In his bicentenary history of the city, Halifax: Warden of the North, Thomas H. Raddall wrote of the eighteenth-century community that
behind the industry of the merchants and townsfolk flourished the other side of Halifax; the brothels, the drinking dens, the underworld which nourished itself on the vices of the troops and fleet. Already the town was reputed the most wicked in North America. A Yankee settler, writing home to the Reverend Dr. Styles about this Sodom of the frontier, made a famous quip: 'There are 1,000 houses in the town. We have upwards of 100 licensed (drinking) houses and perhaps as many without license, so the business of one half the town is to sell rum and the other half to drink it.' His arithmetic was not quite equal to his wit, and his famous generality ignored the fact that the land and sea forces, who kept most of the taverns going, outnumbered the townsfolk by five or six to one.
The proportion of drinking establishments to general population had changed dramatically by 1881, when Halifax City and County had only 51 bar-keepers — but 23 brewers and distillers.
The Dominion Census of 1881 listed 12,933 people employed in Halifax City and 10,632 people employed in the County. The statistics were further broken down into those individuals working in agriculture (251 in the city; 3112 in the county); in commerce (3293; 849); in domestic employment (2351; 648); in industry (4588; 4533); in the professions (812; 303); and those not classified (1638; 1187). Of those employed in the county, 52% were either fishermen (2466) or farmers (3086); interestingly enough, there were 55 women calling themselves the latter. Servants totalled 2014 individuals in the city (262 male; 1752 female) and 588 in the county (114 male; 474 female). There were 56 physicians and surgeons (44 in the city; 12 in the county) and 72 midwives (65; 7). Government employees numbered only 146 (117; 29), and municipal workers were even fewer (29; 6). The military, a conspicuously large group, were — as usual — absent from the returns, being British in origin, transient in the community, and therefore not enumerated like the permanent population.
From the earliest days, most people living outside the city in what later became Halifax County, were employed in agriculture, lumbering, the fisheries, shipbuilding or other marine-related occupations. However, subsequent to the discovery of gold at Mooseland in 1858, mining operations commenced along the Eastern Shore at Waverley, Montague, Tangier, Moose River, Caribou Gold Mines, Dufferin Mines, Harrigan Cove and several other communities, continuing well into the twentieth century.
In 1909 I.J. Isaacs produced, with the approval of the local Board of Trade, a 'booster' booklet entitled The City of Halifax, The Capital of Nova Scotia, Canada: Its Advantages and Facilities. Isaacs wrote that Halifax "is the leading manufacturing centre of the Maritime Provinces. The industries carried on here are of a diversified character...". The city's iron and metal-works included a large rolling mill, various foundries, a number of machine shops and several engineering plants. Other manufacturing concerns included large sugar refineries in Halifax and Dartmouth, with 700-800 employees; an extensive cable, rope and twine factory in Dartmouth; a plant for the manufacture of railway cars; one of the largest clothing factories in the country; a cotton-goods factory; a large boot-and-shoe factory; a paint works; four breweries; a chocolate, coffee and spices factory; and an extensive manufactory of breads, biscuits and confectionery.
In 1991, exactly 110 years after the 1881 Dominion Census, the metropolitan labour force totalled some 182,310 individuals, working in the following categories: government service (16.52%), retail trade (12.67%), health and social service (10.69%), education (7.53%), manufacturing (6.84%), accommodation, food and beverage service (6.24%), construction(5.87%), business service (5.63%), wholesale trade (4.89%), finance and insurance (4.82%), transportation and storage (4.44%), communication and other utilities (4.13%), real estate operators and insurance agents (1.68%), fishing and trapping(0.52%), agriculture and related service (0.46%), mining, milling, quarrying and oil wells (0.35%), logging and forestry (0.22%) and other service industries (6.5%).
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