Excavations


... nothing is more essential to public interest than the preservation of public liberty.

- David Hume



Saturday, June 6, 2026

On Company Towns in Canada, Robert Owen, and a Clubhouse

                                                 
Ioco Townsite, British Columbia, 1940's (h/t Port Moody Station Museum) 

What do Kitimat, Powell River, Fort McMurray, Flin Flon, Ioco and New View Society (in Port Coquitlam, B.C.) have in common?  All but one are Company Towns in Canada, and all of them share an intellectual debt to Robert Owen (1771-1858).

Robert Owen was a social reformer; a Utopian Socialist, in fact.  He was a successful cotton manufacturer who took it upon himself to manufacture “men of virtue”.[1]   He began with his model cotton mills he came to own in New Lanark, Scotland, and then carried it to New Harmony, Indiana, where his plans ended in failure.  Throughout, however, he believed that the environment shaped and formed each individual’s character, which meant that education was essential to improving lives.

Following along the lines of Rousseau, Owen believed that man was naturally good.  When he took over New Lanark, conditions were poor – housing and sanitation were sorely neglected. “Within a few years, Owen had turned this dirty little village into one of the wonders of Europe, a place of pilgrimage for English earls and Russian grand dukes.  And the company paid better dividends than ever.  Owen began by sanitary reform.  He provided for the orderly disposal of waste, and forbade household refuse pits in front of the cottages.  He built new houses, and eventually gave each family several rooms.”[2]

From this, Owen developed his ideal for a model community.  “…. a new village will be built. The buildings will be constructed around a central parallelogram devoted to lawns and gardens.  They will include living-quarters with common kitchens, dining rooms, and recreation-rooms, but providing separate apartments for each family.  A school, a community hall, and other necessary public buildings will complete the parallelogram.  Barns and workshops will be built a little apart.”[3]

As I see it, Owen’s New Lanark was the model for the Ioco Townsite and many other company towns.  When the Imperial Oil Company established the beginnings of the oil refinery on the North Shore of Port Moody, B.C. in 1914, the shanty town that quickly developed needed attention.  As local historian and long-term Mayor of Belcarra, Ralph Drew put it: “The construction of the ‘Ioco Townsite’ complete with playgrounds, bowling greens, tennis courts and sports fields became a ‘jewel of Vancouver’s suburbs’  Almost every aspect of worker’s social life – dances, sports, and more casual socializing – occurred within the purview of the ‘company town.’” [4]

But Owen’s effect does not end with the company town.  His ideas in A New View of Society (1813-1816), are clearly the inspiration behind the New View Society, a mental health clubhouse in Port Coquitlam, founded in 1973  in the wake of Riverview Hospital downsizing.  Spanning the Tri-Cities, and far beyond, Robert Owen’s legacy lives on.



[1] Crane Brinton, English Political Thought in the Nineteenth Century (London: Ernest Benn, 1933), p. 44.

[2] Ibid., p, 52.

[3] Ibid., pp. 54,55.

[4] Ralph Drew, Townsite Tales: The History of Ioco, Anmore Valley & North Shore of Port Moody Arm (Belcarra, B.C.: Ralph Drew, 2017), p. 319.   See also: Lucie K. Morisset and Jessica Mace, Identity on the Land: Company Towns in Canada (Montreal: Patrimonium, 2019).


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