翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Nova Scotia
・ Nova Scotia (AG) v Walsh
・ Nova Scotia (album)
・ Nova Scotia (Board of Censors) v McNeil
・ Nova Scotia (disambiguation)
・ Nova Scotia (ship)
・ Nova Scotia (Workers' Compensation Board) v Martin; Nova Scotia (Workers' Compensation Board) v Laseur
・ Nova Scotia Agricultural College
・ Nova Scotia Archives and Records Management
・ Nova Scotia Association of Architects
・ Nova Scotia Association of Realtors
・ Nova Scotia Barristers' Society
・ Nova Scotia Clippers
・ Nova Scotia College of Early Childhood Education
・ Nova Scotia Community College
Nova Scotia Cotton Manufacturing Company
・ Nova Scotia Council
・ Nova Scotia Court of Appeal
・ Nova Scotia Department of Economic and Rural Development
・ Nova Scotia Department of Education
・ Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever
・ Nova Scotia Environmental and Heritage Acts
・ Nova Scotia Federation of Labour
・ Nova Scotia Fencibles
・ Nova Scotia Gaelic Mod
・ Nova Scotia Gaming Corporation
・ Nova Scotia general election, 1867
・ Nova Scotia general election, 1871
・ Nova Scotia general election, 1874
・ Nova Scotia general election, 1878


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Nova Scotia Cotton Manufacturing Company : ウィキペディア英語版
Nova Scotia Cotton Manufacturing Company
The Nova Scotia Cotton Manufacturing Company was a cotton mill located in Halifax, Nova Scotia which was founded in 1882 and destroyed with great loss of life by the Halifax Explosion in 1917.
The company was formed as part of an effort to industrialize the Maritime provinces of Canada and switch from merchant shipping to manufacturing under Canada's National Policy. Typical of the regional enthusiasm for industry in the 1880s, the company was quickly capitalized by 32 local investors within two weeks, drawn from a who's who of Halifax manufacturers, merchants and business leaders including railway engineer Sandford Fleming.〔T.W. Acheson, "The National Policy and the Industrialization of the Maritimes, 1880-1910" ''Acadiensis'' I, 2 (Spring, 1972), p. 5〕 Carefully studying other cotton mills, the company built a state-of-the-art mill on Robie Street in North End, Halifax, bringing in textile workers from Lancashire, England. Halifax City Council paid for water mains and subsidized the construction of a five-mile railway spurline from the Intercolonial Railway's yards on the waterfront. The "cotton factory spur", as it came to be known, created Halifax's first industrial park along Robie Street, attracting other factories such as the Silliker Car Works, the Henderson & Potts Paint factory and later the railway shops of the Canadian Government Railways.
The mill began production in 1883. It produced plain cotton with a workforce of 600, half of them women including a dozen girls under 16. By the end of the 1880s, it was the second largest employer in Halifax, after the Acadia Sugar Refinery, and the seventh largest producer of cotton in Canada. The company paid small dividends in the first few years but soon feel into debt and had to cut production, dropping to 317 workers by 1891.〔''Halifax the First 250 Years'' Judith Fingard, David Sutherland, Janet Guildford (1999) Formac Publishing, pages 92-93〕 The mill found it difficult to compete with much larger textile mills in Montreal and Toronto and provided historians with a classic example of the difficulty of Maritime firms to compete with larger Canadian competitors.〔Michael Frost, "The Nationalization of the Bank of Nova Scotia", ''Acadiensis'' Vol. 12, No. 1, Fall 1982, p 34-35〕 It was purchased in January 1891 by the Dominion Cotton Mills Company of Montreal, the first purchase in a string of acquisitions by the Montreal firm which became Dominion Textile.〔Acheson, p. 15〕
The mill was destroyed on December 6, 1917 by an accidental explosion of a munitions ship in Halifax Harbour known as the Halifax Explosion. Although almost a mile from the explosion and out-of-sight of the harbour, the mill was devastated by the explosion. The shock wave caused a partial collapse of the concrete floors of the building and started a fire which consumed the building and killed many of the workers.〔Michael J. Bird, ''The Town That Died: The True Story of the Greatest Man-Made Explosion Before Hiroshima'', (1962), pages 27-28, 72-74.〕
After the explosion, Dominion Textile shifted production to other mills. The walls and first floor of the mill remained and were roofed over to store supplies for the city's reconstruction. The Halifax lumber and building supply firm Piercey's opened in the former factory in the 1920s and continues to operate from the building today.〔Janet Kitz, ''December 1917:Re-visiting the Halifax Explosion'' Halifax: Nimbus Publishing (2006) p. 43〕

==References==



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Nova Scotia Cotton Manufacturing Company」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.