Friday, March 4, 2011

Canadian Postal Strikes
1974-1987


[This is the second in a series of articles dealing with postal strikes in Canada. The 1968 strike post can be found here. The 1997 strike article can be found here.]



From 1974 to 1981, Canadians were caught in the middle of labour disputes between postal unions and the federal government. There were four major postal strikes in that time, two of them lasting six weeks. This article provides a brief summary of the strikes of 1974, 1975, 1978, and 1981, and shows foreign suspended mail to Canada posted during the strikes. (An earlier post dealing with the 1968 postal strike can be found here)


1974 Wildcat Strike

In the early 1970s, Canada Post Office began implementing its postal mechanization programme. The system was staffed with female postal code machine operators paid $2.94/hour compared to male postal clerks making $3.69/hour. The national office of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers instigated a national illegal strike to bargain for better wages for the new postal work. The strike lasted from April 19 to 26, and ended when the federal government agreed to arbitrate the pay scale for postal coders. An arbitrator awarded female postal coders the same wages as male postal clerks.

Embargoed Mail

The U.S post office temporarily discontinued service to Canada because of the postal strike and returned Canadian-bound mail to the senders. Since post offices supplied their own return handstamps, most return markings are unique to each office.

Atlanta


Atlanta to Kapuskasing, April 17, 1974


SERVICE TEMPORARILY DISCONTINUED
RETURN TO SENDER



Ithaca, N.Y.



Ithaca to Guelph, April 22, 1974


RETURN-SERVICE
TEMPORARILY
SUSPENDED



Pinehurst, N.C.


Pinehurst, N.C., to Toronto,April 24, 1974


SERVICES
TEMPORARILY
DISCONTINUED



Houston


Houston to Kapuskasing, April 29, 1974


SERVICE
TEMPORARILY
SUSPENDED



1975 Strike

Late in 1975, a 43 day legal strike occurred which ended on December 2, 1975. Postal workers were promised job security and protection of full-time jobs.

Fort Worth


Fort Worth to Don Mills, October 22, 1975


RETURN TO SENDER
EMBARGO ON MAIL



Las Vegas


Las Vegas to Don Mills, October 22, 1975


SERVICE TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED


Brookings, Oregon


Brookings, October 22, 1975
Remailed December 2, 1975


SERVICE
TEMPORAROL [sic]
SUSPENDED



St. Petersburg


St. Petersburg to North Bay, November 7, 1975
Remailed December 10, 1975


RETURN TO SENDER
SERVICE TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED
----------------------CANADA



San Fransisco


San Fransisco to Streetsville, October 21, 1975



RETURN TO SENDER
SERVICE SUSPENDED



1978 Strike

The legal 1978 strike, which began on October 20, 1978, was immediately brought to an end with the passage of government back-to-work legislation on the first day of the national strike. Union president Claude Parrot was charged and convicted of contempt of Parliament and spent two months in jail.

Springfield, Mass.


Springfield, Mass. to Barrie, October ?, 1978
Remailed October 30, 1978



POSTAL SERVICE TEMPORARILY
SUSPENDED
RETURN TO SENDER




1981 Strike

Claude Parrot led a 42 day strike in 1981 (June 30 - August 12) for the right of its members to maternity leave. CUPW became the first federal civil service union in Canada to win the right to maternity leave for its members.

US Embargoed Mail

Richmond, Va.

\
Richmond to Toronto, July 2, 1981
Remailed August 14, 1981


RETURN TO SENDER
SERVICE SUSPENDED



Saint Louis


Saint Louis to Toronto, July 8, 1981
Remailed August 22, 1981


RETURN TO SENDER
SERVICE TEMPORARILY
SUSPENDED


Middlesex-Essex. Mass.


Middlesex-Essex to Toronto, July 14, 19981


RETURN TO SENDER
SERVICE TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED


Youngstown, Ohio


Youngstown to Don Mills, July 12, 1981

Instructional Label:


07/07/81
MAIL SERVICE
TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED


Bakersfield, Calif.


Bakersfield to Don Mills, July 2, 1981

Two instructional handstamps applied:


MAIL SERVICE
TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED
RETURN TO SENDER




SERVICE TEMPORARILY
SUSPENDED. RETURN
TO SENDER.



San Diego


San Diego to Whoonock, B.C., June 30, 1981



MAIL SERVICE
TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED
RETURN TO SENDER



German Embargoed Mail



Braunshweig to Ottawa, August 11, 1981

Post Office note taped to front of envelope states that because of a strike in Canada, forwarding mail to Canada was not possible. Upon presentation of this letter, fees would be refunded.



Volklingen to Vancouver, July 1, 1981

Post Office note taped to front of envelope states that mail to Canada could not be forwarded because Canadian postal staff has been on strike since 01.07.81 without end in site. The post office will reimburse the sneder.



Bad Sassendorf to Calgary, July 28, 1981

Handstamp:

RETURN
RESUMPTION OF POSTAL SERVICE NOT IN SIGHT


1987 Strikes

The author does not have examples of mail that was delayed during the 1987 strike. This article provides information regarding the 1987 disruptions.


Economic Impact of the Canadian Postal Strikes

1975 Strike

A survey carried out by the Canadian Direct Marketing Association and centered around the direct mail industry found that the 1975 postal strike resulted in an aggregate revenue loss of some $25 million to 64 reporting firms, most of which were classed as non-recoverable. Two-thirds of the firms reported a permanent loss of customers, a majority of these losing in excess of 10 per cent, and some 60 per cent of the firms laid off employees.

1981 Strike

In the case of the 42-day postal strike in 1981, a spokesperson for the Canadian Federation of Independent Businesses indicated that a study which they undertook found that Canadian businesses lost approximately $3 billion due to the work stoppage.

In the case of Lee Valley a leading Canadian supplier of woodworking tools and gardening tools and cabinet hardware, the strike forced Lee Valley, a mail order company, to open its first retail store in 1981. Lee Valley now has 13 outlets from Halifax to Vancouver. In a 2008 interview with Profit, President and founder Leonard Lee explained:

In 1981, there was a national postal strike that lasted six weeks. Around the end of the sixth week, [then Canada Post head] AndrĂ© Ouelette said, “I can’t accept that businessmen have to rely on the post office to make a living. If they do, they better find other ways.” That’s a direct quote. I heard that at six o’clock in the morning, got out of bed and stubbed my toe on the bedpost. By the time I got to the office, I was a seething mass of rage, and I decided to put a full-page ad in the newspaper just to vent my spleen. But I also decided we had to have stores. We were losing $1,000 a day at the time, and we just didn’t have the money to afford it—it was only three years after we started. It’s more efficient in this business to do mail order, because you don’t have to pay for all the real estate. But we couldn’t let the business be crippled, so we diversified into retail.

Lee Valley retail customers are glad that Mr. Lee diversified.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

The Millennium Collection
Media Technologies
Imax Movies and
Ted Rogers Sr.

Canada Post released 68 stamps in a Millennium book on September 15, 1999, as well as in a series of 17 Millennium souvenir sheets, each depicting four different stamps, starting December 17, 1999 through to March 17, 2000. This article deals with two stamps issued in the first series highlighting pivotal Canadian subjects in the world of entertainment and the arts : Imax Movies and Ted Rogers Sr.

IMAX

The IMAX system has its roots in EXPO '67 in Montreal. A small group of Canadian designed a new system using a single, powerful projector, rather than the cumbersome multiple projectors used at that time. The result: the IMAX motion picture projection system, which would revolutionize giant-screen cinema. IMAX technology premiered at the Fuji Pavilion, EXPO '70 in Osaka, Japan.



IMAX Corporation Greeting Card Envelope 1999

IMAX Corporation produced an envelope with the Millennium series design for its 1999 Christmas card. The envelope and card were also released through the Philatelic Agency in January 2000.




Private Order envelope




Greeting Card








Ted Rogers Sr.

Ted Rogers Sr. invented a tube which allowed hum-free radios to be plugged directly into electrical outlets. His work lives on in his son's telecommunications empire, which spans everything from cable television to Internet access.



Rogers Cable Bill 2000

The Ted Rogers Sr. Millennium stamp was reproduced on the front of the July, 2000 Rogers Cable bill envelope.








Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Baron Tweedsmuir


John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir



John Buchan (1875-1940) was a Scottish-born lawyer, colonial administrator, publisher, journalist, historian, parliamentarian, and author who served as Governor-General of Canada. He wrote over 100 books, including the suspense novel The Thirty-Nine Steps which became famous when Alfred Hitchcock made it into a movie in 1935.









Governor Generalship
(1935- 1940)



John Buchan was appointed Governor General of Canada in 1935. Upon accepting his appointment as Governor General of Canada, he also received a peerage, and was created Baron Tweedsmuir of Elsfield.


Governor General Correspondence : Mourning Cover

King George V died in 1936. Envelopes mailed by the Governor General's office during the mourning period were framed in black. The cover below was mailed from Quebec City, location of the Citadelle, the second official home and workplace of Canada’s governor general, to the mayor of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan.



Quebec to Prince Albert, August 1, 1936



The letter, sent free, was franked by the Assistant Secretary to Lord Tweedsmuir:





Arctic Travel 1937

In 1937, Lord Tweedsmuir toured the Arctic Circle. He travelled down the Mackenzie River from Fort Smith to Aklavik, NWT, on board the Hudson's Bay Company sternwheeler SS Distributor. The steamboat became a temporary post office during the three week trip.


S.S. Distributor


Lord Tweedsmuir and party aboard the S.S. Distributor


The souvenir cover below, carried on the Distributor, was autographed by Lord Tweedsmuir as well as several postmasters including Donald Nayloe, captain and postmaster of the Distributor.


SS Distributor circular date stamp and oval ship marking, July 21, 1937 (departure from Fort Smith). Aklavik receiver postmark August 1, 1937 on the back of the envelope. Then, Aklavik to Edmonton by air, Edmonton receiver August 7, 1937.


John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir

A sheet of the Governor-General's Train writing paper was enclosed in the envelope:


The Governor General's Literary Awards and Tweedsmuir History Books

In 1936 Lord Tweedsmuir created the Governor General's Literary Awards, which continue to be Canada's most prestigious recognition of literary merit.

Lady Tweedsmuir wrote many books and plays, and was active in promoting literacy in Canada. At a meeting of the Athens (Ontario) Women's Institute, Lady Tweedsmuir stressed the need for preserving the history of Canadian people. She suggested that Ontario Women's Institute Branches keep local history books as the WIs in England did, where she had been a devoted member. These histories were named Tweedsmuir History Books (or Tweedsmuirs as they are commonly known)





On February 6, 1940, Lord Tweedsmuir had a stroke and injured his head badly in the fall. On February 11, just 10 months before his term of office was to expire, Lord Tweedsmuir died. Prime Minister McKenzie King read the following words over the radio: "In the passing of His Excellency, the people of Canada have lost one of the greatest and most revered of their Governors General, and a friend who, from the day of his arrival in this country, dedicated his life to their service."


John Norman Stuart Buchan, 2nd Baron Tweedmuir


John Norman Stuart Buchan (1911 - 1996) ,was the eldest son of John Buchan and Susan Grosvenor. He was a naturalist, a gallant soldier and fine writer of English, an explorer, colonial administrator and man of business.

In 1936, Buchan joined his parents in Canada. He worked for the Hudson’s Bay Company, drove a dog team 3,000 miles, and spent the winter of 1938-39 at the trading post at Cape Dorset, N.W.T. With the outbreak of WWII he enlisted in the Governor General's Foot Guards and was with the first Canadian troops to arrive in England in December, 1939.

He succeeded to the title of Baron Tweedsmuir upon his father's death, receiving his army company on the same day. He saw action with the Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment in Sicily. He served with the the General Staff in Italy, responsible for liaison between the British and Canadian contingents.

British Schools Exploring Society

For twenty-one years he was President of the British Schools Exploring Society (BSES), a youth development charity based in the United Kingdom, which operates expeditions for young people to wilderness environments. Since its formation in 1932, BSES has organised over 130 expeditions and visited all seven continents.

1986 Yukon Expedition

BSES organised a two month expedition in the Yukon in 1986. The souvenir cover below was mailed from Whitehorse, July 16, 1986. The cover was autographed by Lord Tweedsmuir who was President of the BSES and BSES alumnus Admiral of the Fleet Terence Lewin, Baron Lewin (1920-1999) who went to Newfoundland with BSES in 1938. Lewin had a distinguished military career and was appointed First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff . He was Chief of the Defence Staff and member of the War Cabinet during the Falkland War.





BSES Yukon Expedition cachet



John Buchan, 2nd Baron Tweedsmuir

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Index Medallion Issue 1932-1935

Rates, Domestic and International
King George V Index

1912 - 1928 Admiral Issue

1928 - 1930 Scroll Issue

1930 - 1932 Arch Issue

1932 - 1935 Medallion Issue

1935 - 1937 Dated Die Issue
1971 Emily Carr

Emily Carr (1871 -1945) established herself as one of Canada's most famous artists with her depictions of native life on Canada's West Coast. One of the first painters in Canada to adopt a post-impressionist painting style, Carr did not receive widespread recognition for her work until later in her life. In 1927, she was asked to lend fifty canvases for an exhibition in Ottawa. Critics and artists, notably Lawren Harris of the Group of Seven, understood her work and liked it. The group's interest gave her new life. She began painting again, her theme all British Columbia. In 1933 she became a member of the Canadian Group of Painters.


Her first book, "Klee Wyck", a series of tales and sketches of West Coast Indians, won the Governor General's Award for non-fiction in 1941.









Commemorating the 100th anniversary of her birth, the Emily Carr stamp, issued on February 12, 1971, reproduced one of her most famous paintings, "Big Raven".


The Big Raven, Emily Carr









First Day Covers

Canada Post Office Publicity First Day Cover




Shering Corporation







Jackson




Overseas Mailers






Cole Cover




Rosecraft




Victoria Junior Chamber of Commerce






David Pritchard






Usage

Domestic Letter


Vancouver to Victoria, February 22, 1971
6 cents domestic letter rate + 50 cents registration fee