Adolphe Jacquies ( – 30 January 1860) was a Canadian shopkeeper, printer, trade unionist, and newspaper publisher in Quebec City.
Born in Bordeaux, he immigrated to Quebec City sometime before 1826. In 1836, he reorganised the Quebec City printers into the Canadian Typographical Union. He became a typographer in 1837 and published a newspaper called Le Fantasque. In 1839, he was arrested for printing a poem in the paper and released afterwards with health complications. He continued printing newspapers and wrote editorials for the Canadian Colonist and Commercial Advertiser. His views were sympathetic to the Parti canadien and liberal causes. He died in Quebec City.
In 1836, Jacquies helped to reorganise the printers in Quebec City into a union, which was eventually called the Canadian Typographical Union. Jacquies convinced 66 members from twelve workshops to join the union and served as its president. The union disbanded eight years later.
Following his release, he started publishing the Canadian Colonist and Commercial Advertiser. The bi-weekly English paper was published for two years. Although most articles in the paper were reprints from other papers, it also contained editorials written by Jacquies. The paper was against the Act of Union that united Upper Canada and Lower Canada into the Province of Canada: the paper published that the process for the province's creation was undemocratic and created a larger civil service. The paper also denounced England's pursuit of free trade policies, believing that Canada needed preferential treatment for England to buy its timber so that they could afford to buy England manufactured goods.
In 1841 Jacquies acquired a Conservative newspaper called British North American and renamed it to the Quebec Argus. He also printed the Quebec Times, another Conservative newspaper. He may have moved to Montreal during this time, as his wife died there in 1847.
Jacquies was sympathetic to the Parti canadien, a Francophone liberal party. He promoted workers' rights and liberal ideological ideas including responsible government and unions for workers.
He died in Quebec City on 30 January 1860.
|
|