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Ginger Goodwin: 2004 Miner's Memorial Day
Goodwin at Wikipedia.
May 10, 1887 – 27 July 1918
Albert (Ginger) Goodwin, a good Yorkshire lad, was a major thorn in the side British Columbia's early capitalist robber barons. He was a highly effective, Marxist union rabble-rouser back in those evil days when there were very good causes for union rabble-rousing.
He was initially exempted from military service in WWI because he had black-lung disease from his work in coal mines. His exemption was quickly overturned, probably through political interference.
Goodwin was a pacifist and did not wish to serve in the armed forces, but he probably also realized that conscription for him was a thinly veiled death sentence -- if a German bullet didn't get him...... well ... there was always friendly fire.
Godwin fled into the forest. Eventually a Dominion Police Constable found him and shot him -- the Dominion Police were one of the Federal precursors to the RCMP. There is reasonable likelihood (but no certainty) that his death was a summary political execution. The BC Provincial Police charged the Dominion Constable, but ..... things went nowhere almost immediately.
Goodwin's death provoked Canada's first general strike.
Goodwin now has iconic status as a folk-hero/martyr in Canada's labour movement.
He is still problematic today. When there is a socialist government elected provincially, memorial signs go up and roads are named after Goodwin. When there is a right wing government, signs start to disappear and roads get unnamed. :rolleyes:
Further reading:
http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=41525
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~soules/media1...son/ginger.htm
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It is my pure and virtuous heart that
gives me the strength of ten!
