When the American-based United Steelworkers raided Mine Mill Local 598 in 1961, accusations of communism abounded and the tension in the city led to violent clashes, threats and widespread fear from city hall to the kitchen table
The dawn of the 1960s was a time of unrest across North America, with the anti-war movement, the civil rights movement, and the second-wave feminist movement fighting to make changes in society. Here at home in the late summer of 1961, we had a different kind of period of unrest, one of the labour kind, that would radically reshape the worker-workplace relationship, but also the relationships among co-workers.
“It was a period when the eyes of the world were on Sudbury,” reader Adam Spindler recalled. “Everyone was looking to the possible consequences of the strikes, the spread of labour unrest, and how to influence it, direct it, or control it — by fair means or foul.”