The abandoned paper mill
The abandoned paper mill

The abandoned paper mill

The abandoned paper mill

A life for a few pennies

Outaouais (Quebec), Canada

This is one of the oldest stationery in Quebec. Founded in 1851 by a american businessman, the company is composed of a half-dozen buildings on a fifteen hectares site. Saying that the site is large is an understatement, not only because it has a hydroelectric plant, but the company is also located on both banks of the Ottawa River, which means that the company is in Quebec and Ontario.

The plant will initially specialize in the manufacture of matches and in 1869, the plant produced 1.5 million unities per hour. Recognized for poor working conditions (up to 20 fires could break out every day), the plant was headed by an unscrupulous boss who showed no respect for its employees. At that time, the big bosses of the city are called each other in important municipal positions to keep control of urban and industrial life.

Very quickly, the plant begins to hire young girls aged 12 to 20 years old for two reasons: their dexterity and their advantage to be paid barely a third of what men earn. Their duties will be thankless and extremely harmful to their health. We should remember that before 1913, the matches were soaked in phosphorus, a highly toxic material that caused jaw necrosis. As no treatment existed, affected women had to be amputated a portion of the jaw. If nothing were done, the bone broke down and gave off a pus that, when mixed with saliva, causing anemia or even death.

Working conditions are miserable and incredibly dangerous. As employees working with flammable materials, all the women had a bucket of water next to their workstation.

It is also here that was born the first female union in Canada and, when a strike will occur in the 20s, several unsightly acts will be committed as this framework who will order his driver to "running into the pile."

In 1924, more than 2,500 people work there. Sold and resold later, the plant will close its doors in 2007, sending the unemployment last 185 employees. Eventually, the site will be abandoned for several years.

Today, the site belongs to a company who wants to revitalize the area with condos and commercial premises.

Related content

The curse of the Dow brewery
Montréal, Quebec (Canada)

Although this building was built around 1861, the history of the Dow brewery began nearly 60 years earlier, in 1790, when a farmer named Thomas Dunn started in the beer industry in La Prairie, who was an important stopover for travelers who went...

Silos
Montréal, Quebec (Canada)

Built in the early twentieth century, the former Canada Malting plant has a dozen gigantic silos of 37 meters high. The oldest was built in 1905. Hundreds of employees worked there after the Second World War, until the closure of the factory at...

The old superstructures plant
Montréal, Quebec (Canada)

More than a century of expertise in the construction of mega steel structure that represents hundreds of projects from coast to coast. The company's story began in 1879 in Toronto, where a group of businessmen sniff a bargain following the...

The Park lane café
Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec (Canada)

The place is big, very big. While the building is nearly 200,000 square feet, the site, meanwhile, is over than 430,000 square feet in an agricultural area of Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu. For those interested, the site is for sale and the current...