- Arthur "Slim" Evans
Arthur Herbert Evans, (
April 24 ,1890 -February 13 ,1944 ) was a radical leader in the industrial union movement inCanada and theUnited States .Early life
Born in
Toronto , Arthur ("Slim") Evans, travelled west in 1911 and worked in various places, first as a farmer, then a carpenter. InMinneapolis he became involved with theIndustrial Workers of the World , (IWW, or "Wobblies"). He was a participant in the 1913 miners' strike inLudlow, Colorado , where he was shot by strikebreakers hired byJohn D. Rockefeller , one of the big coal company owners, during what became known as theLudlow Massacre . Evans walked with a limp for the rest of his life as a result.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 , where he was sentenced to a three year prison term for leading a strike. In 1933 he was sentenced again to 18 months for his role leading miners, this time inPrinceton, British Columbia . Evans became a member of theCommunist Party of Canada , along with other formerwobblies after it formed in 1921.Relief Camp Strike
Perhaps his greatest notoriety came in 1935 when, as leader of the Communist Party's trade union umbrella, the
Workers' Unity League , Evans led theOn-to-Ottawa Trek . Communist activists organized workers in the government relief camps into theRelief Camp Workers' Union . Relief camp workers struck onApril 4 ,1935 when they went toVancouver , where they stayed and pressed their demands until the Trek began onJune 3 . The first batch of strikers left Vancouver, riding on boxcars, and were joined by many others inKamloops , Field, Golden,Calgary andMoose Jaw . 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". [ Ronald Liversedge, "Recollections of the On-to-Ottawa Trek", ed. Victor Hoar, Toronto: McLelland and Stewart, 1973, 210-211. ] The meeting accomplished little more than to illustrate the intransigence of the government and the determination of the strikers, and the delegation leftOttawa to rejoin the strikers in Regina.Evans and other Trek leaders were arrested at a large demonstration of strikers and supporters onJuly 1 ,1935 , (Dominion Day ), which precipitated theRegina 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 reachWinnipeg that could turn it from a protest into a revolutionary movement.Evans was charged underSection 98 , the section of theCriminal Code of Canada , which had been added in the aftermath of theWinnipeg 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. Evans continued his union activism, and organized the miners and smelter workers inTrail , British Columbia into theCIO union,Mine, Mill, and Smelters Union . He also led fundraising drives for theMackenzie-Papineau Battalion , the volunteer contingent from Canada that fought the fascists during theSpanish Civil War .His last union position was as the shop steward at the Vancouver Shipyards. He died after being hit by a car in 1944.
References
John Stanton, "Never Say Die!: The Life and Times of a Pioneer Labour Lawyer", Vancouver, Steel Rail Publishing, 1987.
Ben Swankey and Jean Evans Sheils, "Work and Wages"! A Semi-Documentary Account of the Life and Times of Arthur H. (Slim) Evans 1890-1944, Carpenter, Miner, Labor Leader". Vancouver: Trade Union Research Bureau, 1977.
Bill Waiser, "All Hell Can’t Stop Us: The On-to-Ottawa Trek and Regina Riot". Calgary: Fifth House, 2003.
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