in behind. Just great, a good Samaritan I’ll have to inform ‘I do know how to change a tire, thank you very much.’ She smiled at him.

“Hey, why don’t you let me help you with that?” He was tall and stout, dressed in jeans and a lumber jacket, a toque pulled over his head. “Oh, I can see ya know what you’re doing. I don’t mean anything against your ability to change your tire,” he said. She hadn’t realised her face must’ve made it clear she didn’t want help.

“Yes, I can easily change the tire myself, so you needn’t bother,” she said, hoping that’d be enough to get him to leave her alone.

“Listen, why don’t you let me do the honours for ya? Consider it a Christmas gift. From me to you for doing your tire and from you to me, for letting me do your tire.” At any other time, she’d refuse to give in to his emotional blackmail. But what harm would it do if she let him do it. She reckoned as he said, it was Christmas, after all.

“Okay,” she said, sighing. He smiled, taking the lugwrench and immediately bending down to loosen the lugnuts. She leaned against the car, her mind awhirl with everything that seemed to have gone wrong in her life. Shelby closed her eyes, attempting to clear her mind, distancing herself from those thoughts.

“So, where are you headed, if you don’t mind me asking?” he said as he worked.

“Going to visit someone.”

“Ah, well it’s a good time to drive,” he said. He continued to unscrew the lugnuts. Shelby was lost in her thoughts, her face, taut and stern. He looked at her. “Bad day at the office?” She turned her head towards him, startled by the comment.

“Huh?” She had only grasped what he’d said after a moment. “Ah, well. It wasn’t great.” He’d begun to attach the spare tire. “I’ve had better, I guess.” She gave a wry laugh. When he’d finished, he got up and leaned against the car alongside her.

“Yeah, we all have our crosses to bear, my mum always used to say.” Another pause as they watched the sun slowly rise. She glanced towards him as he gazed into the sky, his face at peace, yet with troubled eyes. Shelby looked down.

There’s that moment when a person, although absorbed by their own difficulties and trials, they still take the time to lay their own troubles aside. “How about you? Where are you headed?” she said.

“Me? Ah, I’m headed to Deer Lake for my little brother’s funeral,” he said.

“O, I’m sorry to hear that.”

“No worries. He had cancer. So, it’s more a relief he’s gone and no longer in pain.” She nodded her head, not sure what else to do. “It’s gonna be sunrise soon.” She just smiled, not feeling particularly talkative. “Hey, would ya look at that?” Shelby looked to where he was pointing. “That’s stunning.” The sky had lightened enough, showing a layer of pearlescent crimson gold below a deep velvety purple.

As she regarded the sky, its beauty seemed to sweep over her, loosening and disentangling the knots in her body. She could feel the tension in her shoulder muscles releasing.

“My daughter told me it was winter solstice today,” he said to Shelby. “I didn’t think anything of it. But this is amazing.” They stood in silence as the colours in the sky slowly transformed. “It’s tremendous, isn’t it?” he said, elated at what they were witnessing. “It’s just almost overwhelming. So vast.”

Shelby remembered her mum telling her all those years back how important it was to somehow feel connected to something greater than oneself. And looking at the sky, she felt lovingly engulfed by its magnificence. “Yes. It is indeed out of this world,” she said, barely a whisper. They stood for a while longer.

“Well, I better get going,” he said. He rolled the flat tire to the back of her car and then put it away. He told her he put everything into her car.

“Thanks.” She looked at him, a hint of a smile painting her face. “I mean it.” He smiled and winked as he got into his truck, waving as he drove off. Resting in her car, Shelby closed her eyes feeling how comforting it had been to share those moments of grace as they watched the sky illuminate.

Pulling out her phone, she sent a text to Peter to get in touch with Ben. She wrote, “Tell him I regret what I did and to please accept my sincere apologies. And if he‘s willing, he’d be more than welcome to return when we come back on the 30th. Wish him a pleasant winter solstice and a Merry Christmas, too, for me.”

Saint Monday—Rights of Passage (Part 2 of 3)

Saint Monday—Rights of Passage (Part 2 of 3)

Saint Monday, or the People’s Holiday, a Pic-nic at Hampton Court (Source: Look and Learn).

The discordance between the working class and the industry owners was bound to incur the ire and to a certain degree, fear of those who purportedly held the reins of the society—the government and industry owners themselves. The problem of enforcing discipline and an adherence to the clock was particularly a challenge in industrial villages in Britain, textile centres and the metropolis. The control by the factory owners demanded obedience without granting of rights and responsibilities to the people.

Unsteady employment and class antagonism compounded this unstable environment. As a result, owners naturally possessed weakened social control (Malcolmson 161). These concerns resonated in the minds of industry owners and other members of society at the frontline of change and was essentially what Saint Monday symbolised.

However, as with any separation, following the tenets of the rites of passage, what followed was a transformation. Anything of this sort didn’t occur in only one part of society, the working classes for instance. Rather, it was a shift in society as a whole with the two discordant structures—pre- and post-industrialisation—seeking a point of balance. Both factory worker or owner required time and a certain amount of societal adaptation and adjustment to ease themselves into the different structure.

This was the period in which Thomas Paine wrote his Rights of Man. Such a work reverberated with the call for society to change and transform. It wasn’t a matter of denying and resisting industrialisation as much as the need for better conditions for the increasingly defined working class. Often, the call was not against the progress defined by industrialisation.

Rather, people such as Paine fought for the rights of the working class—the men, women and children in the factories powered by steam engines. With industrialisation, the separation felt by the working class and symbolised by the observance of Saint Monday could only begin to transform when the rights of people could be reinstated and strengthened. This was ultimately an element of their culture that had been misplaced within an unfamiliar socio-cultural and economic system.

Thomas Paine

Thomas Paine, copy by Auguste Millière, after an engraving by William Sharp, after George Romney, circa 1876 (1792) (Wikimedia Commons).

According to previous writings by Thomas Paine, the underlying precept was that the governing of a society existed within the realm of common sense, a book he published in 17761 while residing in the United States. It looked through the opacity of the monarchy and government and sought to level the field between those occupying the “higher” and “lower” tiers of society.

These transformations within society, of which customs such as Saint Monday were a part, depended upon people feeling they were deriving from their work what they were investing. In discussing the discontent felt by the working classes of society, Paine made a simple and yet poignant statement:

“Whatever the apparent cause of any riots may be, the real one is always a want of happiness. It shows that something is wrong in the system of government, that injures the felicity by which society is to be preserved” (166).

Robert Owen by William Henry Brooke, Public Domain (Wikimedia Commons).

In this same vein, men such as Robert Owen emerged as a paragon of society. Owen owned the New Lanark mills where part of his objective, along with a successful business, was to improve the lives of his workers. He encouraged the ‘formation of character’, the idea being “. . . to create a more moral, humane, kind, active, and educated workforce by providing an environment in which such traits could be nourished from childhood onward” (Claeys x).

Often referred to as ‘paternal’ discipline, the approach preferred by Owen allowed him to transform the workforce when he first arrived at the New Lanark mills to one “. . . renowned throughout Europe both for its approach to labour and for the quality of its cotton thread” (Claeys ix). He even provided medical care and established a sick fund with mandatory contributions2. Owen was guided by a vision for his product. At the same time, he adhered to a deep-seated ethic towards the people who would manufacture that product.

As with Thomas Paine, these efforts were integral in the transformation of the society. Think again of the words of William Loveless. Resisting change, the words eagerly sought a return to the ways of a former era. At the same time, the words encouraged people to enjoy the “fruits of our toil.” A person could simply feel they were of value within their society. There was a desire for some form of reciprocity to exist between the worker and the employer.

In many ways, this was what the efforts of Thomas Paine and Robert Owen worked to inject into the new socio-economic world brought by industrialisation. Certainly the efforts of Robert Owen were very clearly an attempt to forge the creation and nurturing of a community within the confines of his mill. It was against this backdrop of transformation that Saint Monday began to falter.

The steam engine functioned in the decline of Saint Monday. It also worked in tandem with the development of the Saturday half-holiday. Together, these changes were indicative of a society that was shifting and adapting to industrialisation. Thomas Paine and Robert Owen both expounding the value and rights of workers—men, women and unfortunately children who weren’t exempt from the rigours of factory work—assisted the changes.

In this context, Charles Iles in 1862 commented how once the steam-engine started, regular work hours would be more rigorously enforced. He informed his workers that if they were not willing to work on Mondays, he would have to let them go (Reid 85). The steam-engine meant that in a factory, it was possible to work day and night—the idea of a task-oriented endeavour no longer being possible. People soon began to demand fixed hours.

Together, the more widespread use of steam power and the Saturday half-holiday spelled the doom of Saint Monday. During the middle part of the nineteenth century this new holiday was put in place3. It was largely in response to the needs of the factory owners who were increasingly turning to steam power and needed a disciplined workforce willing to keep regular hours.

Alongside steampower, the half-holiday thoroughly altered the lives of the working class (Thane 282). Monday had previously been used for celebrations such as weddings. However, with the Saturday half-holiday, people cleaved to this day for weddings. As time progressed leisure shifted to Saturdays rather than the Monday (Reid 87). As a result, the workers would be more amenable to working on Monday if they could use the half-holiday for their own needs.

These developments might suggest that people were merely ‘putty’ in the hands of factory owners and the government ready to be guided and moulded as the latter saw fit. However, we have seen how Saint Monday was religiously observed. E.P. Thompson, an English historian, socialist and peace campaigner, asserted how the culture of tradition persisted, acting as a form of resistance and rebellion (Rule 182). The Saturday half-holiday or the use of steam power were a part of the accommodations that helped appease the complaints of the people. They wanted to have a certain degree of freedom and they wanted to believe they had rights within the new socio-economic system.

Along similar lines, the movements referred to earlier helped to ensure rights and freedoms. For instance, what was known as the Chartist period in Britain achieved advances for the working class. There was a form of adaptation whereby the actions of the working class permitted the opposing perspectives to find a common ground.

In Britain, the People’s Charter demanded rights for the people unheard of in the past with assertions for the right to vote, equal electoral districts, vote by ballot and annually elected Parliaments. Once the rights were addressed, or at the very least placed into the consciousness of people, both the working class as well as the owners of industry, it was possible to permit Saint Monday, a relict of a previous socio-cultural and economic system, to lapse.

As such, the decline of Saint Monday was part of a transformation in the society. Saint Monday acted as a form of resistance in its capacity as a symbol of a previous way of life. Following these transformations, the developments of the nineteenth century witnessed a reincorporation.

In reference to reincorporation, it was something that occurred at the scale of the society at large and not solely the working classes. There was give and take required on both sides that witnessed a shift in the socio-economic system. With the arrival of the 1870s, most members of the working class regarded industrial capitalism, the underlying economy of the industrial revolution led by landowners, merchants, financiers and industrialists, as a given.

A considerable amount of national introspection in Britain occurred with a focus on the vanguards of industry—factories and agriculture. By the latter part of the nineteenth century, many official enquiries investigated these areas of industry. Royal Commissions examined the Poor Law and issues pertaining to employment, especially of women and children in factories and mines, education, housing and other social concerns. Officials also looked at the role agriculture played in the industrial economies of the day (Mingay 69).

By this time, the poles characterised by the working classes and the industry owners, through the transformations of earlier efforts began to dislodge and gravitate toward a medial point—a reincorporation of two disparate perspectives. The rights the working classes sought were gradually being addressed and granted a place of value in the new socio-cultural and economic system.

Political and social reforms during the 1838s and 1840s reformed legislation such as the Poor Law in 1847 forcing the traditional ruling class and owners of capital to further accommodate the working class (Brown 119). Reincorporation was less a matter of moulding and bringing into line the working classes than establishing new developments possessing a greater degree of reciprocity.

With all these changes, the observance of Saint Monday did not disappear completely. There were places which remained sufficiently task-oriented where this custom remained a ‘holiday’ to punctuate the weekly round. Even in the early part of the twentieth century, some employers lamented their inability to control their workers. At this time, some miners persisted with their recognition of Saint Monday by taking the first Monday of every month as a holiday (Thane 282). However, for the most part, people had accepted the Saturday half-holiday.

While there were some pockets of observance to the Saint Monday holiday, the weight of society leaned towards regular hours and a defined work week punctuated by a week end established for leisure. Some may refer to the waning of Saint Monday as a victory on the part of the owners of industry, but it was more a signal of a successful passage through which a society must journey to reach a balance.

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Appendix

Poor Law

In 1833 Earl Grey, the Prime Minister, set up a Poor Law Commission to examine the working of the poor Law system in Britain. In their report published in 1834, the Commission made several recommendations to Parliament. As a result, the Poor Law Amendment Act was passed.

The act stated that:

(a) no able-bodied person was to receive money or other help from the Poor Law authorities except in a workhouse;

(b) conditions in workhouses were to be made very harsh to discourage people from wanting to receive help;

(c) workhouses were to be built in every parish or, if parishes were too small, in unions of parishes;

(d) ratepayers in each parish or union had to elect a Board of Guardians to supervise the workhouse, to collect the Poor Rate and to send reports to the Central Poor Law Commission;

(e) the three man Central Poor Law Commission would be appointed by the government and would be responsible for supervising the Amendment Act throughout the country.

(http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Lpoor1834.htm)

Factory Act of 1844

The Factory Act of 1844 is an extremely important one in the history of family legislation. The Act reduced the hours of work for children to between eight and thirteen to six and a half a day, either in the morning or afternoon. Children could only work on alternate days, and then only for ten hours. Young persons and women (now included for the first time) were to have the same hours, i.e. not more than twelve for the first five days of the week (with one and a half out for meals), and nine on Saturday.

Only surgeons, appointed for the purpose could grant Certificates of age. Surgeons could then report accidents causing death or bodily injury. The surgeons would also be tasked with investigating their cause and then reporting the result to the inspector. Every fourteen months, the factory was to be thoroughly washed with lime . Officials kept a register in which the names of all children and young persons employed, the dates of the lime-washing, and some other particulars. Certificates of school attendance were to be obtained in the case of children (http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/IR1844.htm).

Factory Act of 1847

After the 1844 Factory Act the agitation for a Ten Hour Bill continued. Early in 1846 Lord Ashley again brought forward a measure cast in this mould. On his defeat at the General Election that year, John Fielden introduced the bill, and ultimately pressed to a division, when the Government escaped defeat by the narrow majority of ten. The next year the Whigs were in office, and Lord John Russell, Prime Minister. At this time, John Fielden reintroduced the Bill. It passed successfully.

With the enactment of the law the long struggle for a Ten Hours Bill is generally held to have come to a close. It limited the hours of labour to sixty-three per week from the 1st of July 1847, and to fifty-eight per week, from the 1st of May 1848, which with the stoppage on Saturday afternoon was the equivalent of ten hours work per day (http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/IR1844.htm).

Endnotes

1Coincidentally also the date for the beginning of the United States War of Independence.

2Owen also provided education for the children who worked within his mill. (He was in favour of raising the age for employment as well as reducing the number of hours that comprised a work day). While not the place for such a discussion, there are healthy debates that surround the idea of becalming the ire of the working class with education (Brown 119). Some may accuse Owen of such a tactic, but his ancillary words pertaining to working class rights certainly speak to the otherwise.

3There was a statutory Saturday half-holiday in textile mills from 1850 (Reid 86).