A Corporate View of Housing and Community in a Company Town: Copper Cliff, 1886 to 1920.
Date
1990
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Ontario Historical Society, Toronto, Ont.
Abstract
Traces the development of the company town of Copper Cliff (now part of Sudbury), Ontario, to show how a corporation viewed the purpose of such a community and how it was used to meet company ends. Copper Cliff was a settlement around the copper mines of the Canadian Copper Company. A highly pragmatic solution to the problem of getting workers to resettle in out-of-the-way places, these towns usually had their houses, water and systems, schools, roads, stores, and entertainment centers built and financed by the primary company operating in the area. To the company, the housing and the town in general were investments, and also a 'tool' for controlling workers.
Description
Based on company records and local archives; 6 tables, 8 illus., 72 notes.
Keywords
Canada, Social control, Ontario (Copper Cliff), Company towns, Canadian Copper Company
Citation
Goltz, Eileen A.1990."A Corporate View of Housing and Community in a Company Town: Copper Cliff, 1886 to 1920". Ontario History. 82(1): 29-52