Lights Along the Valley and Huntly
Transcription
Lights Along the Valley and Huntly
I GRemember (l~@i[x)lr~ j\(b@~@i lr[x)~ Wj\(b(b~17 . j\~(0) [X)[W ~lr(b 17 by CAROLINE CUMMING 1970 Printed by . D. W. Friesen & Sons Ltd. Altona, Manitobb .. ,.)4._ . , '>8' 4(1" I Remember These reminiscences of Huntly District and vicinity are dedicated to the me~ory of the pioneers who devoted their energy and talent to establish a way of life - "better than they knew." I am indebted to my brother John, to James Williamson Jr. and to Lome Williamson for much information herein contained. Where'er Endeavor bares her arm And grapples with the Things To B.e, A desk or counter, forge or farm, On veld or prairie, land or sea, And men press onward undismayed, The Empire Builder plies his trade. from: Robert Stead's The Empire Builders. ii iii CONTENT:- Ligh ts Along the Valley Preface: "The homestead days on the Canadian prairies were bathed in a romantic atmosphere which all the hard work, privation, loneliness and frustration could never quite dispel." This is a quotation from W. E.'s Causerie, in the Free Press, summarizing Fred Wilkes's: They Rose From the Dust. As I look back to pioneering in Manitoba I feel the romance of its beginning, but am disposed to think, that in not too long a time, the romantic atmosphere gave place to the realities of the hardships the pioneers faced. One wonders at the courage, fortitude, patience and hope that ever dominated the hearts of these first settlers. One can but admire the persistent effort that eventually built better than they knew for the generations to follow. Ninety years ago on the first of April my father reached the Marringhurst Plains at the east end of Rock Lake in southern Manitoba. The anemones purpled the plain. He told me many years later that he, a much-travelled man, had never seen anything so beautiful. I look back, sadly, to the devoted toilers of that far day, for their having been deprived of the many amenities of life which we enjoy. I think of the people who made up our community, and wonder how some brought up in very different circumstances endured to the end. They did, contributing what they had to make a better place for those who came after. I would that our first comers knew how humbly grateful we are for their fortitude, adaptability and resourcefulness to meet conditions imposed by the virgin prairies. C. Cumming April 1, 1969. A. LIGHTS ALONG THE V ALLEY iv (a) Preface (b) Introduction (c) The Metis. 3 (d) Arrival of the White Settlers 6 B. HUNTLY DISTRICT 20 C. REMINISCENCES 61 ( a) The Seasons 61 (b) The First Concert at Huntly School. 67 (c) Neigbourly Calls 68 (d) By The Way I. The Lost Child 2. An Unforgettable Mishap 3. A Poet's Comer . 4. The Prairie Chicken Dance . 5. Berry Picking 6. These Were The Days. 70 70 70 .. (e) A Bit More of Family History . 1. The Way of The Pioneer 2. An Old Quebec Family. iv iv 71 72 73 73 74 74 77 D. NEE LIN . 78 E. CONCLUSION 80 v The Pembina Valley Lorne Lake Lights Along the Valley Part 1. There is not, in Manitoba, a more beautiful spot than the valley which bends like an arm at the elbow from Pelican Lake to Rock Lake. At the bend, from south to east, are Lakes Lorne and Louise. The small Pembina River flows into the valley from the west draining the two small bodies of water into Rock Lake, and on and away into Red River just across the boundary from Emerson. The steep banks, wooded with oak, poplar, birch and many shrubs, slope gently on the north side as they near RockLake. The valley bottom used to be covered with stands of large elms and ash, interspersed with hay meadow, stretching away from the willow-fringed stream. We call it the Pembina Valley. It is really the work of a mighty Assiniboine of pre-glacial period that cut its course across a plain. Pelican Lake is a link with the past. A trench filled with water remained when the great flow was dammed near Wawanesa, and the Assiniboine turned aside to make a new bed farther north. This was a place for wild life; a favorite resort for waterfowl, a true hunting and fishing ground. Who were the first people here? Who can tell from whence they came and when? The mounds scattered along the north and I east banks indicate the habitation of men ages beyond our knowledge. The Indians, in turn, have left the remains of camp-sites of burial grounds and relics scattered everywhere to show that they lived here for many generations - even to the coming of the white man. Lights have shone along the valley for untold centuries. The great lights of heaven, sun, moon and stars, witnessed many changes, but not one more dramatic than the arrival of the white settlers 1879 which resembled a flight of locusts alighting. In ~hort order the candle and the lamp glimmering from lowly dwellmgs took the place of the camp-fire. Now the steady glow of electricity lights up homestead and town. II The Metis Settlement: Of the first people here little is known. A number of Metis came after the Red River Rebellion to occupy scrip land set aside by the government, That they were resident for some years was evinced by scrub"fences built to keep their animals from straying, the well-worn paths along the slopes, the rutted, winding roads used by Red River catts, and the numbers of log houses and remains of others along the valley and on top of the steep bank. Joe and Roger Dacotah lived just west of Rock Lake. 'They were men of considerable means with herds of horses and cattle - their chief asset. Joe had seven grown-up daughters and ruled his household like a king. His deep, silent laughter shook his heavy body, affording much amusement to his visitors. Mr. Henry had a strongly built house of hewn logs on the top of the valley overlooking Lome Lake, and Mr. Martin one up on the east bank at the south end of Pelican Lake. There were more houses and the remains of others between these at the foot of the hills indicating quite a large settlement. Matilda, a very stout, dark-complexioned Metis was wellknown in the white settlement. She lived in the vicinity of Rock Lake and came periodically, seated on the floor of a big Red River cart drawn by a small jog-trotting Indian pony, to sell fine, fresh pike to those less skilled in the art of fishing. The children looked forward with interest to her coming. One of these, many years later recalled how deeply disappointed he was that she should have chosen to visit his home when he was at school. No one seemed to know her last name, to whom she was related, or where she went on leaving. No doubt she joined those who went to St. John, N.D. The Gosselins came from Emerson in 1882. With Mrs. Gosselin, a widowed sister of Joe Dacotah, came her family, sons and daughters and their families. She took up land just at the bend of the Valley. What a view from that vantage point! Lake Louise to the right - a stretch of valley widened out where the Badger River flowing from the south west joins the Pembina, winding, tree-fringed through lush meadows. These people were familiar with this region having many times come on buffalo hunts, for buffalo abounded here. This little old lady as described by her granddaughter, Mrs. John McKay, had attended St. Boniface Convent. She was intelligent, capable and mistress in her own house. She spoke a mixture 2 3 of French and Cree and, much to the amazement of white children, smoked a clay pipe. The family consisted of Paul, tall and dignified, his wife and son, living at the foot of the hill from his mother's house; as did another son Michael, the hunter, who broke his back by a fall from his pony while chasing buffalo over a steep slope south of the old Glendenning road. However, he recovered and lived to a good old age with his wife and son, Willie. Many a visit he made to our house, and we children waited patiently his departure in order to gather up the kinniklnic he spilled on the floor while filling his pipe. Eustache lived near the west end of Rock Lake, where he built a trading post, keeping the staples required by hunters and the newly arrived white settlers - sugar, tea, flour, tobacco. He had several children of whom Mrs. Ramsay Montroy, still living on the old place, is one. Stenislas or Stanley Gosselin came from St. John, N.D. much later and lived here many years. Of whose daughters there was Nancy, stout and jolly, with her two sons Joe Frederick, always known as Cowboy, and Harry Ricker, and a daughter, Lena, who married John McKay. All remained in the district, becoming well-established home-makers. Later Nancy married Mr. Fred Burke. Two children, Paul and Mary were born to them, and like Harry Ricker still live in the Neelin district. Charlotte, a second daughter, had a son Johnnie Bell and a daughter, Eva. The former, quite a violinist, was popular with the young people both white and Metis. Angelique, the oldest daughter, a spinster, lived to be III years. Louis Montroy, his pretty young bride, and his brother Xav.ier, came about 1888. Louis, who remained to bring up a famtly of boys, was one of the most highly respected citizens of the district. When he died it was everybody's loss. These boys were sent to school, first to Roseberry and later to Neelin and took part in all the organized sports. Ramsay, Pete and Emil enlisted ~n World War I, serving with distinction. The former, reported the best sniper in the Canadian army, died at Neelin 1956. Emil was killed at Vimy Ridge. Pete returned, went to the States as a ball player and was accidentally drowned. Zeb, the youngest, lived in the Neelin district, died 1968. George, another s<?n of this family, a veteran of Hong Kong, World War II, is a hIghly esteemed bus driver on the Riverton-Winnipeg route. , Other Metis came for short periods only to move on to more congenial locations. furnishings. The Metis cultivated little land, devoting their time to hunting and caring for their stock. These restless people, except the Gosselins and Montroys, moved away with the coming of the white peogle, most of the~ to St. John, N.D. The land disp?s~d of, .the old homes aban.d~med, the story of a simple people satIsfied WIth the mere ne~SSlties of Hfe can never be told - a romantic story of a romaI?-tic people has been lost. Their lights disappeared. What these lights? The candle and the campfire had faded into the past. Their houses were strongly built of oak logs available on the slopes and uplands. They were chinked and plastered with clay; the roof thatched and sodded. A few stools and benches a table a bed, all home made, and a few cooking utensils co~prised the 4 5 III White Settlers Arrive It is to be regretted that no one, while the pioneers lived, thought enough about history that was in the making to record happenings that should be of interest to communities now wellestablished. All too late some one thought to pick up threads, here and there, of pioneer. life and to try to unravel and weave them into a pattern that will convey a true picture of one of the most enterprising undertakings in the history of settlement. Individuals without aid from any source set out from the British Isles and from Eastern Canada to establish themselves and families on a stretch of remote prairie land. Hope and faith in the future were their chief assets. Were they justified? One has but to estimate their achievement - homes, schools, churches - to know that they did not fail to accomplish what they set out to do. Could it have been done better I It was my mother's beautiful, bright eyes that could spot a dozen lights across the valley from the vantage point of our west window overlooking the valley. In that day there were no fringes of trees on the hill tops to obstruct one's view as prairie fires kept the trees from growing. On frosty winter nights there they were - lights twinkling in the distance. A friendly twin;Iding that dispelled the lonely feeling of isolation. First Comers On the west bank, a mile or so up from the south end of Pelican Lake lived Mr. and Mrs. Knight, English immigrants and family, Harry, Allen and Maude. They were early comers, arriving in 1879. Their home was a log house in a grove of large oaks which made summer shade and winter shelter. For a number of years they kept Glendenning Post Office. The mail was driven from Killarney and included that destined for Moropano in the Huntly District. It is told of Mr. Knight, that on a winter evening he would predict a change in the weather by announcing: "The howls are owling tonight." When well up in years these good people went to Saskatchewan to homestead a second time. A short distance south of Knights lived Joe Clements and his pleasant, short, stout wife. A few years on the praj.rie sufficed. 6 They returned to their former home in eastern Canada to live out their final years. Mr. Clements, a gruff-spoken individual, did not always reply to his gentle wife's appeals in like manner. Mrs. Clements was about to depart on a little visit to a neighbour's, so she said, "I am going, Joe." No answer, "I am going, Joe," still no response. "I am going, Joe." At last came the ungracious consent; "Go then; what's keeping you?" . Joe's brother, William, lived south along the road - an eligible bachelor who should have been the desire of every marriageable young woman; that is if she wanted a model husband. He remained a bachelor, was a prosperous farmer, and in due time retired to Killarney. A little to the right, where the road led down into the valley, was a small log cabin. I can see it still, as when a child I went with the mail carrier to Glendenning Post Office, huddled close to the hillside, sheltered from the winds. This was the home of Mr. A. Henderson and his son, Allen. They did not associate with the neighbours and little was known about them; but the father, ambitious for his son, sent him to school - even to Huntly out of their district - a tall, shy, young fellow, teased unmercifully by his classmates. Their light shone down the valley to mark their presence for a short time only. They went as they came, almost unnoticed. At the foot of the hill where Glendenning Road took a sharp turn south, to branch off to meet the Killarney Road, and then west, as if to get round a low-built house snuggled close to the steep slope behind it, was the home of John Moir. He, his wife and three children came from Hensel, Ontario, in 1882. They went first to Virden with the Langs, Mrs. Moir's family; but both they and the Langs settled here in the valley. Mr. Moir, of Irish descent, had a typical Irish sense of humour and goodness of heart; always the cheerful, good neighbour, a promoter of every worthwhile community enterprise. He was a favorite contributor to the programmes at local concerts. His lively songs were encored uproariously, but deeper chords were touched when he sang Bairnies Cuddle Doon, or in duet with his wife: Beautiful, beautiful twilight Crow ning the day at its close Shedding a hallowed enchantment Over the my and rose Whispering, softly sighing The wind of the west dies away, Beautiful, beautiful twilight Gilding the land and the sea - 7 When the Langs moved to Winnipeg in 1893, the Moirs moved into the old frame Armstrong house they had vacated. Later Mr. Moir built a fine frame home north of Glendenning Road where a clear cold spring flowed from the hill. Near the end of his life his greatest desire was to have a drink of the water from this spring. They moved to Winnipeg in 1903, they and their eight children, leaving the district the poorer for their going. Their light must have cheered many a belated wayfarer on the much-travelled road which led by their door. They exemplified, "Let me live by the side of a road, and be a friend to man." Up the narrow valley of the winding Pembina west of Moirs on the hilltop stood a high frame house. There, a fine spring of water gushes out of the bank to flow down to the river - ample supply for household and stock. There lived Mr. Boucher and his wife, French from Montreal. One ponders why these people came. The writer remembers the tall, handsome man, and the pretty delicate woman visiting in her home; and she remembers too the conversation in French - dear to every Canadian of French extraction. Their stay was short. At the birth of a baby son, Mrs. Boucher died; the husband, grief-stricken, returned East, leaving the baby in Mrs. Ellison's care. With true Irish superstition, Mrs. Ellison, to the end of her life maintained that the house was haunted. Lights, strange lights, winter and summer, could be seen in the uninhabited house. Even at a distance one shuddered to think of the ghost that kept vigil near the unmarked grave. . Long after, Mrs. Ellison told her story of the haunted house so graphically that one listener, a young student in Killarney High School, would not slip outside into the next house not more than two yards away until the dear old soul held the lamp high to show the way. So the Boucher light came and went. The father returned to take his son away, and their very name was forgotten. As long as I can remember, and that is a long time now, the old Glendenning Road was a good road. It ran westward along the middle of section thirty -three; down the east bank of the valley it followed a ravine nearly to the bottom where it took a sharp tum north and angled down to the little bridge built across the outlet which drains Pelican Lake into the Pembina. From here due west, it led across the valley. 8 Half way along this straight stretch of road was a large frame house. It stood seventy years, at least, until it was remodelled into a modem bungalow. It had been built as a store and trading post as early as 1880 by a Mr. Armstrong who managed this business enterprise (it is said) for J. H. Ashdown of Winnipeg, a promoter of distribution even in the earliest settlements. It would be worthwhile to know its history in detail. However, the store was in operation when settlers arrived. I remember my mother relating this little incident. She and Betsy Maxwell had been to Glendenning for groceries. Andrew Easton, on his pony, was riding behind their cart. Driving up a steep pitch they carelessly let one of their baskets tumble out, frightening Andrew's pony. The pony shied, threw the rider off and went galloping away. The rider's indignation spilled over in a flow of profanity that added to the amusement of the irrepressible Betsy. Pills seemed a staple commodity at this store. Some of the stock was left on the shelves after the business had closed. Two persons have related entering, finding bottles of the sugar-coated remedies which they swallowed without reserve and without harmful results. Alice and Annabel Easton were sent to Moirs for the mail. It was a long walk for two small girls in late fall. However, passing the former store, they decided to go in to investigate. On entering they took off their new mittens, put them on an old table, searched round, found a bottle of pills, ate them and went upstairs. Looking out of the window, they saw an Indian making his way toward the house, so they hid in a closet. Soon the Indian came in, but shortly went away. Two small frightened girls came downstairs to find their mittens gone. Alice, recalling the happening years after, was sure her mother never learned where the newly-knit mitts went. It was here the Langs came to live in the 1880's, and it became known as the Langs' house. There was a large family of grown boys and a daughter Annie, a teacher, as well as the married members in establishments of their own, Mrs. John Moir being one. These young men were bent on professions, teaching in the nearby schools to pay their way through college. Allan and David graduated in Theology, Warren and Ben in Medicine. They lived to be old men labouring in their chosen professions from coast to coast. Community spirited and talented, they contributed much to the growth of the districts of Huntly and Glendenning. In 1892 the family moved to Winnipeg and the Moirs occupied the Lang house. 9 Half way between the Langs and the Moirs, on the south side of the road was Glendenning School, built 1887. Later, to make it more central for the school population it was moved west to the top of the hill. There were floods in those days. Sudden, spring thaws brought water in the Pembina down in torrents, and spread it over the low banks of the river covering the valley from bank to bank. Mr. Lang, during one unusual devasting flood, determined to send for Mr. Moir. Mrs. Lang realizing the futility of such a proposal, observed, "What good will John do? He can't stop it!" High up on the east bank and at the south end of Pelican Lake was another Metis house. It was the home of Mr. Martin, a thin, wiry little man. He was often engaged by the white settlers as a guide over the trackless prairies when they needed to go to the Land Titles Office at Wakopa or Deloraine. Donald Cumming, Father's brother, and their nephew Jock wanted to file on homesteads, so Mr. Martin was engaged to take them to Wakopa, a distance of about thirty-five miles. They set out on a bleak November day, the two land-seekers in a gig, and their guide on a small Indian pony. . Not a sign of a trail westward across the stretch of tawny grass. Often the riders in the gig got down, well-clad as they were, to run a pace to warm themselves. Not so their guide. He sat his pony, clad in a thin shirt, a light-weight coat, trousers, and shod, stockingless, in a pair of home-made moccasins. When asked if he were cold, always the cheery "No, not moch." At one place he dismounted, scratched round in the tall grass and announced "Camped here last fall." There were the ashes, the remains of ~ campfire; but what his landmark was could not be conjectured. They eventually reached their destination where Mr. La Riviere kept the Land Titles Office, regardless of the fact he could neither read nor write. The two prospective settlers filed on their homesteads and returned to Mr. Martin's, where they were pressed to stay for a meal then in preparation. While waiting they were shown the winter store of food in a lean-to at the back of the house. From floor to ceiling were packed, in their feathers, ducks, geese, prairie chickens, partridges, row upon row, meat in abundance for the months ahead. Mr. Martin, like the rest of the Metis, sold his land to a British immigrant, a Mr. J. T. H. McEwan. Mr. James Williamson Jr. furnished this information about Mr. J. T. H. McEwan. "He was a very early settler here, as he was established when my father came in 1886. 10 "It was said, and I have reason to believe that it was true, that his father was a director of the bank of Scotland, which went broke. This man evidently inherited his father's money, and as some legal action was taken against the directors of the bank, the Old Country Courts tried to follow the son to Canada in order to collect some of the father's assets to cover his liabilities. It was generally agreed that J. T. H. established that location on the lake as a sort of hide-out to which he could slip away when the law was chasing him. I remember he was the only man in the area who had money; and I do know my father borrowed money from him for as little as 2% per month." Mr. McEwan kept his own counsel and remained the subject of conjecture and speculation to the end of the chapter. He was a tall handsome man with considerable resources, so it seemed. Why'settle here in a remote corner of the district? Perhaps, the superb view was the attraction. It was rumoured he had been discharged from the army for some misdemeanor, that he had misappropriated funds in a bank, and had left his native land to evade the long arm of the law. No one was ever the wiser. Years later two uniforms which bore evidence to his profession were found in a box buried under the house. He lived in a somewhat elevated style, sported a fine democrat and a spirited team of horses. He kept a pack of hounds, although the wooded slopes of the valley and treed hill-top were not conducive to hunting with a pack. His wife must have found life monotonous as they had little to do with their near neighbours. They found more companionship with the English people across the valley, the Stewarts, Heaths and others. On Mrs. McEwan's rare visits to her neighbours she was beautifully dressed and conducted herself with dignity and reserve. He loaned money at a twenty-five percent interest rate. A loan of a hundred dollars netted the borrower seventy-five, and the twenty-five was retained as interest. He was exceedingly niggardly in his dealings with others and consequently unpopular. He bought meat from Mr. J. Moir, later taking back the bones in expectation of a refund, which he did not get. I remember well, as a small child, four women walking past our home on the way to McEwans. Two turned back, two went on. Years later Mrs. Humphrey Wilson told me she was one of the four and that they were taking their mother to visit Mrs. McEwan. Who in this generation would consider a walk of seven or eight miles to go visiting! Mr. McEwan retired to Winnipeg at the turn of the century, and in 1904 he terminated his business here, disposing of his land to Peter Dufty. 11 The Eastons, whose small log house was built about half a mile east from the top of the valley, were Scottish folks. They arrived 1882, lived two years with Mr. Stark, an old friend, before moving in 1885 to their own homestead S.W. 34-3-15. The family consisted of a son, Andrew, who lived his life in this community, and three daughters. They were an asset - supporters of everything that made..for progress in a new district. Mr. Easton was secretary-treasurer of Huntly School District for years; Mr. Easton, the ever reliable help in time of trouble. A light from their west window on a winter's night streamed out afar. Both light and house are gone but memory lives on. A quarter of a mile south and west, right on the bank of the valley, were we. This was Father's second move. He had come from Rock Lake to be near the Maxwells and now, on New Year's Day, 1888, he moved into Mr. Henry's well-built log dwelling. A cellar had been dug, a low upstairs finished to serve as sleeping quarters and the family settled down for a long stay. The view from this strategic hill was fine. Pelican Lake to the north, Lorne Lake at the foot of the hill and Louise at the bend of the valley to the south. The tree~lined Pembina wound through meadowland draining Lorne and Lou!se-onandaway - a perfect picture! If we did not learn much else, we did learn to love nature. the milewide valIey. From that window we saw, glimmering in the distance, the lights of those settled west of us, Cluffs, Bea~oms, Watsons, people from Ontario who came shortly before the ratlway reached Killarney in 1885. And one must not forget the twinkle from the dwelling of Dr. Ramsay and his brother, and of old Mr. McElhearn. Again one wonders why characters so diverse came to a stretch of bleak prairie, surroundings so different from what they had been accustomed to. But there they were! I remember Dr. Ramsay, a small dapper Englishman in a tweed suit sitting by our west door on a summer day, aw~iting t~e meal my mother was preparing. Perhaps he had stopped m on hIS way home after a professional visit, for he did minister to the sick as a side line from his homesteading duties. It was said that he was a ship's doctor in the British Navy, but his drinking propensities terminated his career there. Like others he had sought solace in the excitement of pioneering in the Canadian west. When the railway was built Killarney became a thriving town of hotels stores and all that makes a distributing centre. The poor doctor's powers of abstaining were nil. Once again his old habit prevailed. A member of one of the neighbouring families said that they had a little rhyme which went like this: Dr. Ramsay went to town To get three bottles of whiskey One for Jim, and one for me And one for Dr. Ramsey. Mother recalled the visit she and Mrs. McLeod, father's niece, made to take Gracie McLeod for medical examination. They arrived in their gig without appointment. The Doctor was away for a load of wood; the brother was home preparing dinner; a foot up on the front of the old-fashioned cook stove, slicing potatoes into a pan, he entertained the callers to. the best of his ability. Soon the woodsman returned, turned professlOnal and ably diagnosed the case, T.B. of the hip, prescribed the necessary treatment - a long stay in Winnipeg General Hospital. The Doctor's homesteading was of short duration. He went his way leaving but a memory in the minds of a few old-timers. In the old house was a door to the west, which was soon replaced by a window that shed its light for many years across Cluffs' light shone out for many a winter night. Mrs. Cluff was a Mrs. Wiggs if ever there was one. Many a heart she cheered, many a bachelor she baked for, mended for, cared f?r. Life was made easier by such neighbours. When each of the famtly had gone his or her way, the old couple went to pioneer a second time in 12 13 Mr. Henry's House 1880 Saskatchewan. A few more years of hardship and back to Winnipeg to end their days with their daughter Alice. The Watson lights could be clearly seen from our window. There were brothers, Henry and John. Farther west lived the latter's two sons, Fred and Bob. And what of the lights hidden by a fringe of trees to the south west. They were there: the Thomases the Leeces, the Turners, who remainerl for many years in their well-established homes. The Turners, still as I write 1969, Annie and Arthur are living on the old homestead. At the foot of the valley west near where the old Killarney road wound up the steep slope lived Watt Nichol and his wife, Maggie, Mrs. Ellison's daughter. One can't remember Watt ever working over much for a living. He had a blacksmith shop, doing the repairs for his neighbours, and in the fall making ready his big threshing outfit to do their threshing. Their location gave access to three districts, a good place to meet for a dance where could mingle young and old from far and near. Watt played the violin well - well for the old-time quadrilles and waltzes - and tirelessly. There were many dances, small crowds, large crowds, all kinds of crowds; there was always at the wind-up of threshing the threshers' dance to which we did not always get going. They were always the same lively affairs; Watt played and often called the quadrilles at the same time. Mrs. Nichol prepared lunch (between dances) sufficient for a sumptuous repast at midnight. No one dreamed of going home before morning, the host and hostess finishing on a high note of satisfaction for their share in the night's fun. "What's your idea of heaven?" was asked a young woman. "a good waltzing partner," was the answer. At Nichol's, one had just that opportunity. Gus Anderson, a S.wede, who took up land abandoned by an earlier settler, was the perfect partner. So many nights of entertainment planned by these folks in their simple, hospitable way deserves for them special mention. They have long passed and are forgotten in the community where they lived. One bright light less in the passage of time. About 1900 the McLennans came from Glengarry, Ontario, the County famous as the birthplace of Ralph Connor. They occupied a farm south of ours, which like ours, was partlYQn the hill top but mostly in the valley. It was an ideal stock farm where a fine herd of shorthorns became one of the best known in Manitoba. The house, a good frame structure, and the large red barn gave an air of prosperity to the place. 14 They retired to Holmfield in 1908, having sold their farm to Messrs. George and William Beaulac. Mr. McLennan died in 1913 but Mrs. McLennan lived to a good old age. She passed away on January 16, 1936, in her eighty-sixth year. Rounding the elbow at Lake Louise one found a few of the Metis families well established - the Gosselins, the Montroys and others. They were a pleasant people, retiring, keeping pretty well to themselves. They supplied the labour required at all seasons for seeding, haying, harvesting. Often, too, it was go for Nancy, Charlotte or Mrs. Paul when the washing piled up, the cleaning needed doing and the potatoes picked. On the slope of the east bank was the home of R. B. Watson, a stone mason. He was an early comer and one of the first to engage in the milling business in partnership, first with Mr. Cowie and later with John Montague. In timehe built a picturesque small house of stone and stucco with a look-out tower commanding a fine view of a wide stretch of valley. The basement, opening out on a pleasant terrace round which was a low stone wall, was occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Pritchard, Mrs. Watson's parents. Mr. Watson who claimed descent from a Pomeranian Count, although by birth an Englishman, was something .of an. aris~ocrat in manner and appearance. He wore a goatee, whIch WIth hIS affability, helped to bear out the possibility of noble bi:th. His wife, a charming, small chubby woman, had brought WIth her from England numbers of things to adorn her home, making it a p~easant one, and betokening former life very different from that of pI?neer~ ing in Canada. I remember especially a fine set of Charl~s DIckens works , which at her death were willed to the Graham gIrlS. Mr. Watson operated a lime kiln, supplying the surrounding districts with a commodity very necessary in the construction of better homes. The limestone necessary for this operation was very plentiful along the hills. In L910 Mrs. Watson died of cancer, incurable in that day; a few years later Mr. Watson died in Middle Church, Winnipeg. Round the bend from the Watsons close to the foot of the hills was the home of Joseph Neelin who first homesteaded the quarter section later owned by George Cooper. Mr. Joseph Neelin, a builder, came with his brother from Ottawa to Winnipeg where he worked at his trade. Later the brothers took up land, the former farming, the brother operat.ing a store across the road. Stock in the store consisted of the Immediate needs of the settlers, and these supplies were brought from Emerson until the c.P.R. was built to Manitou in 1882, the haul 15 from the latter being much shorter. The storekeeper tiring of his business moved to Port Arthur while Joe Neelin purchased John Montague's land in the valley. c 0; ~ l . John Montague, an early comer, operated a lumber mill on the fast-flowing creek from a never-failing spring up the hill. The plentiful stands of oak and poplar on the slopes, andel!J!antl3.sh in- the valley supplied tne required timber. . -----. ~ .c § .E, ..J During the time the Montagues lived here an epidemic of diphtheria caused the death of their two children. Many years later Mrs. Montague returned to try to locate the little burial plot just east of the house. All was so changed she could not find the place, and went away saddened that the tiny graves must go unmarked. c ~ ..; ~ '!! Mr. Neelin, in time, by patient energy and skill put up a commodious house of stone and stucco (still standing 1969) and acquired more land, both of which he needed to maintain his family of six sons and three daughters. I remember well the L-shaped house, the big kitchen, dining-room and parlor well-furnished and much used. . 0; .~ o E ~ Mr. Neelin was a quiet, reserved man whose home was open to all in true pioneer hospitality. He farmed successfully for many years, and when the C.N.R. was built in 1904 he insisted that to perpetuate the name, the town site be called Neelin. A P'CniC Graham, Mrs. Mrs. Stevens, Members of photographer. at James Grahams about 1895. Back Row: Mr. Stevens, J. F. Stevens, Mr. Hillyard. Middle Row: (Adults) R. B. Watson, Sr., Mrs. R. B. Watson, J. Neelin, Mrs. Graham. Children: the families of J. Graham, J. Neelin and F. Stevens, the 16 17 f h~T Nee~n, a sister of Mrs. Watson's, was the capable manager IS ~rge ousehold. Her busy hands were always employed I n~t .WIth mea.ls, ;-Vith a basket of mending that seemed never t~ bh~Imshed. ThI~ dId not I?erturb her cheerful, happy disposition a W Her long lIfe was bnghtened by having all the family except BertIt. settled nearby. 1 That light, too, like the others is replaced by electricity light. th Ing e way of a new generation. f J Eastward from the Neelins, on the north slope was the home o ames Graham. The house he occupied was a great frame partly-stuccoed structure built it is said by R B W t f M' C . h '11 ' . , " a son or r oWIe; .t e mI owner in partnership with John Montague I~ was dIVIded fr~m front to back by a long hall; two large ro~ms I'ere on e~ch sId.e and a stairway from the front door led up to a ow upstaIrs whIch was. never finished. A big window on each g~ble and a small one In the gothic in the hall afforded a fine VIew of the valley - east, west and south. A pleasant place in summer b~t how bleak and cold in winter! In 1949 the house was e.. A IhInt ?f the once deep cellar remained to mark the site grnth o IS 0 d resIdence, one of the first here. . Now, I must go back to the mill for a short space A lumber mIll operate~ by steam and a flour mill had been built 'on a small stream floWIng down a ra:vine west of the house. The old mill shtones land part ?f ~n en?In~ lay for years near by to testify to t e ear y enterpnse In thIS dIstrict. Mr. Graham, a burly Scotsman, came with William Stark about 1882. The two families and the Eastons were close friends in the old land. Mr. Graham never took kindly to farming, and indeed, his wasn't too good a farm, on a gravelly hilly slope, mostly. He occupied himself in other ways. For years he was secretary treasurer of Roseberry School, and was the first postmaster in the village of Neelin, when Moropano was transferred from John Cumming's in 1905. He operated a small grocery store and butcher shop in conjunction with the post office. Later he dispnsed of his farm and built a house in the village. One spring he spent most of his time sitting on a stonepile working out the design for a sheaf-loader. He had his invention patented but it was never brought on the market. He contributed much to the development of the district, was the first to grow everbearing strawberries and even attempted a tobacco crop. He was on call to entertain at every concert far and near, at weddings and other gatherings. His rendering of Long Barny, I'll Meet Ye On The Lee Rig, Oor Kale Yard and many other Scottish ballads brought down the house. He was a staunch liberal in politics; Scotch or not, he had a keen sense of humour. He used to laugh over this little incident: Mr. Bryson strongly condemned the Canadian people for electing a French Canadian, Sir Wilfred Laurier, as prime minister. Donald Cumming, learning of this cirticism, stamped in indignation up and down the short sidewalk in front of Bolton and Way's store said, "What's old Johnnie Bryson anyway? Better have a good Frenchman than a bad Scotchman any day." Mrs. Graham came in the early 80's, with her parents and a brother, from London. She was a woman of many parts and in her quiet, reserved way exerted an influence for good - more than can be measured. How often she was called out to minister to the sick and how cheerfully she gave her services. Her pleasure in nature surely compensated for whatever privations pioneer life may have brought. Her musical ability and the possession of the fine Stewart piano made possible the retention of her skill. Their family of four daughters bound them to Canada with strong ties. . Their light no longer gleams from the hillside. They rest with others in the Neelin Cemetery where the tree frogs trill in the dying light of the August days. Roseberry School, 1892. 18 Near the west end of Rock Lake lived Tom Murray - a mere name at this distance of time. His farm was a rendezvous for the haymakers in summer. The farmers who had no hay on their own 19 farms put up quantities, on shares, on this stretch of good grass land. Victor Waitte occupied this quarter for a few years; and later it was bought by Will Cooper who developed this and bordering sections into a fine farm home, now occupied by his son, Nelson. On January 20th, 1959, Will and Bertha Cooper celebrated their golden wedding anniversary, on which date Harry and Mrs. Ricker also celebrated theirs. The community, in recognition of the contribution they had made during their long residence in the district, presented each couple with an electric lamp. Mary's old log house, built on her homstead about 1895. AUweather roads take the place of prairie trails that angled across small farms; electrification has brought labour-saving devices and cold storage; and a third school, modern in every detail, stands across the road from the site where the first frame structure was built in 1887. Huntly District Introduction The First Family 1880 - The Maxwells Early Settlers The Maxwell Home a Community Centre The First Wedding Huntly District Organized - A School Built The First Teachers and Pupils Kate McPhail, William Coutts Later Teachers The Lang Brothers, Mr. Pratt, A. E. Buttress, A. Moir School Life Noted Pioneers Wm. Stark, John Cumming Sr., Mrs. J. Cumming, The Eastons, Charles McKay, Mrs. D. Maxwell, McLennan Family, The SOIT"ervilles, L. Williamson, Wm. Daniels, J. T. McEwan Agricul turists Cumming Brothers - John, William, Malcolm, Walter Mabon, William Maxwell Newcomers 1890-1900 Arrivals 1900-1910 The Pioneer Church List of Settlers and Later Arrivals Location of Homesteads Neelin - Building of the C.N.R. Huntly Times change. As I write this account of Huntly District, 1969, I am aware that it is not the Huntly which had its beginning in 1880. The pioneer homes are gone, even Aunt 20 Mr. and Mrs. David Maxwell Too, the pioneers are all gone. Very few descendants of the first families remain to occupy the old farmsteads and perpetuate their names. Much of the land is occupied by newcomers; larger farms have resulted in fewer families, so that the school population has dwindled to a minimum. I go back to the beginning to relate something of what I remember and what has been told me by the few remaining, older than I, who were brought as small children to the district. 21 The first family to arrive was David and Mary Maxwell with nine of their te? chi.ldren, ranging from ages one to twenty-one, four boys and frve girls. A married daughter had been left in the east. She came later, after her husband's death, bringing two small daughters and an infant son to add to the household. The Maxwells came from Ormstown Quebec a community thirty-five miles south of Montreal. Th~y travelled by way of Chicago, where t~ey picked up my mother, then on to Emerson, the end of the railway. From here they continued the journey by horse and wagon to the end of Rock Lake, where was my father's homestead. ~e ha~ lived on it the winter before, there being a g~od log cabm whICh accommodated the new arrivals. Why they did not take up land on the Marringhurst Plains I cannot say; but early fall found them located on the S.E. quarter of section 12, township 4, range 15. Their house was a large two-storey log building ready for them when they arrived. Who built it, I do not know; but even then ther~ ,,:ere a nun:ber of sawmills along the Pembina Valley wh:re bUlldmg matenal, poplar shingles and oak siding, were avaJlable. The weather was beautiful into late October and Uncle David turned the first prairie sod - rich black soil the best for wheat growing. " From ~he~ on settlers came in numbers, not only to this unnamed dlstnct, but to homesteads in all directions. One recalls Nellie McClung's account of Milford, near Wawanesa, because that was where most of the supplies were procured in the first few years. Among the first settlers were Jim and Harry Williamson, two young bachelors from near Ottawa; William Stark and the Easton family from Se.lkirk, Scotland; the Bremner brothers, Tom, Jim an~ Bob, Scottish folk, and the Daniels family Mrs. Daniels a sister of the Bremners. All arrived about 1880-1882. Charles Cumming, father's cousin, Malcolm and Jock Cumming, father's nephews, were among the first here. In 1882 their brother Will an~ in 1888 their mother, sister and youngest brother, Donald, arnved to swell the Cumming population. In 1883 my parents moved from Rock Lake and located on N.E. 1-4-15, across the road from the Maxwells. Here my sister Flora was born, November 17, the first white child born in the district. In 1888, New Year's Day, they moved, having sold the farm to Charles McKay, also of Ormstown, to N.E. 28-3-15 bought from Mr. I:Ienry, a Metis. The two-roomed log house on the brow of the hill overlooked Lake Lorne and a fine stretch of the Pembina Valley. The Eastons, who had lived with Mr. Stark for two 22 years, located on S.W. 34-3-15 in 1885; they were our neighbours for many years. In 1886 Let Williamson with his wife and family of four arrived settling two miles north S.E. 9-4-15; 1889 brought Walter and Andrew Mabon, young bachelors, from Ormstown, Tommy Somerville and family of four small children, and Duncan Cumming. Mr. J. T. H. McEwan was already west of the Williamsons, at the south end of Pelican Lake, S.W. 8-4-15. A number of land-seekers homesteaded but abandoned their claims so that little is known of them. Mr. Cook - Cook's Hill the la~dmark, The Shellcrosses and George and Cephas Martin remained but a short time. The majority settled down, acquired preemptions to increase their acreage, and set about in earnest to establish permanent homes. All they had was youth, hope and determination. P.erhaps these are the greatest assets in life, for money was scarce, distance great, roads poor; but make the best of it they did. However there was considerable shifting about, first-comers leaving, new~omers moving in. In 1895 Charles Cumming. moved family and effects by sleigh to Gilbert Plains. It was dunng the spring thaw, the going difficult 'the front bobs on snow the back ones in water,' so it was said. Mr. Coutts, Huntly's second teacher, homesteaded and remained long enough to prove his claim, then left to take a course in law. Harry Williamson, disillusioned with the west, returned to his former home in the East, and Mr. McEwan by this time was in Winnipeg. Nor must I forget the McLennans. Rory McLennan, wife and family came in 1890 from Glengarry. He located S.E. 27-3-15 on the Pembina Valley. Because it is the early pattern I wish to record, I have included a map to complete the picture as well as a list of the first families brought up on the prairies. Social Life The Maxwell home was a community centre. No wonder! There were so many young people in the family; William, ~alcolm and David all played the violin and brought the neighbours together for many an evening's dancing. Then there were the marriageable young women to attract the lonely bachelors. It was not long until Myzie married Jack Robertson of Minto, and Mary married John Gordon (many years her senior) of the Craiga1ea Community, later Belmont. 23 The first wedding in the district was that of James Bremner and Euphemia Bruce, niece of Mrs. Thomas Bremner. Everyone was invited; the wedding gifts of the most practical kind - eggs, butter, chickens and whatnot. The night's entertainment was dancing interspersed by songs rendered by that indispensable guest, James Graham. One selection pointedly insinuated the disparity of the ages of bride and groom, "Auld Robin Gray Was A Guid Man Tae Me." Picnics and concerts brought the community together on many occasions. Huntly School During that year, through the determination of all concerned, the district was organized, named by Mrs. Easton and the school built, my father drawing the lumber from the mill at Rock Lake, a distance of eighteen miles over bad roads. It was duly painted and furnished with home-made desks. Comfortable enough they were too. The first pupils were Jean, Maggie and Charles Maxwell; Andrew, Annabel and Alice Easton; Mackie and May Cumming; Lizzie, Jim and Bob Williamson; and Douglas Cumming. A goodly start. The first teacher was Kate McPhail, an aunt of Hon. Ivan Schultz, one time Minister of Education in the Bracken government. She died many years ago, but was remembered by an ex-pupil (1965) for her gentle kindliness. It was not until 1887 that a school district was organized. In the meantime my father engaged Annie Thring, whose family lived north on the Belmont road, to instruct the three younger Maxwells and my eldest sister and brother, May and Mackie. She occupi~d the low, attic-like upstairs of our one-roomed log house, and eVIdently gave her pupils a good grounding in the elementary subjects. She, on one occasion, cautioned them on no account to touch frosted iron. Mackie took the first opportunity to go out and put his tongue on the head of the hammer. The release of the tongue left the skin on the iron and a small boy with a very sore mouth. Huntly School Pupils 1892. Reading from left to right: Back Row: L. Williamson, B. Lang, M. Maxwell, A. Easton,. W. Lang. Second. Row: May Cumming, Alice Easton, Annabel Easton. Third Ro~: L. Cumming, M. Cumming, D. Cumming, E. Coutts (teacher) '. C. Cumming, .B. Easton, F. Cumming. Fourth Row: C. Cumming, Robt. Williamson, G: MOlr, C .. Maxwell, M. Cumming, J. Williamson, Jack Williamson, W. Cumming, G. Williamson. N.B. Not all the pupils are here no Somervilles nor McLennons. The second teacher to take charge of this remote school was William Coutts (1888), a brother of Mrs. Farquharson, wife of the Rev. Farquharson of Pilot Mound. The Farquharsons, Mr. W. Coutts, D. Stewart, first medical superintendent of Ninette Sanatorium, and the Bradshaws all migrated from County Kent, Ontario, to Morden. Why these people came to such out-of-theway places, what motive prompted them must remain unrecorded. Huntly School, 1887 24 25 Mr. Coutts, a tall handsome young man, with poise and dignity, had no disciplinary pro'blems, although the winter enrollment increased by the attendance of numbers of older students, almost grown up. He lived in a shackon his homestead, walked two miles to school and devoted his ability and energy to stimulating the minds of his pupils and to the betterment of life in a pioneer community. What a teacher! I do not know of a better one. He instructed his pupils in the proverbial three R's and imparted to them by example, morals, principles and practices that go to make worthy standards in life. He could be severe but he was always just and impartial. Once he had a party at his shack for the whole school. Alice (Easton) Cumming remembered something about it. She remembered his serving out potatoes to the hungry diners, and at the end of the meal giving every single pupil a gift. And these were no mean trifles. I have in my possession a gift booklet, given to my sister, May, "The Old Oaken Bucket," beautifully illustrated. I remember the mechanical toy Mackie had - a blacksmith that hammered an anvil when Andrew Easton brought over the little steam engine that operated it. To Lizzie Williamson he gave a microscope that, according to her, "makes a fly look like an elephant." I remember the magic lantem that was given into the safe-keeping of May and Mackie, with the understanding that a show be put on when the other pupils came to visit. One slide, I remember, was a big bull frog among the rushes by a pond. Wonderful! That lantern and the slides lay safely for many years on top of our high red cupboard. Treats, too, were in order. My sister, Flora, arrived home from school with something in a closed fist; Mr. Coutts had brought them figs. When Eva and Jimmie McKay died of diphtheria and were buried in the deep woodlands, the pupils the following spring decked their graves with flowers. Lizzie Cumming, careless of a robin's nest, broke an egg. The mother robin's disconsolate call, Lizzie's loud wails and the teacher's stem rebuke taught us to respect our feathered friends. The ground work in manners and morals was laid down in no uncertain terms. Yes, there was considerable national strife. Mackie called the Irish "the dirty Irish"; Lizzie Williamson retorted with "the lousy Scotch"; Mr. Coutts heard the latter remark and promptly reprimanded the speaker for her unbecoming language. There was a good library at this time which must have come through the effort of the teacher. The little cupboard under the chimney was full from top to bottom. From Log Cabin to White- 26 house, Livingstone in Africa, Poetry for Children, and many more, the pupils became readers of books. Through Mr. Coutts's management a cheese factory was built S.W. 2-4-15. The farmers pledged delivery of milk each morning, and at the end of the season received so many cheeses as their share of the profits; good cheese it was. Mr. Brown of Baldur was the first cheese-maker. Later Tommy Somerville took over and finally Cephas Martin operated the factory until it closed. The school children riding as far as .the factory with the milk delivery were treated to curds, much to their enjoyment. Mr. Coutts, who went to Ann Arbor, Michigan, to study law, was succeeded by his brothers, Ed and Jim, who stayed but a short time. Teachers who followed the Couttses were the Langs who lived in the valley in the old Armstrong store. David Lang was a great favorite, as was Warren. Their kindly interest in school and community inspired their pupils to greater effort. I have still my first New Year's card given me by Warren Lang 1894, also one given my sister, May. David went into the Ministry, preaching many years in Saint John, N.B., and later in St. John's, Newfoundland. He spoke over radio March, 1949, on the Confederation programme when Newfoundland became the tenth province of Canada. Warren graduated in medicine and practised many years in Vancouver, B.C. The successor to the Langs was Mr. Platt, rather of the Squeers type, except that the older boys got a great deal of enjoyment out of his attempts to keep them under control. He would say to the juniors, "Draw a map, just draw it any way." Some were very good map drawers and were not satisfied with just being kept busy. He stayed but a short time and was succeeded by Mr. Buttress. Mr. Buttress, an Englishman, had many excellent qualifications that were, not at the time, appreciated. It takes age to evaluate correctly true values. He showed a preference for England that tended to rouse the antagonism of the Scotch and Irish descendants, especially during a history lesson. He applied freely the rod cut from the willow clump, and woe betide the laggard who failed to have his homework done. For misbehaviour one stood up on the seat, sometimes for long enough to be tired. "But behave." What fun at the intermissions and football and baseball. Often the balls rags, which did not detract from the overtime at recess - even almost to 27 noon hours, playing cricket, were stuffed with grass or fun. Sometimes we played closing time - when the teacher's side was a little behind in the score. Then on Fridays always "The Journey" - a trip into many lands, the pupils, the characters on the trip. One was treasurer and kept the finanfial statement, showing profits and losses. These lessons in geography taught more of the world than any other method could have done, and kept the attendance up. Believe it or not, no pupil on that day missed a good adventure story. ' Every Christmas came the Christmas Concert which gave each pupil one or more parts on the programme. The preparations were an occasion in the school year - practices, new dresses for the girls, suits for the boys, primping of hair, and constant excitement in the air. Then the tree, usually a poplar trimmed with batting and garlands of coloured paper, stood ready; and across the room, bright streamers in every direction gave colour to the scene of festivity. The evening actually arrived; the small school was crowded to capacity. People from far and near came. The programme included not only performances by pupils but that of adult talent wherever procurable. One remembers Fred Stevens, as good a comedian as one would find anywhere in the music halls, delighting the audience with "Where Did You Get That Hat?" "Oh, Liza, Dear Liza" and many more songs. His encores were many and always responded to. One remembers Jim Graham and the Scottish songs that warmed the hearts of his countrymen, and always the request for "Long Barney." The Waitt brothers, Bruce, Louis and Vic, brought down the house with their humorous dialogues. Fred Smith and Jack Ovingdon added to the evening's enjoyment with more sentimental selections. And Mrs. King McGill climaxed it with her splendid elocution. At these concerts a small admission was charged, and the proceeds bought prizes for the pupils. Everyone from the oldest to the youngest got a book - lovely books they were - which surely nurtured the art and enjoyment of reading. Mr. Buttress taught for five years when he was succeeded by Alex Moir, John Moir's brother, who at this time was farming the land lately occupied by the Langs and was anticipating a medical career. He, too, gave inspiration and direction to his pupils emphasizing the importance of perseverance in attaining one's goal in life. He achieved his ambition, graduated in medicine, practiced a short time in Manitoba before going East to establish a more permanent practice, where he served with distinction. side of the road just across from the original location. Pioneering , was over. The first school was suitably situated as to distances from homes and for the pleasure of children who loved outdoors. It was surrounded by stretchesQf qalqmd poplar groves. Beautiful willows fringed the nearby ponds, and fruit trees abounded - wild plum, hawthorn, nanny berry and saskatoon. I think of the profusion of blossoms in spring and the joy of berry-picking later on. A large clear pond on the west side provided opportunity for wading and poling a big, heavy raft from side to side in summer; and in winter it was the skating rink for those fortunate enough to have skates, a slide (hard on shoes) for those with no skates, and best of all a football field. Yes, we played football, cold or mild. If the ball's bladder burst, the jacket was stuffed with hay or straw; the game went on. For the more junior and discreet, a hand-made sled or a good wide board enabled them to use the slope of the pond as a first class toboggan slide. We surely had a variety of sport. I remember the rose bushes at the west windows covered with their fragrant, pink flowers nodding in on a rainy, summer day. We forgot our work, dreamed, and drank in the beauty of it all. Many of the pupils had a walk of three miles to school. We took advantage of this and had pleasure in gathering the beautiful wild flowers that grew everywhere - anemones, ladyslippers, lilies, columbine, honeY~llckle, and numerous others; in looking for . strawberries; and in watching for and hearing the bobolinks that swung on the same slender willow year after year; but whose nest we never found. In fall we took new roads home, this by way of change, and delighted, on misty fall mornings, in disturbing the funnel spider by touching the bottom of the slender tunnel to makeilie little spinner run up onto the web spread out all dewy on the grass. We endured the cold of winter and were thankful for the occasional ride on very severe days; thankful to reach the school on a frosty morning; thankful to reach home at night after a trudge through drifting snow, and to get warm by the big boxstoves stoked full of good, wood fuel. I remember Grace McLeod, Aunt mary's granddaughter, walking the mile, summer and winter, on her crutches, always the cheerful one in spite of the tubercular leg. Mr. Stark knit her a pair of mitts, one large, one small but surely warm. Time and space prohibit the record of individual achievement From this time on the district pursued the more modern trend of the times. In 1907 a new school was built on the north many contributed worthily in every walk of life and in many places 28 29 of these pioneer pupils; some are still living, some are gone. So across Canada. They were independent men and women, energetic, law~abiding, asking nothing but the reward of their own honest effort. We are so prone to contrast the past with the present, that we fail to assess the changes in material development that have created a new world which has had its impact on a new generation; and as we ponder, we know our new generation will measure up when the call comes. HALF-YEARLY REGISTER Of Attendance 1893 (SECOND HALF) of the Dedicated teachers! We have had them. SCHOOL DISTRICT OF HUNTLY Copied from the First Register of Huntly School. NUMBER 477 IN THE PROVINCE OF MANITOBA A. Pupils who attended at opening - 1887 Miss Kate McPhail, Teacher; Maggie Maxwell, 10; May Cumming, 8; Charles Maxwell, 7; Malcolm Cumming, 6; Andrew Easton, 10; Alice Easton, 6; Annie Easton, 8; Georgina Daniels, 12; James Daniels, 14; Lizzie Williamson, 7; James Williamson, 6; David Maxwell, 15; Jean Maxwell, 12. B. Pupils who attended 1888-1895 William Coutts - Teacher (until Dec. 1892) John McKay, Allie McKay, Lillie McKay, Robert Williamson, Douglas Cumming, James McKay, William Somerville, Mamie McLeod, John Williamson, Willie Cumming, May Somerville, 6; Etta Brown, 8; Minnie Cumming,S; Charlie Cumming, 16 (1891); Beatrice Easton, 6; Christina McLennan, 16; Norman Bell, 17; Willie Goosala (Gosselin), Harry Ricker, Peter Irvine, Walter Irvine, George Williamson, Lizzie Cumming, John Bell, Tommy Somerville, Jack Williamson, Lena Jeniveau, 14; William Cumming, 32; Henry Green, 22; Grace McLeod, 7; Jennet Cumming,S; Sarah Jennet McLennan, 7; Maggie A. Cumming,S; Allan Henderson, 15; Carrie Cumming, 6; Ellen Mathers, 19; Flora Cumming, 8; Mary McLennan, 11; James Mathers, 6, June (1888); David Lang, 14, June (1888); George Moir, 8, June (1888); Louis Schultz, 7; Ben Lang, Warren Lang, May Cumming, 14; Malcolm Cumming, 12. N.B. Some pupils non-resident - Langs, Moirs & others. The older pupils, winter attendants, Names misspelled. in July.................. 20 Days in August ............ 9 Days in September ........ Days in October .......... 22 Days in November .. .... 21 Days in December ........ 15 Days Total.................. 87 Days NOTE - In no case should part of a day be counted as a full day in the above. a. During the above term authorized teaching days (not counted above) were lost as follows: (1) Days spent by the teacher in attendance at Teachers' Convention - none. (2) Days lost through sickness of the teacher - none. I certify above statment to be correct. The Metis who attended for a short time: Willie Gosselin, Johnnie Bell, Lena Genevive, Eva Laval, Harry Ricker. (These pupils had about four miles to walk.) Wm. Easton Secretary-Treasurer When Glendenning School was built, John Cumming's farm was included in this district to make its organization possible. The Cumming children never attended here were non-residents in Huntly. 30 David Lang Teacher 31 Huntly Pioneers WILLIAM STARK William Stark, a well-educated and well-informed Scot, was an early comer to the country. Although not a resident of the Huntly District, he seemed to have an equal interest in every community around him. Each solicited his help in organizing municipalities and school districts; each depended upon him to arrange for church ~rvices and, indeed, to institute at the earliest time possible every worthwhile enterprise. In his homeland he began his career as a banker, but due to an acute short-sightedness he gave that up, migrating to Canada about 1878. Here he engaged with the c.P.R. in Montreal as a train dispatcher, so it is said. In 1882, like many more, he became interested in the prairie west and homesteaded on the N.E. quarter of section 6-4-14. Now he turned his attention to immigration, and was instrumental in bringing to the district, James Graham, William Easton and family, former friends; the Waitts and the Hamiltons, young bachelors who married and settled down to become worthy builders of Empire. Mr. Stark was the first secretary treasurer of Argyle Municipality. He was called upon to look after the registration of births and deaths, to make records - due to his fine penmanship in the family Bibles, and to do much of the business correspondence for the less-educated settler. He was a reader, having recourse to books supplied by the folks at home. He had a fund of good stories and a ready wit which made him a splendid chairman or a contributor to the programmes of school and church entertainments. One can remember at one particular concert a long discourse on "The Development of Weaving" which was not nearly as popular as Fred Stevens' music-hall songs or the Waittses' comic skits. However, the lecture interspersed with a number of well-told jokes proved both informative and entertaining. He was a welcome visitor in every home in the settlement, having a meal wherever he went. A bachelor, he enjoyed the cooking of the women folks, for in the culinary art he was not an expert. He brought the children delightful little booklets sent him by his sisters and an aunt. I can still remember some of the poems read to me before I was of school age: Tu Whit, Tu Whoo, Oh, What Shall I do? There's no fire at home to warm me through. My wife's gone out to her Aunt's to tea And taken away the cellar key. I can't get coal, I can't get wood, Not a drop to drink, not a bit of food. 32 33 How we reviled the poor old owl's cold-hearted wife. Now which will you be, Jane in the greenwood or Jack by the sea - ? conjured up pictures of happy children on holiday. Mr. Stark often visited the Maxwells. On one occasion he showed Aunt Mary the photo of the young woman whom he should have married, and shed tears, as he confided to her the story of the death of his sweetheart to whose memory he had remained loyal. The first Presbyterian Minister, Rev. Farquharson of Pilot Mound, succeeded by the Rev. Cairns, held -the first regular services at. Mr. Stark's house. Myzie Maxwell was called in to make the necessary preparations for these meetings, and according to her, there was considerable clearing away to be done. After twenty-five years of pioneering Mr. Stark at the request of his relatives returned to Scotland. He lived to a good old age, but even so it was with regret that his many Canadian friends learned of his death. Sometime after he returned to Scotland, a Minister, who had toured Canada to procure material for a series of lectures spoke in Mr. Stark's home town. The speaker made some detrimental remarks about the "Colony"; at the end Mr. Stark rose to correct any false impressions that might have been made by saying, "I lived a quarter of a century in Manitoba, and most of what has been said is in error of real facts." He was ready to testify to the future greatness of Canada. As Bruce Hutchison would say, "The Giant of Tomorrow." - J. Cumming an d Family 1895' Mary, Flora, John, " J Such settlers contributed greatly to the rapid development of our pioneer communities. The Son of Pioneers MY FATHER John Cumming was born in County Beauharnois, P.Q. (south of Montreal), 1842. His parents, Scottish Highlanders, had migrated to Canada, 1831, during the period of great depression in the British Isles. The land where they settled, forest-covered and SWqmpy, had to be cleared and drained before it could be cultivated. He was brought up in a typical pioneer community where opportunity for education was meagre and the amenities of life almost non-existent. Regardless of the many privations he, his brothers and sisters and many cousins had happy lives. 34 John Cummings 1888 35 t May Mackie Caroline. ane" , · At the age of eighteen he left home to find work. This took hIm to Montreal, where one could always engage with a shipping company on the St. Lawrence and the Great Lakes. So it was that he served his time to become a first class machinist and some years later, qualified for a certificate as a lake Captain. ' 1864 fou.nd him in Halifax shipping on an English blockade runner ~arrymg food and war materials to the southern States and takmg out cotton for the mills of Britain. The vessel on its way down the coast was sighted and chased by a United States' Man-Of-War. It was a close call; but the blockade runner was able to make Havana just ahead of the pursuing vessel. The one cheered the other as they sailed side by side into the neutral harbour. Jointly owned by himself and a banker. It had been docked some distance up river where the fire swept down, threatening all the boats. They attempted to move a number of vessels out, but the bridge closed to enable the fleeing crowds to cross to safety. Policemen stood guard, so it took considerable entreaty and threatening to persuade the officers of the law to open the bridge for a short time to let the boats through. Finally this was done without hazarding the lives of the fleeing refugees. So the vessels were saved. A storm on Lake Michigan drifted a small boat in which a little boy was playing out into the open water. The frantic parents begged that someone go to the rescue of their small son. No one was willing to risk his life by venturing out in a gale such as that. At last the appeal was made to Mr. Cumming. He consented to run a tug boat out, despite the danger. This he did, and reaching over as he came alongside the small craft, he lifted the child safely aboard. The wee fellow looked up, quite oblivious of the danger, and said, "Frankie had a good ridy." The gratitude of the parents remained always a pleasant memory. His boat was lost in a storm, the joint-owner got and kept the insurance leaving his partner pretty well insolvent. J. Cummings, 1883. The place wher l b . classroom, Annie Thring the teacher. e was orn. . The upstaIrs the first Then to steal out from Havana and make New Orleans was another thrill for the adventurer. There he left the BrI·t· h h· d I· d· h IS S Ip an en Iste m t e northern army just about the time the Civil War ended. H~ then joined the United States navy, serving four years. on the DIctator. He always commended the American system of faIr wages and promotion for the working man. .On. his return to Canada he engaged with the Northern Na~IgatlOn Company working out from Chicago, where he was durmg the great fire. He related many times his experience on that devastating day. The boat, of which he was captain, was 36 Just at this time, 1878, four nephews, sons of a brother who had been killed in an accident, required direction and assistance in settling down to make a living. Again, the opening up of the west seemed the solution. The lure of cheap land on the prairies enticed many an easterner to pull up stakes, and on April first 1879 John Cumming was on the Marringhurst plains, purple with anemones, searching out a homestead. He filed on Sec. 18, TA, R.12, arranged with James Wilson to build his shack while he returned to Chicago for the summer's work with The Northern Navigation Company. Returning west in the fall, he spent the winter in the small log cabin. I t was a unique experience, cooking meals, baking bread and fishing through a hole in the ice in nearby Rock Lake. Such fish! One huge pike measured twenty-nine inches in girth and was correspondingly great in length. A walk of nine miles to Pilot Mound for the mail was an after supper diversion. On a frosty, moonlight night, as he made his way over the snowy plain, he saw a wildcat sitting on the road. He hesitated a moment, in case the animal attack; but decided to take a chance so strode casually along and passed the fiercelooking night prowler. It just sat, indifferent to the intruder on its privacy, and then moved slowly away. 37 Neighbours were few; McKnights, the nearest, became lifelong friends. Three young Englishmen, William and Frank Price, and Mr. Esplin spent the winter here. The former remained in Manitoba, later settling north of Huntly, and still later moved to Baldur. Frank, having had enough of it, went to Vancouver Island to end his days. Mr. Esplin, too, though deciding to remain fi?ally settled in Glenboro. James Walsh, owner of a saw mill, hiS two sons and his daughter, Maggie, lived within easy visiting distance. In the spring of 1880, once more the walk to Emerson to take the train and back to the boating in Chicago. In the fall of 1880 the Maxwells came bringing his wife and the small daughter, May. When navigation closed he returned west for good. The spring of 1881 was one of high water. Never had the Assiniboine flooded its banks so extensively. Father was engaged to take a boat, the Marquette, up to Fort Pelly to bring the Governor-General, the Marquis of Lorne, and his wife, Princess Louise, down to Brandon. He and Albert Cramer set out to meet the boat at Portage la Prairie. They walked across country, wading through water a great part of the way, slept in an Indian tepee one night and reached their destination on schedule. The journey up the Assiniboine in the Hudson's Bay stern wheeler, sometimes in midstream, sometimes taking a short cut from bend to bend, required considerable skill in navigation. There were numbers of passengers aboard bound for various places between Winnipeg and Brandon. A young minister and his wife were landed on what appeared to be an island. There was no one at the boat to meet them. Father often wondered how they fared. Often the boat had to pull in to take on wood for fuel. Sometimes an Indian wandering along the bank would be startled into a panic at the sound of the shrill whistle, much to the amusement of crew and passengers. At Fort Pelly the Governor-General had just completed negotiations and the signing of the second Indian Treaty. In farewell, every member of the assembled tribes must shake hands with the departing dignitary, until The Marquis, unable to raise a hand, let it lie limp on the table. Each Indian came along, picked up the weakened member, shook it vigorously, put it down and passed along. carry him and Willie Maxwell across country to Rock Lake. Over the prairies with a compass was to father a voyage on the Great Lakes. In 1883 father moved to Huntly (still unnamed) where the Maxwells had settled, procuring the quarter across the road N.E. 1-14-15. During the winter David Maxwell became seriously ill and died, the first death among the pioneers. His grave, unmarked, has disappeared. In February, 1884, father went East to Ormstown for a carload of cattle. After a winter of deep snow, he arrived back in Emerson in March at the time of a spring thaw. The bringing of those animals by way of Pembina Crossing, south of Manitou, and on home was no mean task. He did it without a single loss. On the way he came to a homestead near the crossing whose owner had a stable snow-covered that had first to be dug out to the doorway to let the cattle in, and a stack of hay. Here they stayed until the herd was well rested and well fed before cOl1tinuing the journey home. It was a well-selected load of stock. I can still remember Bell, Aggie and Mag, fine cows, that were the progenitors of good ·herds in the surrounding districts. In 1887 Charles McKay, another immigrant from Ormstown, bought his farm, and on New Year's Day 1888, he moved to Mr. Henry's (a Metis) on the bank of Lome Lake. I do not know if Father had anything to do with the naming of the lakes we could see from our door, or if it were coincidence that they were so named Lorne and Louise. In 1894 Moropano Post Office was moved from Johnson's near the Rosehill district to our home. Here it stayed until 1905 when a petition was circulated requesting that it be moved to Neelin, on the newly built C.N.R. which ran from Greenway to Wakopa (1904). Here Father lived until his death November 18, 1931, at the age of eighty-nine years, ten months. The trip back to Brandon was without incident. The Royal Couple graciously thanked father for the safe journey, shaking hands in farewell as they left the boat. Here he bought a blacksmith shop which he sold later, and a Red River cart and pony to It was a long life full of interesting experiences and hardships. Once a Conservative in politics, on the issue of Free Trade he became an ardent Liberal, upholding the Laurier government on the above, and on the conscription policy during the First World War. The farm was taken over in 1923 by John Jr. who occupied it until 1965 when he retired to Belmont. 38 39 MY MOTHER I am sure Mother had the most beautiful brown eyes in all of Canada, besides possessing so many skills and womanly assets that I liken her to the perfect woman described in Proverbs. She was a small, dark-eyed fair-complexioned French Canadian with all the artistry of that race. She had a pair of skillful hands, an active mind, and a moral code that kept her family pretty well on the straight and narrow path. There was no eluding her. If there was mischief brewing she sensed it at once. Our door was open to everybody. There was always a bed and a meal for the wayfarer. We often wonder how she managed; but as I look back, there did not seem to be any effort in the doing. The Half Breeds came often in the early days to talk to her in their mixture of French and Cree. She seemed always to interpret correctly and to clear their difficulties. Many a time she would be called away to minister to the sick of the neighbourhood and to comfort those who sustained loss. For a number of years she was incapacitated by an injury due to a fall, and by arthritis, for which there was in that day no remedy. She died October 29, 1925, at the age of sixty-nine years and six months. William Easton and family, 1895. Mrs. Easton, Bernice. Mr. Easton, Annabel, Alice, Andrew, THE EASTONS This family from Selkirk, Scotland, who knew James Graham and William Stark in the old land were our nearest neighbours. They were prepared to migrate to South Africa when their second daughter, Alice became ill and postponed their departure. In the meantime plans were changed, and 1882 found them on the prairies instead of on the veldt. For a time they lived with Mr. Stark, moving in 1885 to SW quarter Sec. 34-T3, R.15. Mr. Easton, a promoter of church, school and everything that made for a better community, Mrs. Easton, capable in many ways, a good counsellor for the younger women, a sympathetic helper in time of need (and the calls were many) devoted talent and energy to off-set the harsh existence in pioneering and so made for themselves a name to be remembered in Huntly. Mr. Easton was secretary treasurer of Huntly School for twenty-five years. When he went west in 1911 to pioneer a second time on a homestead and to be near his daughters, the district presented him with a purse of fifty dollars - small recompense for so many years of service. It did carry with it the humble gratitude of the contributors. That is certain! Easton's House, 1885 40 41 Mrs. Easton, always delicate, died November, 1895, at the age of fifty-one. From her little book of poems was taken the following, written in memory of a friend and used on her own "In Memoriam": The day of toil is o'er! The rest is won! The morn of life is past, the noon-tide heat. The western shades have stolen across the glen Till eve's soft hand has spread its twilight folds Round thy still form! Thy wearied heart now rests, And tranquil slumber curtains thy repose. Mr. Easton died in Brandon hospital in October, 1913. He had returned to Manitoba after proving up his Saskatchewan homestead. His son, Andrew, continued to live on the old farm for a few years. He later moved to Neelin, where he operated the grain elevator until his death February 28, 1948. He had never been farther from home than Winnipeg, preferring to extend his hospitality, so bountifully, to friend and stranger alike in his own hometown. CHARLES McKAY Of all the personalities among the pioneers in Huntly District none was more colourful than Charles McKay. His ancestry is worth noting. His grandmother was a stowaway on the ship sailing for York Factory on which was Sir George Simpson, newly appointed Governor of the Hudson's Bay Company. She left her well-to-do home to escape the discipline of her strict Scottish parents. On the voyage she fell in love with and married Sir George's valet. In due time they reached the Selkirk Settlement and took up land; but owing to the rigours and hardships of life at Red River they, with others, left for Canada locating south of Montreal a~ Ormstown. There Charlie was born and raised. his farm, moved to S.W. quarter 2-4-15, where his wife died at the birth of a sixth child - all very sad. Relatives in the East came to the rescue, taking the older daughter, Lily, and the baby Barbara to care for. Unable to cope with the difficulties of batching and caring for two sons, he married Charlotte Gosselin and proceeded to make a living the hard way. He moved from one farm to another and was the terror of the countryside with his everlasting clearing of bush and setting of fires. He used to say when the creditors became insistent, "Gosh me, you can't get blood out of a stone." Finally he settled on the banks of the Badger, where the big, tough elms afforded him plenty to clear and burn. Every once in a while, in spring, the river would go on the rampage and flood him out; sometimes his buildings floated away. What did he do? Petition the government for aid? No! He started from scratch with the spirit of that ancestress, the stowaway. Looked after by his daughter Bella he lived to a good old age and passed along to his reward. Huntly Pioneers Not for long did he remain in one place. Misfortune seemed h!s lot ..The two youngest children, Jimmie and Eva, died of dIphtherIa; he was unable to meet his financial obligations. lost Aunt Mary Maxwell was a unique personality. She was tall and spare with fine features. No one, to my knowledge, ever criticized her and, at an early age, her nieces and nephews got a feeling that she was without reproach. They treated her accordingly with affectionate esteem and reserve. Her natural dignity commanded respect, and her quiet unobtrusiveness was offset by a pointed sarcasm (seldom used) which dispelled any notion of passivity. She had come with her husband and nine of her ten children to establish a new home. Uncle David died in 1883 leaving her to face the strain of pioneering single-handed. So far as I can remember she never did a tap of work. Why should she! There were always the devoted, grown-up daughters to relieve her of the commonplace tasks. She never went out nursing as did the other women; she must always be at home and in her own bed by nine, at the latest, and have a cup of tea before she got up in the morning. Only once in all those years did she sleep at our house. She had come to welcome Brother Donald from the East. A storm came up; he was storm-stayed and so was she. She had the most sympathetic attitude to all who needed a friend. Her door was open to every passer-by, welcoming to her table with equal hospitality young and old, saint and sinner. When her widowed daughter came from the East with her three children, the mother took her in, where she remained until she married again; 42 43 He married Elizabeth McCaig, a distant relative of the Cummings, and moved to Lancaster, Ontario, where he engaged in storekeeping, a sideline to his farming efforts. In 1887 the lure of the west proved too strong; so to Manitoba he came with his wife five children and a carload of farm equipment. It is said that a~ the train travelled along near Pilot Mound one of the horses fell out of the car, but fortunately was not injured. He bought John Cumming's farm opposite the Maxwells. but Grandmother kept the little lame Grace until she was almost grown-up. Once she went on the annual railway excursion to visit her birthplace. This decision was made because Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mabon were going and would see that she got off safely at Lancaster, where brother Donald would meet her. This trip satisfied a desire, long-cherished, but convinced her that Manitoba was home. She brought back a beautiful vase, a family heirloom given her by her Aunt Elizabeth Cumming. She was fond of visiting, walking here and there to call upon neighbours and relatives, comforting and cheering them; her very presence dispelled worry and gloom. Almost every Saturday in summer she walked the four miles to the post office kept by brother John. As soon as dinner was over and the mail sorted she bundled the neighbours' and her own letters and papers into her big apron and set off for home. tive labour on their respective farms. Sport was just not in their line. They attended diligently to their work, never failing to give a helping hand to others in time of need. They were independent, honest in business, generous in judgment and consistent in evaluation. The members of the family married and settled not too far away; but in 1905, much to her sorrow, Malcolm and David moved to Viking, Alberta. One remembers her staunch Highland clannishness. When she sang, on occasion, a snatch of Gaelic song, the listener found himself wanting to weep the pathos was so nostalgic - the Highlands, the sea, hills of home, the emigrant. Her moral and Christian upbringing were deeply rooted. She lived her life, accepting her lot ~ith patient fortitude, never complaining. Once I heard her say Yet IS man born unto trouble, as the sparks fly upwards." Being young I wondered what the meaning, but it has made me think of her many times since. . She homesteaded the quarter just west of her first home, where Duncan Cumming built her a small log house and which she occupied until her death December 18, 1917. The house stood intact until 1967 when it was taken down. Malcolm Cummings Shack The Cumming brothers were big men physically, who were less interested in social activities and sport than in the remunera- Jock was the best-read man in the district, capable of assessing the trends of the day. They were staunch Liberals. On being questioned on his political affiliations during World War I, Malcolm declared he could not vote for a prime minister who parted his hair in the middle. Will liked to visit. After disposing of his farm in Huntly, he went to Belmont, where he was employed for several years by one of the grain companies. His three daughters became teachers, his wife died, his only tie a farm at Altamont which was rented. Now he was able to run about at will, calling on friends and relatives as suited his time and disposition. He was excellent company and welcome in every home. To be a good visitor is an enviable quality to possess. 44 45 Our Agriculturists Certainly some of those who came to farm made a poor attempt at it. Not so with Jock, Will and Malcolm Cumming, Aunt Meran's sons, Walter Mabon and William Maxwell. Their prosperity was attributed by their less industrious neighbours to their closesaving propensities. Not so. Will Cumming once said that if he had a son he would not send him to Agricultural College, he would hire him out to Walter Mabon for a year. Here were young men who had to make, unassisted, their way in life, and they did. Walter Mabon was more community minded. He was a number of times a member of the school board, a councillor and a reeve of the municipality. He, after his retirement to Belmont, settled his sons (four of them) on land near together, Edgar on the home place. These sons, like their father, are good farmers and continue in the district with their families now grown to manhood and womanhood. So the generations come and go in order of time and circumstance. . f';1r. Mab?n. and Mr. McLennan owned the first threshing mIll m the dlstnct, a horse power. This machine was much in demand before the advent of the steam thresher. WILLIAM MAXWELL vegetable and flower gardens attended with care revealed the character of the owners - their love for tidiness and order. Mrs. McLennan, the perfect housekeeper, had everything under control. The house plants in the windows, so lush, denoted a green thumb; the clean yellow-painted floors enhanced the sunshine streaming in through the shiny windows to make every room ' bright and cheery. A visitor was always made welcome. Drop in any time of the day, he or she was received as warmly as if expected - no telephones to announce one's coming - and was never made to feel that the time .~as inconvenient for entertaining. Pressed to stay for a meal, the VIsItor was treated to the best with as much consideration as if a prince had arrived. The conversation always turned to the happenings that made for fun and laughter. One came away refreshed. William Maxwell, the eldest of Aunt Mary's family, a young man in his early twenties when he came to Manitoba was her mainstay after the death of his father. He was diligent' and persevering, prospering accordingly. That he was well-to-do made no difference to his way of life; honest, generous he continued to be. Not only di~ he assist the members of his immediate family, but became a kmd of local bank where the less progressive of the district could borrow when in need of ready cash. For those who failed to redeem their notes he must often have been the loser . . His sisters, Jean and Maggie, helped out in busy seasons with his housekeeping until he married Bella Gruer, Mrs. Mabon's sister. He had four sons to inherit his estate when he died in June, 1918. His short life was one of achievement in building up a fine fa.rm home, no:" occupied by his youngest son, Mack. In taking hIS Jul~ sh~re m the growt? of a pioneer district from its very begmnmg mto a well-orgamzed one, he testified to what can be accomplished by persistent effort, whatever the obstacles. THE McLENNAN FAMILY One recalls with pleasure the McLennans, Mr. and Mrs. R. McLennan and their four daughters, a typical Eastern Canadian family, industrious, thrifty, enterprising and hospitable. They were descendants from Loyalists who had migrated to Upper Canada 1780 or thereabouts, and had settled in Glengarry County, Ontario, made famous by Ralph Connor. Mlna, Mrs. McLennan, Lena, Roderick McLennan, Mary Jane, Sarah. ~he tall frame house stood on a sunny knoll facing south; the bIg, red barn at the back sheltered the fine shorthorn herd of cattle, known to every stock farmer in the province. The neat After Mother had spent an afternoon with the McLennans her daughters could always expect a blast of adverse criticism. "Comparisons are odious." But there it was! The McLennan girls so clever with their hands had shown yards of knitted lace, mitts with pretty designs on the backs, hooked mats and whatnot! What had her daughters done? Spent all their spare time reading, reading, forever reading. It was humiliating to say the least. But whatever the inward resolve to rise to heights of usefulness we never achieved the art of perfect craftsmanship. 46 47 They were good church people supporting the pioneer ministers to the utmost. One saw them on a summer Sunday driving to Huntly School, a big work horse hitched to the small buckboard. They had their sorrows as others. Their eldest daughter, Mrs. Andrew Easton, died at the birth of her baby in March 1901; the baby, cared for by his grandmother, died in August of the same year. The other three daughters married, Mary Jane and Sarah living in Holmfield, Jemima on a farm in that district. They must have been a comfort to the aging parents after their retirement from the strenuous life of pioneer farming. THE SOMERVILLE FAMILY This was a large family, seven boys and four girls. Tommy, father's nephew, came with his wife and four children in the spring of 1889. Their first home, a very modest one with an earthen floor, was soon enlarged to accommodate the growing number of occupants. Mr. Somerville, interested in local politics, was for sometime a member of the Municipal Council, and a very capable one; Mrs. Somerville centred all her efforts in the home to provide the needs of her household. This she did with diligent perseverance. It seemed not long until some of the family were old enough to leave home in order to earn their own living; William and Thomas went west, George, after graduating from high school, enlisted, went overseas 1914-18 and was killed at Passchendaele. John and Robert remained on farms in Huntly district until retirement to Neelin. The other members of the family settled in nearby communities. The old farm has passed to strangers. THE WILLIAM SONS Three brothers, Jim, Harry and Let, from near Ottawa were early comers to the district, but it is to the latter I must direct attention, as he was a resident for many years, bringing up a family of nine and contributing to the development of the community in no small measure. Mr. Williamson was of Irish descent, had engaged in the logging business in Ontario, and now turned to farming on the prairie, 1886. A gruff outspokenness, not often relished by his neighbours, belied a kindly heart under a somewhat rough exterior. One can fail to interpret downright honesty of expression. A year or so after the death of his wife he married his sister-in-law who took up the management of his household with skill and energy. 48 Wherever there was need for help the Williamsons were there. Mr. Williamson saw to it that Mr. Daniels, old a.nd alone, was cared for. He built a commodious brick house to smt the members of his family and to extend an abounding hospitality to all who came. As the family grew up, all but Bob and Ho~ard left the district to find employment elsewhere, each one playmg a worthy part wherever he settled, doing honour to parents who gave them good direction. WILLIAM DANIELS Billy Daniels was in a class all by hims~lf among the e~~ly settlers. He was a short, stocky Irishman WIth all the quah~les attributed to the Irish. He surely never let a tart tongue-Iashmg disturb his equanimity or rouse his ire. His philosophy was to maintain the peace under any circumstances; well, except .when the neighbours' children took a short cut to school across hIS one field. I am sure he was often imposed upon, and he kept a savage dog as a means of protection against intruders. He was no farmer. They were very, very poor, living in the most tumbledown, low dwelling - a mere roof over a shallow cellar. He was a veritable Rip Van Winkle, lo:red to wand~r al~)ll,g the banks of the valley with his dog, gun m hand. HIS wife s constant scolding did not improve his way of life; and she had provocation enough, dear knows, for venting her bad temper on. a husband so improvident. Later they had a much better home bUIlt in a grove of poplars near their first dwelling. Their family, Bessie and Margaret, twins, Geor~in~ and JimI?ie were well in their teens when they came to the dISt~lct. Ge~rgma had a beautiful voice and sang, on request, to enter tam us chIldren when she came to visit. The twins had keen senses of humour and could mimic the neighbours to perfection - all in good spirit. Mrs. Daniels died in August, 1893, after a life of struggle. and hardship. She testified on her death bed to her faith in a pro.vIdent and loving God; and so passed in peace to her reward m ~he great beyond. Mrs. Easton and Mother ca:ried out her last WIsh to be wrapped in a white shroud for bunal, as was the custom in her native land. Mr. Daniels died a few years later, after a short illness, in Killarney cottage hospital. Pioneer Homesteads 1880-1895 Location: NE 14-4-15 NE 14-4-15 Occupant: J ames Bremner Robert Bremner 49 Location: SW 12-4-15 NE 12-4-15 SW 7-4-14 NW 7-4-14 moved SW 7-4-14 SW 8-4-15 SE 27-3-15 NE 1-4-15 moved SW 2-4-15 NE 26-3-15 NE 6-4-14 SE 9-4-15 SW 10-4-15 NW 10-4-15 NE 33-3-15 NW 2-4-15 SW 2-4-15 Occupant: W al ter Mabon J. T. McEwan Roderick McLennan Charles McKay Thomas Somerville William Stark Let Williamson Harry Williamson James Williamson Robert Anderson Huntly School Cheese Factory (a) Pelican Lake (b) Outlet (c) Pembina River (d) Lome Lake (e) Glendenning Road ~L Changes The pattern of a district does not remain the same for long. Soon a number of the first homesteaders left and newcomers arrived to take up the vacated land. Occupant: Thomas Bremner Thomas Cook William Coutts John Cumming S. Charles Cumming John Cumming Jr. William Cumming Malcolm Cumming Donald Cumming & Mother Duncan Cumming William Daniels William Easton David Maxwell Sr. Mrs. Mary Maxwell William Maxwell Andrew Mabon Location: SW 14-4-15 SW 3-4-15 NW 35-3-15 NE 1-4-15 moved NE 28-3-15 NE 2-4-15 NE 24-4-15 NW 2-4-15 moved SW 13-4-15 SE 34-3-15 SE 14-4-15 NE 13-4-15 NW 34-3-15 moved NE 4-4-15 SW 34-3-15 SE 12-4-15 50 From 1890 to 1900, among the families that moved in to establish homes and play an important part in community development were George McGill, his grown-up sons and daughters, and included in his household were Miss Huffman, his sister-in-law, and Artie Huffman, a nephew. He bought and resided on the quarter formerly homesteaded by Charles Cumming, later acquiring more land to enlarge the farm. In all progressive enterprises the McGills were energetic promoters. Will Cumming married Margaret Bryson of Ormstown about 1890. In 1897 her brother John arrived with his bride, Nettie Lockerby; and the following year the Lockerby and Bryson families came. Mr. John Lockerby, locating NE 36-3-15, became the local blacksmith, Mr. Bryson taking over Will Cumming's homestead, NW 2-4-15, the former having moved to SW 13-4-15. These families brought young people with talent and experience who did much to stimulate social life, so much needed. Concerts - good ones, debates, house parties, picnics all in their season tended to bring the people together welding friendships and promoting co-operation that helped tide over the isolation of pioneer life. 51 Del Smith requires special mention as he continued to live in the. d.istrict for many years. He came as a young man, worked !or WIllIam Maxwell and other farmers for a time, eventually buyIng NE 3-4-15. Here he and Mrs. Smith raised their large family. N? one was m.ore energetic than Del Smith in promoting everythIng w?rthwhrle - sc~ool, church, social activity - and in every way actIng the good neIghbour to all who needed a helping hand. He eventually retired to Belmont. None of his family remain in Huntly to carryon the tradition of good works as set by their parents. There were many transients, those who came to live here or there, ei1her renting or occupying a vacant house for the time being. They contrilJUted little to growth or improvement so require no mention in this account that is concerned with those who became perman en t]y established. Mr. Roller, an American, came, as many of his countrymen did as this time, bought the Daniel homestead from the then owner, John McCuaig, Sr. Here he farmed for many years. After his death Walter took over the operation of the land. In September, 1963, Mrs. Smith at the age of ninety-one years was entertained in Belmont at a dinner at which all the family were present, a number of relatives and six friends to make a table of forty guests. She died 1968. George Weedmark and family came to S 1-4-15. Better people one could never have as neighbours. After Mrs. Weedmark's death, Mr. Weedmark married again and went to Edmonton; but eventually he returned, living sometimes in an institution. Over ninety years of age he was still active; he died in 1966. Besides these, other young men came as farm labourers and one might say, to spy out the land, married, settled down t~ rais~ families and to contribute a worthy share to the work of the community. Among them were Henry Green William Aikens and William Fairservice who bought James Wniiamson's farm. ' About this time, also, came a number of families whose stay was short. Of these were Mr. J. James, an excellent stonemason and plasterer, his son-in-law, Allen Kavanaugh and George and Cephas Martin. The latter, a good cheese-mak~r, ran the factory for two or three seasons, often taking prizes for his product in the local fairs. Further Changes - 1900-1910 No sooner does it seem that when we think from now on life will contin.ue. indefi?itely, unchanged, something happens to dIspel so unrealIstIc a notIon. In 1905 the provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta had just been organized. Many of the pioneer families had grown to manhood and womanhood, and now must establish themselves in the scheme of things. So it was when cheap land and homesteads were opened up . In the two new provinces there was migration from Huntly. Among those who went, some to Alberta, some to Saskatchewan were David Maxwell, Mackie Cumming, William Somerville,' Mack Cumming, the Bremners, the Robert Andersons, the J ameses, Ka~anaugh~ and ev~n Mr. Easton. Jim and Jack Williamson, having ~o In~erest In farmIng, left to find work in less strenuous occupatIOn, Insurance and accountancy. At their going the loss seemed irreparable, but into the district came others to take the place of the newly departed. 52 Donald McKenzie and William Cumming, Mrs. McKenzie's brother, came in the spring of 1907. The former bought SYz 4-15, later sold out to George Thomson Jr. and moved to S 10-4-15 where he developed a typical Eastern farm-home. Of their large family, four daughters and six sons, Donald and Jimmie have remained in Huntly. William Cumming bought S 11-4-15. He was interested in every phase of community life. His presence at social functions was a "must." He was an ardent sports fan and a staunch Liberal in politics, a sometime delegate to the Liberal conventions in Ottawa. He married Jean Maxwell, built a fine brick house and was a well-established resident for many years. Three sisters came in turn from the East to teach Huntly School, and incidentally to keep house for their bachelor brother. Margaret married Percy Neelin, Bessie married Howard Williamson and May returned East; but at the death of William's wife she returned to Manitoba to maintain his home until his death in March, 1960. The Beaulacs, George and William, bought the McLennan farm. Neelin being a more convenient centre for them, they took little interest in Huntly's affairs. The Pioneer Church Not to record the concern of the church for the spiritual welfare of the pioneer communities would be remiss. On looking back one can have only admiration for those who made provision for services, and for tlIose who so devotedly went from settlement to 53 settlement under most adverse conditions to minister to the people, much as the Apostles of old. At first church services were held in the homes. It is certain that Mr. Stark was one who saw to it that these be held, and opened his house as the meeting place. Saturday was the day of preparation and there was much ado in cleaning up, polishing the stove, providing seats and whatnot. Sometimes he enlisted the help of capable Myzie Maxwell when all would be in order as desired. Mr. Farquharson of Pilot Mound, Mr. Coutts's brother-in-law, was the first minister. How often he came one does not know. It was a forty-five-mile drive, but come he did for church, funeral, baptism and marriage services. He it was that performed the marriage service for Mr. and Mrs. James Bremner - the first wedding in Huntly. It was he who preached the funeral service for the two small Montague children who died of diphtheria, and baptized all the first-born in the district, myself included. Many years later the Reverend Farquharson preached in Huntly School - an old man who had devoted his life to the spiritual welfare of the people. After Mr. Farquharson, Mr. Cairns took up the work. He was as devoted to the need of spiritual sustenance as his predecessor. I remember his baptizing two children in our home, my sister Janet and Bill Gordon. latter stood to sing; a solo. This was special: a fine song "The Better Land" by Mrs. Hemans, a fine voice to make it impressive. Never ha.ve I Ileard better, even in large churches with welltrained choirs_ Besides the regular Presbyterian services, evangelistic groups were interested in spreading the gospel. The Pentecostals held meetings every summer; Mr. Vipond and Mr. Keyes from Killarney preached spirited sermons, not without results. So the spiritual values of life were stressed, thanks to the earnest devotion of those who would remind one of the shortness of life. Epilogue A small organ was purchased for the school, which served for the church as well, with Kitty Lockerby as organist. When she married and went to live in Trinidad, Mrs. Colin McGill took over this part of the service. Friday, June 28, 1968, residents of Huntly School observed the integration of the school district into the larger unit and the closing of the school by a reunion of former residents, ex-teachers, ex-pupils, and of residents and non-residents from neighbouring communities. They deserved to be congratulated on the results of their effort, in having a response so gratifying. Approximately three hundred, coming from every part of the country from coast to coast, signed the visitor's book. The crowd gathered on the school grounds was warmly welcomed by Donald McKenzie. This was followed by a period of intermingling which enabled one to contact old friends or relatives, many of whom one had not seen for years. Present were descendants of every pioneer family, except the Eastons and the Bremners. The visiting period was followed by the serving of a sumptuous picnic supper; and to conclude, the company was entertained by a short musical programme. Among the items were choruses by the pupils, old time music by Mr. and Mrs. John Cumming, and the solo How Great Thou Art rendered beautifully by Mrs. Ted Smith. Those present parted with mingled feelings - of sadness for what is past, and of hopefulness for what may be ahead to make life more meaningful for the rising generations. Compiled March 1963. In summer there was a Sunday School with a good attendance, the Lang brothers among the first teachers. Pioneer Families About 1890 there were resident ministers at Belmont and for years Huntly was one of their appointments with services held in the school house. In winter church was poorly attended, hence often discontinued due to long distances and bad roads; in summer attendance was good, providing opportunity to meet one's friends and neighbours as well as hear a sermon. Always there was the lingering round outdoors in groups, discussing weather and crop prospects. I remember one summer Sunday brightly green and glistening in freshness as only a Sunday can be. The congregation, wellgroomed and dressed in its best, had gathered, Kitty, immaculate, at the organ, Maude by the window. At the right moment the 54 1880-1890 A. 1. David & Mary Maxwell & Family: 1880 William - Farmed May - Married Jack Robertson, Minto 55 Alexander - Teacher. Entered oil business near Edmonton, Alta. N.B. this family moved to Gilbert Plains, 1894, where four more children were born. Malcolm - Moved to Viking, Alta., 1905 Mary - Married John Gordon, Belmont Flora - Married James Hall, Alma District Betsy - Married James Williamson David - Moved to Viking, Alta., 1905 Jean - Married W. G. Cumming Margaret - Married Andrew Easton Charles - Farmed - moved to Belmont 6. Thomas & Mrs. Bremner: Mrs. Bremner died in 1894, Mr. Bremner moved to Unity, Sask., 1905 (All deceased) 2. Let & Elizabeth Williamson & Family: 1886 Elizabeth - Milliner - married Wm. Martin James L. - Worked for Wawanesa Life, Retired to Victoria Robert - Farmed in Huntly - retired to Calgary John - Bookkeeper for Lumber Co., Winnipeg George - Farmed in Huntly - retired to Victoria Margaret - Nurse - lives in Calgary May - Married G. Armitage Howard - Farms in Huntly Reuben - Farmed in Huntly, now works on Lake Manitoba boats 3. William & Annie Easton & Family: 1882 Andrew - Farmed, later operated Neelin Elevator Annabel - Married Alex McCaig, moved to Nokomis, Sask. Alice - Married Mack Cumming, moved to Sask., lived in S1. Vital, moved to Calgary, 1963 Beatrice - Married David Bryson, moved to Young, Sask. 4. John & Lena Cumming: May - Deceased 1897 Malcolm - Moved to Viking, Alta., 1905 Flora - Married John McCuaig, moved to Lydden, Sask. Caroline - Teacher, retired to St. Vital, 1957 Janet - Teacher, married W. J. Wood, Winnipeg Beach, killed in an accident, 1928 Mary - Married Alex Lockerby, retired to Winnipeg, 1945 John - Farmed the home place, in Huntly Isabel - Nurse - married W. J. Wood, lives in Winnipeg 5. Charles & Mary Cumming: Douglas - Dressmaker, married Rev. E. Johnston, lived in Winnipeg. William - C.N.R. engineer, lived at Souix Lookout Eliza beth - Deceased Margaret - Nurse. Did honourable service in World War I Retired in Winnipeg, awarded Royal Red Cross. Euphemia - Deceased 56 7. Thomas & Sarah Somerville: William - Moved to Viking, Alta., 1906 May - Married Tom Freeman, Killarney Thomas - Moved to Hanna, Alta., farmed Margaret - Nurse, married Lindsay Smith, Ninette Betsy - Dressmaker, retired to Winnipeg John - Farmed the home place, retired to Neelin Robert - Farmed, lives in Neelin George - Killed at Passchendaele World War I Eddie - Farmed at Cartwright & Killarney Flora - Teacher - married Wm. East, Cartwright Lawrence - C.N.R. Section man - Goodlands 8. William & Annie Daniels: Bessie - Married Jas. Smith, moved to Unity, Sask. Margaret - Married Malcolm Cumming Georgina - Married Robert Anderson, moved to Unity, Sask. James - Farmhand - moved to Unity 9. Charles & Elizabeth McKay: John - Farmed, an amateur photographer (a good one) operated a hardware store in Neelin Allan - Farmed in the Valley, S.W. of Neelin Lily - Lived in Ormstown after the mother's death James - Died of diphtheria 1890 Eva - Died of diphtheria 1890 Barbara - Brought up by an aunt in the East Tommy - Lived near Neelin - deceased Bella - Married A. Weedmark (last two children by a second marriage) B. Young Pioneer Bachelors (1880-1890) who married here and whose families attended Huntly School. 1. Walter & Joanne Mabon John - Farmer, deceased 1962 Agnes - Married J. Gillies, deceased Jane - Married E. Hamilton, Ochre River, Man. Norman - Farms at Neelin, Married Rose Gosselin Carl - Farms at Neelin, married Rita Weedmark 57 Edgar - Farmed the home place, married Bea Gosselin, retired to Belmont Gladys - Teacher, married Mr. Rogers, Nesbitt, Man. 2. John & Annie Cumming & Family: Edith - Married George Beckam, deceased Gordon - Farmed the home farm, lives at Elgin Flora - Housekeeper in Winnipeg, home in Huntly Mary - Married F. Sampson, bought Will Cumming's farms Donald - Lives in England Grace - Married, lives in Winnipeg Isabel - Married, lives in Winnipeg Helen - Teacher. Married Mr. Burdeny. (Their son Barry Burdeny - a noted artist.) 3. William & Margaret Cumming & Family: Marian - Teacher, married H. Rogers, deceased Ella - Teacher, married C. Madson, lives at Neepawa Irene - Teacher, married C. Fargey, lives in Edmonton 4. Malcolm and Margaret Cumming & - Family: Callum - Deceased 1910 Annie - Married George Beckam, deceased 1916 Roy - Deceased Gordon - Farms his mother's homestead. Retired William - Farmed the home farm, lives in St. Vital 5. William and Bella Maxwell & Family: David - Farms in Belmont District. Retired William - Farms in Huntly Currie - Farms in Neelin District Malcolm - Farms the home place 6. James & Betsy Williamson & Family: Lived in Huntly, moved to Alma, later to Belmont district. Albert - Deceased Arthur - Farmed Belmont district Frank - Farmed Belmont district Charles - Farmed in Belmont district Russell - Served in World War I, Farmed in Belmont district James - Farmed in Belmont district 7. James & Euphemia Bremner & Family: James, Richard, Elizabeth and John. (Latter killed in an accident when a boy) The family moved to Unity, Sask., after Mr. Bremner's death. 58 8. Dunca.n & Margaret Cumming &. Family: Charles, Minnie, E1izab~th, Duncan, Maggie May, Carrie, John, Lillian, Florence (moved to Winnipeg in early 1900, none remained in Huntly). Only the older of above three families attended Huntly. 9. Henry & Efhel Green & Family: Doris, Albert, Mabel, Evelyn, Cecil, Lester. The latter farm the home place Settlers who came to the District 1890-1900 and whose children attended Huntly School: 1. Roderick & Sarah McLennan & Family: Christina - Dressmaker, married A. Easton Mary Jane - Teacher, married G. Harrison, Holmfield Sarah Janet - Married T. Cairns, Holmfield Jemima - Married A. Jackson, Holmfield N.B. Sold their fine stock farm 1908. Moved to Holmfield. 2. Josiah & Mrs. James & Family - moved west. Hannah (Mrs. Kavanaugh) A husband and two young daughters. John, Nathan, Ferguson, Marshall, Alma. Moved to Hanna, Alta. 3. Del & Mrs. Smith & Family: Blanche - Married, lives in Victoria, B.C. Kat - Married Wilson Aikens Delmar - Married May Bramwell - deceased Clifford - Lives in B.C. Robert, Elgin, Ada, Jessie. None remain in Huntly. Two children died when quite young. 4. Thomas & Mrs. Maloney & Family: Minnie David - Married Angey Deedman Dot June Charles Wilfred Ernest - Killed overseas, World War I Jane Helen Florence The youngest members attended Huntly School. 5. Robert &: Georgina Anderson: Flossie, Lyle, Violet, moved to Sask., 1905 59 Adult Families who came 1896-1900 descendants of some still live in Huntly. 1. George & Mrs. McGill & Family: Colin - Married Helen Moir, their sons, Herbert & Alvin farm the home place. Bert - Married Nettie Maloney - lived Mount Hope District King - Married Alice Kelly - moved to Alberta Flora - Bookkeeper - employed in Killarney Margaret - Secretary - married P. K. Rollins, Killarney 2. John Bryson: John - Married Nettie Lockerby. Moved to Young, Sask. Margaret - Married Will Cumming James - Married in West. Lived at Young, Sask. Ella - Married E. Street, lived at Young, Sask. Isabel - Married. Lived in Cal. Peter - Moved to Young, Sask. David - Married Beatrice Easton. Lived in Young. 3. John Lockerby: David - Married. Lived at Baldur Maude - Married Malcolm Cumming Catherine - Married S. Williams. Lived in Trinidad Nettie - Married John Bryson Ethel - Married Henry Green Barbara - Married Chas. Maxwell, moved to Belmont Alex - Married Mary Cumming. Their son and family live on home place. 4. Donald & Janet McKenzie - came 1907 Duncan - Moved west Flora - Teacher. Married Wm. Thompson Barbara - Teacher. Married, lives at Morris Mary Jane - Teacher. Married Aif Neelin, live at Killarney Donald - Farms. Lives on Wm. Cumming's homestead Bruce - Married. Farms at Morris William - Graduate of University of Manitoba. Works in Hamilton, Ontario Graham - Graduate of University of Manitoba. With Department of Agriculture, Manitoba. Elizabeth - Teacher. Married McRuer, Desford James - Farms the home place 5. George & Mrs. Weedmark Alton Pearl - Died at an early age Albert - Married Bella McKay Chester - Married Maudie McKay Rita - Married Carol Mabon 60 LOCAl'lVlV N.E. 33-3-15 N.E. 3-4-15 N.W. 2-4-15 S.E. 25-4-15 S.W. 25-4-15 S.W. 11-4-15 S.W. 8-4-15 N.W. 10-4-15 N.E. 35-3-15 S.W. 35-3-15 N.E. 4-4-15 N.E. 36-3-15 N.E. 36-3-15 N.E. 8-4-15 S.E. 36-3-15 S.W. 36-3-15 S.E. 3-4-15 N.E. 4-4-14 N.W. 34-3-15 N.E. 2-4-15 moved N.W. 1-4-15 N.E. 2-4-15 N.E. 9-4-15 S.E. 4-4-15 moved S.E. 10-4-15 S.E. 1-4-15 N.E. 3-4-15 S.W. 1-4-15 N.W. 7-4-14 N.E. 4-4-15 SETTLERS Robert Anderson William Aiken John Bryson, Sr, John Bryson, ]:r, J ames Bryson Wm. G. Cumming Peter DuHty Wm, Fairservice Henry Green Josiah James Allen Kavanaugh John Lockerby Alex Lockerby Vin Maloney Cephas Martin George Martin David Maxwell, Jr. Chas. Maxwell John McCaig, Sr. George McGill Colin McGill Bert McGill Donald McKenzie Neil Shaw Del Smith George Weedmark Robert Williamson Howard Williamson Reminiscences The Seasons: I remember winter in the pioneer days of Huntly. There were the log houses, squat and sturdy, sca~tered over ~e snowcovered land, smoke rising in the frosty aIr ~rom the tm stovei es protruding through the roofs, - sometimes sod~ed, some~~es po lar shingled, the kind of shing!es that warped WIth weatheringThe drifting snow gave to the aIr a hazy appearance. I n see the wind-swept valley, the hay stacks in the meadow and t e wooded hills beyond. It seemed colcler in winter then. The houses chinked and plastered with mud were not always wind-proof. Great stoves burning large pieces of wood stood in the middle of one room Ct 61 giving off sufficient heat to warm the lower part of the house during the day. At night, when stoking ceased, temperatures fell low and it took considerable time in the morning to get a normally comfortable condition. I remember the children warm setting out for school, lunch in hand, in their heavy, home-made clothing. Mother knit the stockings and sewed the dresses and coats. Not very fashionable by today's standards, but serviceable. A walk of two or three miles demanded common-sense dress. I remember, too, the fun along the way with the companions who joined us, running over the snowy drifted roads to the little one-roomed school with a porch, often cold when we got there. It was all in the day's happening. At recesses and noon hockey, football and sliding on the big pond nearby. No skates, but often a football stuffed with straw was the playground equipment. We never seemed wearied. Another walk home after school tested our stamina. I remember the visitors who, all unexpected, arrived for supper and to spend the evening. There were no telephones to inform us that company was on the way. By way of entertainment the occasional concert drew a crowd from surrounding districts. The talent often exceeded all expectation. Fred Stevens always delighted the audience with his many concert hall numbers: Oh, Liza, dear Liza if you die an old maid, You only have yourself to blame He was a show in himself, better than anything seen on T.V. Winter work taxed the most stalwart. There were no laboursaving devices, no conveniences of any kind, everything had to be done the hard way. The procuring of the year's supply of wood was hard work. If there was norreon the farm, then one set out early on the bob-sleigh drawn by a team of oxen or horses to the nearest wooded section to cut a load oIpoles which he must getholllebY_!1ig.ht-fal1. WJien enough wood had been hauled to last until the next winter, it must then be sawn. For this task a large family came in handy; each member learned to use a saw. I remember the long cold trips to town to get supplies. Sometimes farm produce, meat, eggs, butter would be taken to exchange for tea, sugar, clothing, a barrel of apples and sometimes near Christmas a few luxuries. Also, loads of hay, wood and grain were sold, often at a very low price, if the commodity were plentiful. lighting of a lantErn to oversee the stabling of the weary team was hastened; the pile of groceries carried in, and the precious coal oil can with an apple stuck on the spout to prevent spilling; and lastly the bela ted supper when the returned member recounted the latest news from near and far. I remember the coming of spring, the lengthening days; sunshine brilliant and penetrating and the winds veering in direction. Fleecy, white clouds sailed the deep blue sky, or banked darkly to bring the· first ~pring rains. How lovely the valley! Sometimes a flash flood made a lake from bank to banl; the ice crashed and ground with the force of the water behind as it roared down the Pembina. Migrant geese, ducks and swans lit on the water in numbers for a short stay. Crows, robins, meadow-larks and other spring birds came in quick succession as the days grew warmer. The buds on the trees developed like magic, and the meadow and hillsides became beautifully green before our very eyes. From the river bank we watched the fish jump out of the water as they made their way up stream to the spawning ground, and we listened to the blackbirds serenade from the fringes of tall willows. The seeding, the gardening, the clearing away of the winter debris occupied the men; the housecleaning, the setting of hens and turkeys, the milking kept the women busy. A hundred things to be done with few conveniences. I remember long ago Mr. Easton plowing and harrowing, and sowing by hand his few acres across the road. Laborious work but never neglected. Then came the first seeders that relieved the strain of manual labour. I remember the anxiety lest the rain fail or that it be too wet a season. To school went the children, slates and books in hand, often wading, boots and all, through the spring-made ponds, to sit all day in wet shoes. Who cared? There were the a_!lemones the buttercups and three-flowered avons. Best of all, the bobolink never failed to swing on a slender willow branch, sing his song and contemplate a nest nearby, one that small searchers were never able to find. The joys of spring prevailed. A tepee of poplar poles was built; a place for a playhouse in a sheltered grove was cleared; and the summer fun begun. So long ago! All is changed. To me it is a new but less pleasant world. I remember the waiting for the return of the absent member of the family. The jingling of the sleigh bells, the scrunching of the runners on the frosty snow announced his arrival. Then the I remember the summer with the long warm days of sunshine; the refreshing rains accompanied often by lightning, wind and sometimes hail; the green hills, meadows and woodlands bathed in golden glow or shrouded in a shadow of cloud and rain. 62 63 The highest point of Turtle Mountain, purple in the distance, stood out in the clear air. The prairies, flower-bedecked, stretched away color-scented with lady-slippers, flaming orange lilies, fragrant bergamot, roses and a hundred other blossoms. The drone of insects heralded the growing grain and the haymaking. I remember those days of haying in the valley. The smell of the newly cut grass in which the odour of mint pervaded. The cutting, raking and cocking were the work of many hands, followed l>y)oading the rounded piles onto the hayrack and taking them to where the stacks were built. This entailed double toil, but the many hands made light work. Food must be taken to the men for the noon meal. This was the task assigned the younger members of the family. They carried a bountiful supply of warm food and a jar of hot tea heavy work to be recompensed by permission to play by the river for a time. And what fun to wade in the cool stream at the crossing where they gathered clam shells, caught minnows, saw turtles and heard the ripest black currants plop into the water. And the berry-picking - saskatoons by the pailful, patches of strawberries, clumps of raspberry canes laden with fruit in quick succession; later the cherries, wild plums and high-bush cranberries; all to be made into delicious preserves, jam and jelly for the winter store. Going for the cows had its pleasures. Wandering along the cool paths on wooded hillsides, one had leisure to study the devious ways of plant and animal life. Then find the cows, drive them home on the road at the foot of the hill, up the path leading by the spring where every cow must have a drink before tackling the steep pitch to reach the hilltop at the stable. Then the milking, and straining into clean shining pans in which the warm milk cooled, and the cream rose to the top. Next day the cream skimmed from the top would be put into a crock to sour before churning it into butter. What industryl I remember the men coming home from the field in the late evening - with their tired teams of horses - doing the endless chores, having supper and going to bed early, for tomorrow would bring its many tasks. I remember Sunday, which seemed the brightest day of the week, when we went to church at the school house and came home to a quietness and peace that gave a sense of contentment. Nor must I forget the Sunday visitors from far and near who arrived for supper and stayed late, exchanging gossip, news and ideas. These contacts made life-long friends. 64 65 One remembers the picnics in some neighbour's poplar grove, the long tables were laden with food of the very best. The afternoon of sports, foot races, jumping, games, entertained the crowd until evening. These gatherings brought together the older people who seldom met at any other time of the year. Now the day is over, the chores are waiting, the horses are hitched with precipitation to buckboard or wagon to hasten the home going. I remember Autumn. It stole upon us with a stealth that caught us by surprise. The coolness of the days turning to cold as the season advanced foretold the approach of winter and the year's end. Goldenrod, purple asters, white daisies fringed the roadsides and woodland borders. Yellow, purple and white toned down the gayety of the summer show. The grain turned golden, the vegetables in the gardens came to maturity, the leaves changed to a hundred hues, ranging from dark brown and purple to the palest yellow. What beauty! As the one end of in deepest and purple days shortened, our valley, at sunset, lit up. Sometimes the lake was brightest gold while the other end was grey - almost black; over all the sky, yellow, red added to the serenity of the twilit landscape. I remember the call of the jays, the gathering of swallows along the telephone wires, twittering as they alighted or rose in flocks, the honk of geese passing over on their way south. I remember pausing to hear the hum of the threshing machines, the shrill whistles of a distant engine; in the night, listening to the moaning of the wind and the patter of rain on the roof. I watched in the darkness of early evening the flights of birds, the flares of burning straw piles and stubble, the rising smoke, and the deep sky studded with stars forming the winter constellations. I remember the harvest - cutting, stooking, stacking and threshing in endless succession. While the men were employed in the field the women and children gathered the vegetables and stored them in the old earth cellars or root houses, and arranged upon shelves row upon row preserves and pickles which were put into every conceivable kind of container - old jugs, great earthenware crocks and bottles. The business of threshing was the year's climax. There were the horsedrawn, cumbersome, portable steam engines and separators, large gangs of men - engineer, fireman, waterman, bandcutters, those who drew in the loads of sheaves, those who fed the grain into the feeder, bagged the grain, drew it to the granaries and dumped it into bins. Think of the labour! But again many hands and good company. 66 For the women, providing three substantial meals made a full day's work - up at 4 A.M. to bed at 10 P.M. sometimes later. Such peeling of vegetables, roasting of huge pieces of meat I have never seen since; baking bread, buns, pies - to feed the ravenous gang that had no coffee break, required skill and management. I remember the rainy days when the men lay around having nothing to do until the grain dried, the excursions from the East that supplied workers to harvest the ever growing yield of grain in Prairie Provinces. The final preparations for freeze up followed closely upon the completion of threshing - repairing buildings, hauling straw and hay, getting fuel, setting up the box stoves and putting fresh straw into the mattresses. . Soon followed the first snow, the lovely Indian Summer, the passage of endless flocks of migrant birds which seemed to imbue a spirit of resignation to the coming of winter. I remember the hunting, the fowl suppers and the house-tohouse dances - the pioneers' most popular entertainment. There was no limit to these parties: come early, stay late. The fiddles never seemed to fag. When one dance was over the next was called in quick succession. So, never a dull moment in the whole night's fun. I remember the pathos of the passing away in all seasons of cherished members of the community. There is ever the reminder of the shortness of life, but time has been quick to efface the toil and loneliness of pioneer settlement. THE FIRST CONCERT I remember the first concert held in Huntly School. It was the fall of 1888. I, a small child of some three years, three months, have no recollection of going to the concert but do recall sitting in the crowded, small schoolroom wedged between Mother, with her baby on her knee, and Aunty Mern, whose clothes had always a fragrance of cleanliness no one else's ever had. The women were chatting, the children good, one sound asleep, the other wide awake. The room was well lit by four coal oil bracket lamps fastened to the side walls. The stage was set. A pair of curtains hung in front of the platform served, by pulling them together to conceal the stage between items. Of the audience I remember but few, my mother, Aunty Mern, three large men, the Lang boys, home for a visit, and Louis Montroy and his pretty young bride the rest, a mob of heads, seated on planks across and down the sides of the room. 67 The Langs had brought their small organ and other instruments all the way from the valley - a guitar and something else I can't recall. They, a musical family that sang and played well, contributed several items I remember: When I was a student in Cadiz I played on my Spanish Guitar, Tra la, I used to make love to the ladies, I still think of them from afar, Tra la - - - Then the Waitt brothers, Bruce, Louis and Victor acted their humorous dialogue which brought the house down. What clapping! Perhaps it was the big knife used to perform an operation to remove an umbrella from the abdomen of the patient that put the fear into me and impressed this item on my memory. Last, I remember a Pinkerton from across the valley playing the organ and a group singing: In this world I've gained my knowledge And for it I've had to pay, Tho' I never went to college, Yet I've heard that poets say, Life is like a mighty river Flowing on from day to day, Not a friend and not a shilling Pulling hard against the stream. So then do your best for one another. Making life a pleasant dream, Help a weary-worn brother Pulling hard against the stream. The small girl must have gone to sleep by this time, as nothing more can be recalled. I would I could remember the chairman! Was it Mr. Stark? cutter came to a halt Father got out, unhitched the horse, fastened the reins to a. tree and proceeded to pull the cutter through the snowbank. In the meantime Mother placed me on top of the snowdrift while she carried Flora to where the cutter now waited the horse to be rehitched. The howl I set up on being left was enough to bring Mother hurrying back. I surely thought I was abandoned to the weather and the wolves. We got to our destination to find the Dacotah family at home in the big house (later occupied by James Graham). He was a sturdy Metis. with a wife and seven daughters. I ~e~ember the warmth of the hospitality accorded the unexpected VISItors. Of the trip home I remember nothing at all. TO THE GOSSELINS There was no snow, or very little, the winter of 1889, the year of the total eclipse of the sun on New Year's Day; consequently there was no difficulty on a January day to reach Mlch~el Gosselin's house snuggled in the shelter of the bank of the Pembma Valley near the foot of Lake Louise, a small log house plastered with brownish mud to make it winter-proof. The whole family was taken along. The going and returning to and from the Gosselins was uneventful, but what did register was that the Metis were still celebrating the advent of the New Year. There was quite a gathering of relatives who had ample good cheer on hand to keep up the holiday spirit, especially that of Eustache. After the adults had dined the young folks and small children were seated on benches along the sides of the table. It was a cheerful meal, the older boys making sure that the small visitors were well looked after. THE DACOTAHS Shortly after moving to the new home on the bank of Lome Lake, I remember being taken along with Flora when Father and Mother went to Joe Dacotah's. What prompted the long drive on a cold January day with snow piled in great banks and no road to speak of I would not know. By this time Eustache had reached the stage of intoxication wherein he thought to entertain the company with the best of his Indian tradition, songs and dances. When he lifted the cellar door, seated himself at the very, very edge and pointed with great vigour his forefinger into the cellar, sang a hair-raising dirge, it. surely put the fear into the small visitors. The only assurance whIch allayed panic was the casual indifference of the wives, who paid no attention to the performer and the quiet, unconcern of my mother as she conversed in French with the women. We set out in the one~horse cutter, the runners crunching over the frosty ground, the going tough. Finally the horse got below its depth in a drift and was floundering helplessly. The I remember my father baq~aining to buy Willie's pony, and Willie weeping in protest at parting with his pet. The deal called off, the owner mollified. we went home. 68 69 Neighbourly Calls By The Way THE LOST CHILD Daylight comes early on a June morning. The occupants of the log house are up with the sun in order to accomplish all that requires doing on the farm. First the milking. Father went out with the pails while Mother roused eight-year-old May to look after the baby, a lively, whitehaired, dark-eyed child of nine months - already walking. Grandfather, too, was up, and as usual, busy with the other chores feeding the horses and pigs and cleaning out the stables. All finished outdoors, back to the house to strain the milk into the shining pans, and to set them in the cool milk-house where the cream would rise, then preparing breakfast and everyone ready for the meal. The children, May, Mackie and Flora, were wakened, washed and dressed. But where was the baby! There was a little disconcerted questioning, for May had fallen asleep and knew nothing about her charge. The search began all over the house, round the yard, about the stables. Grandfather, who appeared on the scene, knew "that Betsy Maxwell!" (the most mischievous of the mischievous) "had come the half mile and taken the baby to play a prank!" On the suggestion, Father at once set out for Aunt Mary's. In a short time he returned carrying a very dirty, small girl. The dust and the dew had done their worst as the tiny traveller crept along the grassy road all on her own, and had almost reached her destination. Betsy was exonerated. It was evident that while May slept the wide-awake wee one managing to get out of bed and seeing the wide open door, undertook a little morning outing. Father always maintained so smart a child knew where she was going; Mother thought otherwise. THE MOST UNFORGETTABLE MISHAP: Bill Daniels had a big, old horse and a buckboard, the type with a long open part behind the seat. This means of conveyance enabled him to get around with comparative comfort as his energy wore down with the passing years. One spring day he was driving south of Huntly School just after the classes had been dismissed, and the usual crowd of children was on the way home. Somervilles, McLennans, Cummings and others had set out on the long walk to their respective abodes. To get a ride was rare and a chance of one not to be passed up if it came. Mr. Daniels stopped to pick up those who 70 were going his way. It was quite a load, Ferguson, Geordie and Louis in the front, Jemima and Betsy on the back. They h~d not gone far when Betsy realized that her dress was caught m the wheel and was gradually being wound round the axl,;. Fearf~lly she called "Old Billy, my dress is caught in the wheel! Old. BIlly, vexed beyond words, exclaimed, "You silly little fool, w~at dId yo.u do that fort" He was Irish and short-tempered. Takmg out ~IS jackknife, he opened the large blade and cut off the offendmg piece of skirt. . Betsy's new, print dress! Grandma ~ad sent the nIce. navy blue length with the white rings on It from Lancaster.' and Mother had made the adorable mother hubbard, and here It was completely spoiled. What was worse, here were Ferguson James (the author) and the others, but especially .Ferguson, who could see ~er petticoat. What humiliation! The pett1co~t was .a good substantIal drugget one, but that did not matter. It dId not m the least console Betsy's grief. How could s~e ever go home, and how could she ever again look Ferguson m the face? Well she lived to tell this little tale of woe many, many years later to ~ group of aged schoolmates who enjoyed to the full Betsy's most unforgettable mishap. FAREWELL TO THE OLD IRON HORSE Read in the House of Commons, October, 1969. Farewell to the old iron horse They opened up a continent, They brought the settlers in They colonized a nation With every kith and kin. They did a yeoman service, Their laurels they have won, Now the giants of the frontier Have made their final run. We miss their belching smoke stacks, And their whistles moan and scream, We miss the throbbing pistons, And the hissing clouds of steam. But their days were surely numbered, They have vanished one by one, And the grand old railroad steamers Have made their final run. The water tank stands empty, Along the right of way, The round house is forsaken, Where the monsters used to stay. The coal docks are a memory, Their days oE service done; 71 Since the big steam locomotives Have made their final run. A sleek new shining diesel Came down the line today. And it makes you kind of wonder Are these units here to stay With progress pressing onward, And their era just begun As history keeps repeating Will they make their final run? As we gaze into the future Of a hundred years or more What scientific marvels This old world may have in store. A weird fantastic monster Getting power from the sun, With ten million pounds of payload, May be on their daily run. Ferguson James. N.B. The author, of Hanna, Alberta, formerly of the Huntly District, Manitoba. THE PRAIRIE CHICKEN DANCE: A typical spring morning in April 1905, misty, calm, mellow, with the very feeling of everything bursting into life, - found me on my way to school after a week-end at home. Father, smoking his pipe as usual, drove old Tom leisurely along in spite of my urging that we make- better time. To me there is nothing like being on time; maybe I have always been a little on the side of too much in a hurry. We had almost reached the corner where one turns south on the Neelin road. On the left hand was a grassy knoll where once a house had stood, and there in a flock were the prairie chickens, a goodly number, engaged in their spring dance. They were chortling, nodding, running, frisking backward and forward, turning and circling this way and that. One could almost imagine a caller directing a quadrille: "All to the centre and back, honour your partner, allemande left, all swing out." What a dance! The modern square, so much in vogue, had nothing on that of the prairie chickens. It conveyed a feeling of joy at the advent of spring and a buoyancy of spirits that sensed pleasure and fun in the performance. I was ready to stop, to watch indefinitely. Father, of another mind, continued the leisurely ride. Be on time. Let the chickens finish their dance unmolested by spectators. What one sometimes misses! 72 BERRY PICKING Raspberry season c:ame al()ng with a bountiful crop of delicious fruit. On the slope from the south bank of the valley to the Pembina on land that had been cleared of timber and burned off - later the Bramwell fartn - were acres of cane loaded with ripe berries in almost inex:haustible supply. People from far and near came to pick day after day. Mother, too, took time off and with three helpers set out on a warm sunny day in the old buckboard to which was hitched Nellie, a strong mare of a restive disposition. Tena McLennan was picked up on the way, and in due time the pickers arrived in the berry patch to find a number of people on the same errand as they. The abundance of fruit was so enticing that it was not until evening, with our pails full, that we prepared to leave for home. Think of our concern on returning wearily, to where the buggy and horse were left to find that Nellie had broken her halter shank and was gone. Some one from Glendenning loaded our berries and us into his wagon, tied the buckboard behind to take us to the Gosselins from where, Mother felt sure, we would be looked after the rest of the way. I remember climbing the steep hill in front of Mrs. Gosselin's house. I remember the little old woman sitting on a stump in front of the house smoking her clay pipe. Mother explained our dilemma. A peremptory order to Johnnie Bell had, in no time, a horse hitched to the buckboard. In short order we were back home safe and sound. Johnnie, our cheerful driver, returned horseback to report to his grandmother that all was well. Nellie, evidently, tired of long delay, heat and flies, took things into her own hands and was safely in her stall by the time the berry pickers arrived. THESE WERE THE DAYS: Mary was married young. She had a good husband, a big new house, and looked' forward, on her wedding day, to leisure time a time for real living. Five years had passed. There were three bonnie little daughters to bless her home, and now the fourth child was expected. It was the sec:ond of May. The men were busy seeding, and Mary, ever attentive to her share of the chores, bethought herself of the turkey-hen that had stolen off into the pasture to nest among the willows. After breakfast had been cleared away and the dishes washed, she must take a walk through the woods to find the hidden nest. Those eggs were mighty important in the scheme of things. 73 By the time she got back to the house she felt tha t other matters were developing quickly, so she had better do the washing. There was no power washer as yet, but she bravely set to work and in due time the clothes were on the line. Upstairs she went to put her bed in order. This she did but could not come down again. The listener, just here, interrupted to ask if there was no one on hand to call the doctor. Yes, Alex's mother was to take over the case; she was within reach and soon got on the telephone. The doctor was out of town but would be contacted at the earliest possible. The belated physician arrived too late to be of assistance in bringing Mary's young son into the world. He, like others, had to contend with the element of mischance as he explained later. This is how it happened: He had gone to Baldur in his new Ford with the intention of returning home in record time. The car on the heed of the urgent call refused to start. Finally he persuaded Ernie Sexsmith to take him back to Belmont to get his black bag, an absolute requisite on a mission such as this. On entering the office, here was Tommy Somerville w!!-iting to have an aching tooth pulled. To do so entailed a little delay; the tooth-pulling would have to be postponed, so said the belated doctor as he set off with all speed, horse and buggy, to cover the twelve miles to his patient. How Tommy's tooth fared I do not know, except that he enjoyed many peaceful years after this episode. The small son grew to manhood, took over the farm and raised his family where he was born. The faithful doctor continued to devote his services to a community which, on his retirement, duly acknowledged its appreciation of his contribution to the welfare of all. The mother related this little happening after she had reached beyond the three score years and ten - looking back, enjoying once more the grim humour of what might have been a serious matter. they set up as merchant seamen, establishing a busines~ which in time became a prosperous venture. Robert, the sea captam, went back and forth to Scotland carrying exchangeable merchandise. On his voyages, Robert met Jean McPherson, whom he married bringing her back to make a home in his adopted country. Before the birth of their child, it was decided that she should return to the parental roof, so on her husband's next voyage she went back to Scotland to stay with her people for an indefinite visit. On the return trip, Robert's ship was evidently lost at sea; nothing was ever learned of him - the sad fate of many a worthy captain· and crew in the day of sailing vessels. Jean's baby boy was born during the period of great depression in the British Isles. Time obliterates many details, but history relates the tragedy of the years between 1780 and 1820. However, this young man was educated to be a school master, living first in Campbellton and later in Inverrary in sight of Castle Argyle. About the turn of the century he married Janet McCuaig and in due time had a family of five sons and two daughters. The oldest son, my grandfather, used to say he was born in the year "two" 1802. Times were hard, to make a living difficult, unemployment widespread. One heard the old folks say how precious to find a piece of driftwood was to supplement the meagre supply of fuel. In 1830, John Cumming decided that migration to Canada would be the solution to the problem of establishing his sons in a securer way of life; consequently the spring of 1831 found them ready for the voyage to Montreal. The party consisted of the immediate members of the family, Flora Hamilton, wife of John (junior), their two small daughters, Betty and Myzie, also Douglas McCuaig, wife of Alexander. The Hamiltons had come to bid their daughter farewell. Just as the ship was about to sail Mrs. Hamilton said, "Leave Betty with us and we will take her to Canada next year". The father handed the little girl to her grandmother; but not until 1845, after the grandmother's death, was she brought to her parents in Canada. A BIT MORE OF FAMILY HISTORY The Way of The Pioneer The 1745 contest between Stuart and Hanoverian for the throne of Britian brought dire results for the losers. Bonnie Prince Charlie, "Noo awa", left his followers after the Battle of Culloden Moor, April 16, 1746, to face the consequences of defeat. The Cumming Clan had given its full support to the Stuart cause. When reprisals were meted out, its head, with many others of the highland forces, was banished from Scotland. The Thirteen Colonies was a haven for these refugees; and about 1750 three Cumming brothers settled in Philadelphia, where After a trying sea voyage of seven weeks devoid of any comfort, a journey by boat up the Chateauguay River, a walk of several miles through the forest, the Cummings and many more immigrants, were on land allocated them thirty-two miles south of Montreal. It was virgin land, much of it burned over by the great fire of 1825, much of it swampy and stony rendering it useless for agriculture. There were few roads, no drainage and little cleared of timber. It was a case of inexperienced people beginning from very scratch. 74 75 Money was scarce and means of earning any were remote. The making of potash from the ashes of the burned timber was the most remunerative source of income, a slow labourious process. Food was scarce; Janet Cumming and her son, Duncan, walked nine miles to buy a bushel of peas, each taking turns carrying the bag over their backs. Shortly after arriving in the settlement near Ormstown, the father took ill. His daughter Betty and a friend walked from Montreal to visit him, bringing a blue glass bowl of apple jelly. Many years later the bowl was the cherished souvenir in the home of the granddaughter Betty in Yale, Michigan. These people brought with them their traditions and mode of life. Stern, resolute, industrious, they soon established homes, schools and churches. They loved the skirl of the pipes and met on occasion to dance the Highland reels to the tunes played by the incomparable piper, Robert McCuaig. Robert McCuaig was a recruit in the English army during the Napoleonic Wars. Once he deserted, was caught and fearfully punished. He piped the Highlanders into the Battle of Waterloo, and shortly afterwards deserted again. This time he was able to evade the authorities and migrated to Canada. I remember the old folks telling about Aunt Mary Maxwell's wedding. As the procession came up the concession road, the piper leading, the bride's two young brothers ran across the pasture to watch the party coming. They declared that even the cattle romped and played to the music. He had a beautiful set of pipes, silver mounted, which are still extant - in the possession of a McDonald family in Glengarry. Fifty years passed. The genteel, lovable grandmother must now part with a member of her family - pioneer to the western prairies. When Will Cumming was setting out for Manitoba, she remarked: "It is fifty years since I first walked down this Fifth Concession road." Many changes have taken place in the succeeding half century; sons of the pioneers to Manitoba pioneered in Saskatchewan and Alberta. One can not but say as the hymn: Time like an ever rolling stream Bears all its sons away. OLD QUEBEC FAMILIES As it happens, Ii ttle is lmown of the Moreaux, Mother's paternal ancestors. They were early comers to Canada - one at least a courier de bois - and in th e late 1700's were living south of Montreal in the Chateauguay Basin. On her maternal side something of the St. Louis has been gleaned from the records of time. The St. Louis were early settlers in New France and acquired a seigniory not far from Quebec, as was customary for the Gentry to do. After the conquest they remained in Canada and in the course of events a Fraser Highlander, one of Wolfe's soldiers named Menny, married a French woman; their daughter married a St. Louis. This mixing of French and Scottish blood was disapproved of by the respective families. However, this St. Louis, as all the seigniors, spent considerable time and money gambling. It seems that as a last resort he staked his land-holding and lost. He protested to the courts. The judge announced at the hearing that he must have been either drunk or a fool. The proud old gentleman protested he. was neither; t~e judge had no other alternative but to declare hIS property forfeIt to the winner of the stakes. Mr. St. Louis then moved south of Montreal acquiring a lease on a seigniory held by the Grey Nuns. Here he brought up his family, Levi, Rosalea and Delphine. Rosalea married Guideon Moreau, a tall, handsome young man who lived across the road. They had five children, three sons and two daughters. The elder daughter married John Cumming. Mother remembered her grandfather and grandmother St. Louis, who lived to a good old age. One day grandfather took the small girl's hand and said, "You are going to marry a tall, fair man and go far away". This she did, coming to settle in the Rock Lake district in the fall of 1880. Today (1969) there is the fourth generation of St. Louis living in the great brick house on the old farm near Ormstown, P.Q. The whole area is intens.ively farmed. Much dairying supplies Montreal with milk and cream. picked up every morning by great trucks. The whole countryside is electrified, and every modern convenience is made use of. A great change from the coming of the pioneer into a region of swamp, rock and forest with no means of communication exc,ept the river, a tributary to the St. Lawrence. Note: In 1969, Malcolm Cumming, ninety-three, youngest son of Duncan Cumming born 1812, was living in Calgary, Alberta, a span of one hundred and fifty-seven years, across the two generations. Note: Sending a letter to Scotland, for a time, cost three dollars. This taken from book written by the Editor of the Gleaner, Robert Sellers, Ormstown, P.Q. 76 17 NEELIN The village of Neelin had its beginning with the build.ing of a branch line of the C.N.R. from Greenway to Wakopa m the summer of 1904. The townsite was located on the farm of Joseph N eelin - hence the name. In the fall of the year the station was built and Roseberry School moved from its original site on the prairie to a north lot in the newly surveyed town. This building, somewhat wrecked ~y the moving, with a few repairs, served for a numbt;r of years. m the capacity of a hall as well as a classroom. CarolIne Cummmg was the first teacher in the village. In the spring of 1905, Mr. William Huddlestone (a section foreman) and family were the first residents of the new village. George Way and Harry Bolton of Cartw~ight built. ~ small ge~eral store and began business. At the same tIme a petItIOn was c~rc~ lated to have Moropano Post Office moved from John Cummmg s to the village, and named Neelin. This was appro:red of by the whole community, and James Graham became the fIrst postmaster with his daughter, Jean, as assistant. The grain elevator and Andrew Easton's implement shed were built both of which he operated while still living on the farm. He, ~ few years later, moved into town where he resided until his death in February, 1948. By 1914 the village had grown considerably. Mr. J. Laughlin of Cartwright opened a bank and built a home on the lot west of the school; the Henwoods a boarding house; the Grahams a combined butcher shop and confectionery store; and in 1914 on the site of the old, a fine brick school was erected. Mrs. Dalzel occupied a neat little cottage across the street. east of Rob~rt Fisher's blacksmith shop. Indeed, it was now qUIte a commumty centre serving a number of districts: Huntly, North Derby, Lorne and of course included the former Roseberry. The school accommodated some thirty-six pupils from grade one to grade nine. Business thrived. Trains ran three times a week - west, Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons, east on the alternate days in the morning; a service slow but regular. In fall and early winter cars of grain and stock were shipped every week. Any day, a dozen or more teams were at the loading platform, neighbours hauling out someone's grain, as soon as the box cars were available to each successive applicant. Smaller quantities of grain were sold directly to the elevator. In the meantime a second elevator was built; the former became the Pool Elevator. 78 In 1909 telephones in the homes of the rural district were installed. It was a step forward in communication to be linked up with towns where places of business could be contacted, and with neighbours for either a social chat or discussion of more serious matters. By 1921 there was need for a high school to accommodate the increasing numbers of pupils planning professional careers. The bank building had been vacated and was now turned into a classroom for grades nine to eleven with Florence Warriner of Miami as the first teacher. Outstanding graduates of this small school are many: Dr. Easton of Selkirk, Eleanor Fisher, Barney and Bill Bolton, school principals; Gordon and Lloyd Henwood; Hugh and Grant McKay, both veterans of World War II, who served their country so well. Yes, and many more, were there space to name them. In February, 1946, Rural Electrification, a government project, brought all the facilities afforded by electricity to the Village. In 1949 this service was extended to include every farm home. This surely was a worthwhile achievement. In 1950 the town built a very fine curling rink, which added greatly to the interest of old and young in local sport. The onceupon-a-time good baseball team was succeeded by equally good curlers. In July, 1936, the United Church was dedicated and in 1961 the twenty-fifth anniversary was observed with special services attended by many old-timers. The Anglicans, in the meantime, acquired the property of the former high school, remodelled the building and had their dedication service November, 1951. In 1950 the brick school burned and was replaced by a tworoomed one, the high school occupying one room. This arrangement was of short duration, for on reorganization of school areas, 1960, the school became once more one-roomed; all the senior pupils were transferred by bus to either Cartwright or Killarney. The C.N.R. in 1961 discontinued its run west of Neelin, having that section of the track taken up. What effect the change will have remains to be seen. During the half century, and more, the business places have changed hands. Bolton and Way's store was bought by Andy Embury of Baldur. A few years later Mr. Aikenhead took over the business, operating for quite a time. Ben Brown bought him out and later sold to Mr. Polson. When Mr. Bolton retired as postmaster in 1945 Hugh McKay took over until he moved to Cartwright in 1953 and was succeeded by H. Winram, son of a Pilot Mound pioneer and a veteran of 79 Hong Kong. So it was with other businesses, coming and going of people, many of whom in their own way contributed to the betterment of the community. Changes take place that reverse conditions, and there would seem to be the possibility that this small village will settle into the state of quiet middle-age - a quiet, wayside place, its energy spent, a thing of the past. Frank Neelin reviewed pioneer days, naming the early settlers. The Reverend D. A. Brooks of Killarney, the guest speaker, read Hebrews 11: "Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen -". He developed the thought that the God that lives within is a living God. Those present will be looking forward to another reunion, 1970, Manitoba's Centennial Year. Note: Sunday, August 23, 1970 Neelin celebrates Manitoba's Centennial. Conclusion Centennial year, 1967, found many a former thriving village but a ghost town. Changes have taken place so quickly. Branch railway lines have ceased to operate due to increased bus and transport service on good roads and highways. Rural and village schools have been closed. The larger units have made it imperative to transfer students to the schools provided for their accommo~ dation in the larger centres. The many-acred farms have decreased the rural population. Neelin is a mere hamlet. Many of the former residents have moved away, business places have closed, and the school was integrated into the larger unit, June 1968, as was Huntly. One train a week suffices to carry the freight required for the few businesses and the district, and that service may be discontinued in the near future. Whatever changes, it is the people who count. One finds them energetic, keeping abreast with the times, as demonstrated by the well-organized and appropria te Centennial Year observance, Sunday, August 20, 1967 - A Centennial Inter-Faith Service. Former residents and friends were notified, the rink made ready to provide .space for them all; speakers were arranged for, and a choir presided; and preparations were made to serve a social lunch at the conclusion of the programme. Some two hundred and fifty persons signed the guest book. These included many old-timers, many not so old, residents and non-residents from neighbouring districts. Here friend met former friends - a handshake, a word of greeting bridged the gap of time and brought back many memories of the long ago: memories of the toilers who passed along without compensation commensurate with the work accomplished, memories of those one had hoped to see who were unable to be present. 80 81