NFB Collection
12,000 Men
197834 min 27 secFilm: Documentary
Direction: Martin Duckworth
Production: Dennis SawyerRex Tasker
Produced by the NFB in co-operation with the National Museum of Man, National Museums of Canada.
This powerful documentary brings alive the brave story of Cape Breton's union struggles in the coal and steel industries from the 1890s through the labour wars of the 1920s.
The fight for decent wages and improved working conditions took on an urgency when the British Empire Steel Corporation, or BESCO, bought every single steel and coal company in Nova Scotia. When the Montreal-based company cut wages by a third, a long and bitter dispute began. The lockouts, picket lines and strikes were finally ended by brute force when provincial police and federal troops were sent in. The mine owners, however, were ultimately forced to recognize the union.
This film combines vintage footage, photographs, drawings and interviews with men and women who were actually in the pits and on the front lines. These Cape Bretoners speak of the hardship and brief victories of the coal miners and their families--people who COULD stand the gaff!
Availability
Subject categories
- Mining > Atlantic RegionCoalHistorical PerspectivesNon-metalsWork Issues
- History - Canada > Atlantic RegionEconomics and Industry
- Work and Labour Relations > Historical PerspectivesStrikesUnionization and the Labour MovementWorking Conditions
Credits
- director
- Martin Duckworth
- photography
- Martin Duckworth
- producer
- Dennis Sawyer
- executive producer
- Rex Tasker
- sound
- Patricia Kipping
- editing
- Martin Duckworth
- Shelagh Mackenzie
- narrator
- Kenzie MacNeil
Awards
- Golden Sheaf Award - Category: Best Documentary FilmYorkton Film Festival