William Arthur Pritchard


William Arthur "Bill" Pritchard was a pioneer Canadian socialist politician and publisher. Pritchard is best remembered as a principal defendant in a 1920 sedition prosecution of nine socialist leaders in connection with the 1919 Winnipeg General Strike.

Biography

Early years

William Arthur Pritchard, known to his friends by the nickname "Bill," was born in England in 1888. He attended school in Swinton, a town in the City of Salford, part of Greater Manchester. His Welsh-born father James Pritchard emigrated to British Columbia, Canada in 1900, when Bill was 12 years old. While working as a miner in Canada, James Pritchard became a socialist activist, splitting from the reformist Socialist Party of British Columbia in 1902 to help found the short-lived and tiny Revolutionary Socialist Party of Canada before joining the broader movement again as a founding member of the impossibilist Socialist Party of Canada in January 1905.
Back home in England the Pritchard family's financial situation remained difficult. Bill Pritchard's conventional academic career came to an end shortly before his 13th birthday when he was apprenticed to a Lancashire building contractor so that he might help support his family while learning the construction trades. Pritchard nevertheless attended night school over the next seven years at two technical institutes, where he gained formal training.
In 1911 Pritchard's father returned home from Canada for a short visit. The 23-year-old decided to join his father on the return trip to North America, sailing with him across the ocean before traversing the breadth of Canada by rail to Vancouver on Canada's Pacific coast. The pair arrived in Vancouver on May 19, 1911, and immediately went to meet with party leader E. T. Kingsley at the office of the Western Clarion, the weekly newspaper of the SPC. Two days later Bill Pritchard attended his first socialist meeting and before the month was out he was admitted as a card-carrying member of the SPC.

Political career

The high point of Pritchard's political career was actually reached in the period after 1919, and especially after 1925, when the "Impossibilist" Socialist Party, as such, dropped out of electoral politics. In 1926 he ran as an Independent Labour candidate in the sprawling federal constituency of New Westminster, promising workers and farmers there a war "on poverty" as an alternative to the personal partisanship of Arthur Meighen and Mackenzie King. He was badly beaten but did win certain polls—such as the railway workers' community of Port Mann. A key concentration of Labour voters in North Burnaby, where Pritchard had settled after his release from federal prison in the wake of the Winnipeg General Strike, was identified, and effectively used by Pritchard in subsequent campaigns for municipal office. Gaining the confidence of north-ward voters in rocky debates over pro-development issues on Burnaby council, he gambled, successfully, on a bid for the reeveship or mayoralty of Burnaby, just as the Depression set in.

1930s Burnaby Mayoralty

He soon emerged as a major champion for local relief issues vis a vis senior governments, and was rewarded by a staggering majority in his last municipal race On his political watch, Burnaby gained unprecedented profile as a real or imagined laboratory of socialistic innovation.. A garbled report in the New York Times was headlined "Town Dispenses With Money; All Debts Paid with Labor." Although local co-operators had some success in building an alternative economy, municipal debts, as such, could scarcely be addressed by radical means. After long and winding controversy, a symbolic repudiation of municipal debt triggered provincial receivership of the errant municipality, a move that is known to have been well received in Conservative Ottawa, where Pritchard was always persona non grata and Burnaby at large had become a strangely significant political headache. Unfortunately for the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, the new "left" political movement to which Pritchard adhered in 1932/3, he was unable to win elective office under that banner and typically failed in an ambitious bid to transform its provincial press, which he edited during the mid-1930s, into a commercially competitive newspaper.

1919 Winnipeg General Strike

The Winnipeg General Strike occurred in 1919 and was the most crucial strike in the history of Canada. Having originated from social inequalities along with poor working conditions in the working class domain, the strike resulted in numerous arrests and murders but significantly contributed to the future evolution of labor movements and social democratic politics. William Arthur Pritchard was a key historical figure in this context, being a as well as one of the strikes leaders, "Bill" Pritchard pursued social and cultural goals instead of solely revolutionary. As a result in his activity, he was arrested and found guilty.

Death and legacy

After Pritchard's engagement in the Winnipeg General Strike, Canadian society began to struggle against poor working conditions, unemployment on par with inflation, and dismal wages. The legacy after William Arthur Prichard's death encompasses more comfortable working conditions, adequate wages, and better relationships with the government.