A letter from T.H. Hooper, Operating Superintendent of the Waterworks Department, to M. Peterson, Secretary of the Committee on Finance, informing him that there were no volunteers working in his (Hooper's) department during the strike.
A letter from C.H. Burgess, a railway worker, explaining to the Mayor and Council that the blame for the strike should be assigned to the owners of Vulcan Iron Works and the Manitoba Iron Workers.
A letter from Chris Newton, Acting Chief of Police, to the Board of Police Commissioners, recommending it approve the reinstatement of several former employees who had reapplied following the General Strike.
Several pages from a bound volume of the minutes of the Board of Police Commissioners between 23 May and 26 June 1919 (page 80: May 23; page 88: May 29; pages 115-116: June 9; pages 125-126: June 11; page 155: June 25; page 156: June 26). Some of the pages have copies of other records pasted to them from other dates. The pages are excerpts and, as a result, some pages contain information that is either continued from the previous page or continues on the next, but is not included. These excerpts were selected by the Winnipeg Police Museum and deal primarily with staffing during the General Strike, including the dismissal of and reinstatement of employees, and the Slave Pact loyalty pledge.
A list of volunteers who worked in the Electrical Department during the strike, submitted to the Committee on Finance by F.A. Cambridge, City Electrician.
A letter from Chris Newton, Acting Chief of Police, to the Board of Police Commissioners, listing employees he had reinstated following the conclusion of the General Strike.
A letter from Geo. A. Watson, Commissioner of Manitoba Government Telephones, to Mayor Gray regarding John Burton Harding, a returned soldier and Special Constable, who had been injured during the General Strike.
A letter from Geo. A. Watson, Commissioner of Manitoba Government Telephones, to Mayor Gray regarding John Burton Harding, a returned soldier and Special Constable, who had been injured during the General Strike.
A letter from A.J. Douglas, Medical Health Officer, to M. Peterson, Secretary of the Committee on Finance, informing him that there were no volunteers working in his (Douglas') department during the strike.