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Cornerstone : the journal of the Alberta Historical Resources Foundation PDF

20 Pages·1992·5.2 MB·English
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Preview Cornerstone : the journal of the Alberta Historical Resources Foundation

The Cornerstone I J OURNAL OF THE ALBERTA HISTORICAL RESOURCES FOUNDATION Volume 15, Number 3 • Summer 1992 m 1 1 1992.^ Marion 360 Excavator, Diplomat Coal Mine, Forestburg i.irii TTie Alberta Historical Resources Founda- ine tion, Pa rovincial Crown Agency, was estab- lished in1 976 to assist in the preservation of tobhjee c Ptrso v ainndc e 'tso ehnicsotuorriacg e b uainldd i npgrso,m ostiete s p aunbd- Cornerstone lic awareness of Alberta's past. Donations JOURNAL OF THE ALBERTA HISTORICAL RESOURCES FOUNDATION and bequests of funds or property' receive the tax benefit of a donation to the Crown. Annual dues are $10.* which entitles a Mike \inlligan had a steam shovel a beautiful red steam shovel. supporter to receive the Foundation's quar- Her name u-'os Mary Anne . M ike Mulligan urn very proud of M ary terly journal, The Cornerstone. Anne. He always said that she could dig as much in a da\ as a Albertans are invited to contact the Foun- hundred men could dig in a week. and infodratimon'as toffiicoe wni t hof t shuebijr e cetnsq u iarnide s, e vneenwtss -Virginia Lee Burton, Mike Mulligan and his Steam Shovel. 1939. which they want to share through the pages of The Cornerstone . Cover: The Marion 360 excavator, a 1927 state-of-the-art ma- Please direct all enquiries to: chine, removed the overburden from coal seams at the Diplomat Mark Rasmussen Coal Mine in Forestburg. Last used in 1979, the 750 ton machine, Coordinating Director one of the world's largest and oldest excavators, was removed from Old St. Stephen's College the pit in 1982. A potential Registered Historic Resource, it has 8820 - 1 12 Street Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2P8 been unprotected from weather, vandals, and birds. Once restored. Phone:431-2300 It w ill be featured in the proposed Diplomat Mine Interpretive Site. The AHRF Board awarded the Marion 360 a grant under the Board of Directors Honorary Chairman Foundation's new Transportation/Industrial Artifact Preser\'ation Di. J.W. Grant MacEwan Programme. Photo Credit: Historic Sites and Archives Sen,-ice, Calgary .A.lberta Culture and Multiculturalism. Chairman In This Issue: Charlach Mackintosh Letter from the Minister 3 Members Letter from the Foundation's Chairman 5-134 ZRuols e Bmoagray Fennell CCaallggaarryy- Spring Grants Review Jean Hoare Claresholm Heritage Bed & Breakfasts, Gerry Howis Manning Restaurants, and Tea Houses 14-1178 C. Redvers Perry Baliac Robert Phillips Milo Main Street Alberta Update Jack ReiUy Wetaskiwin Gushul Studio 2109 Jean Rycroft Sexsmith Yvette Vincent Bonny\'ille Books and more Don Wheaton Edmonton Publisher Alberta Historical Resources Foundation Editorial Policv Editor The purpose of The Cornerstone is primarily to inform others of the Barbara Dacks Foundation's activities and secondarily to communicate heritage news Designer from around the province. The Foundation is u nable to pay for anicles Grant Elston or photographs used in The Cornerstone. Use of submitted material is Silicon Type & Graphics (Edmonton) at the discretion of the Editor. The Foundation receives technical and administrative support from Albena PRIMARY FUNDING FOR THE Culture and Multiculturalism and is responsible to its Minister. ALBERTA HISTORICAL RESOURCES FOUNDATION COMES FROM ISSNO 707 - 7 05X mm o The Cornerstone is p rinted on recycled paper. THE SOURCE OF MANY BENEFITS Page 2 The Cornerstone Summer 1992 Message from the Minister Dear Foundation Members: As we enjoy another great Alberta summer, let me suggest a f amily outing to one of t his province's colourful heritage attractions. Whether a major provincial development such as the Royal Tyrrell Museum, a civic facility like the Claresholm Museum, or one of t he community -based projects sponsored by the Alberta Historical Resources Foundation like the Main Street Project in Lacombe, visiting heritage sites provides adventure that is b oth entertaining and educational. Alberta's network of t hese fascinating historical facilities and sites is growing at a f ast rate. This summer, the Fort George 'Buckingham House Provincial Historic Site near Elk Point opened on a picturesque vista overlooking the North Saskatchewan River. It tells the story of t wo competing fur trade posts and illustrates life i n the fur trade era. In September, after years of p reparation, the Reynolds 'Alberta Museum in Wetaskiwin will open, providing a "hands-on" look at our transportation, agricultural, and industrial history. It is t ruly world class and will be a wonderful family experience. Some new or recent local features that you might wish to visit include the museums at Bonny ville, Vermilion, High Level, Etzikom, the Basilian Fathers' Museum in Mundare, the Dr. George House in Innisfail, the Dickson General Store Museum, the Big Valley Railway Station and Round House, and the Sexsmith Blacksmith Shop. There are over 130 of t hese attractions across the province, with access for all. Happy touring ar\d 1 h ope to see you visiting our heritage sites this summer. Yours truly, Doug Main Minister of C ulture and Multiculturalism Summer 1992 The Cornerstone Page 3 Message from the Foundation's Chairman Dear Foundation Members , This issue describes local projects awarded grants from the Fouruiations spring applications review. In total, approximately 1 00 projects were provided with over $650,000 in Foundation sponsorship. I t hink you will find the range in projects impressive, both m terms of g eogi-aphi- cal distribution and the kind of w ork being widertaken. The number and variety of t hese endeavours speak well for the health of A lberta's heritage community and the public' < appreciation for historical resources. The Foundation has been working hard to ensure that the nuixrnmm amount of i ts lotteries funding is p assed on to the public. Aside from continuing to simplit\ our administration, we have also greatly reduced our cash reserves over the Lis: >c jr ro place the money in the communities where it w ill do the most good. I a m pleased ri • > j > that we now have a balanced budget and that none of t he principal of o ur lottenes junainz i< l ost to administrative expenses. In the Minister s message, the Honourable Doug Main invited you all to tow- Alberta's heritage resources this summer. I w ould like to echo that, and encourage you to take advantage of t he extraordiruiry opportunities presented by our expardmg network of heritage attractions. These sites make history come alive and offer us a better sense of o ur own roots and pride as Albertans. As a f amily experience, these quality times will he long remembered by you and your children, as ivill the knowledge gained. Have a great summer and enjoy your heritage. Yours sincerely , Charlach R.D. Mackintosh Chairman of t he Board Page 4 The Cornerstone Summer 1992 prmg rants Review Okotoks Town Hall Building ( 1 903) was one of t he projects awarded an AHRF grant this spring. very year the Alberta Historical Resources Foundation provides financial assistance and Jl y l obtains technical aid for hundreds of heritage projects in Alberta. Primarily community- based initiatives, these projects preserve local landmarks, enhance our cultural environment, and provide tangible evidence of our past. As well as offering social and educational benefits, they often stimulate tourism, create adaptive reuse of heritage buildings, and revitalize business and residential At the April meeting, the Board approved • 3 Education $3,420 grants totalling $627, 530 to 96 projects, as • 11 Heritage Awareness $37,800 follows: • 6 Publications $15,585 • 14 Feasibility Studies $109,638 • 13 Research $93,550 • 43 Historic Resource Preservation $333,077 • 2 Roger Soderstrom Scholarships $8,000 • 1 T ransportation/Industrial Artifact • 2 W orkshops, Seminars, Conferences $ 1 ,250 Programme $25,000 • 1 Professional Development $210 At the June meeting, the Board also approved funding of $9,750 for 6 cemeteries, a $4,000 supplement to the St. Jean Baptiste Mission Church, Falher, an $8,000 supplement to the Red Deer CPR Bridge, and $6,600 to the Gushul Studio. continued on page 6 Summer 1992 The Cornerstone Page 5 Funded Projects Chung Building (P uffer side) , L acombe, $5 ,000; St. Laurence Anglican Church, Monitor, Feasibility Studies: Medalta Potteries, $1,800; W. W. Arcade Building (Goodridge Medicine Hat, $7,500; Saamis Archaeological Block), Edmonton, $25,000; Camrose CNR and Teepee Site, Medicine Hat, $15,610; Cen- Station, $15,000; Carmichael Homestead, tral Memorial Park, Calgary-, $5,195; Walterdale Hythe, $5,000; Christ Church (Anglican), Fort Playhouse, Edmonton, $ 1 5 ,000; Okotoks Town Macleod, 55,000; Edgerton Museum, $1,500; Hall Building, $9250; Ferris Residence, Hampton School, Ohaton, $4,000; John Edmonton, $1,083; Discovery- Centre (Old Walker Bamett House, Edmonton, $10,000; Western Decalta Office Building), Turner Myster\- Lake Log Cabin, near Barrhead, $4,500; Valley, $12,500; John Walker Bamett House, Old Billiard Hall (Koopman Building), Edmonton, $2,500; Newbrook Observatory^ and Lacombe, $3,500; Old Courthouse, Blairmore, Residence, $10,000; Russo Greek Catholic $9,500; Ryley Museum, $5,000; St. Charies Orthodox Parish of Topovontz, Smoky Lake, Catholic Church, Meams, $3 ,000; Toleff Omlid $5,000; Saskatoon Mountain Historical Re- Homestead, Hythe, $5,000; Village General source Complex, Beaverlodge, $10,000; St. Store, Hanna, $5,000; Gushul Studio, $6,600; Charles Catholic Church, Meams, $2,000; St. Jean Baptiste Mission Church, Falher, Ukrainian Greek Catholic Parish of Protec- $4,000; Red Deer CPR Bridge, $8,000; tion of B lessed Virgin Ma^>^ near Radway, $4,000; Ukrainian Settlement Bloc Transportation/Industrial Artifact Ecomuseum, Bruderheim, $10,000; Programme: Marion 360 Excavator, Diplomat Coal Mine, Forestburg, $25,000; Historic Resource Preservation: Anderson Professional Development : A ria Hill , H S A Apartments, Calgar\-, $10,000; Haig Residence, Lethbridge, $20,000; Hiebert House, Dldsbur^^ Training Workshop, $210; $10,000; Knox United Church, Calgary, $21,000; Sheriff Robertson House, Edmonton, Education: 1992 Mackenzie Bicentennial Tourism Project, 51,000; 101 Years m the $ 7 , 750; St. Mary's Romanian Orthodox Church of Boian, Willingdon, $2,227; St. Norbert's Communirs' - Lacombe Oral History Project, Roman Catholic Church, Provost, $11,000; $220; Stony Plain Walking Tour: Teacher's Multicultural Heritage Centre, Stony Plain, Kit Development, $2,200; $2,000; Wood's Douglas Fir Tree Sanctuary-, Calgary, $7,500; George Pegg Botanic Garden, Heritage Awareness: Christian Reformed Glenevis, $34,000; Allison House, Pmcher Church of Nobleford Cairn, $2,000; Conrad's Creek, $2,500; Chown Residence, Edmonton, Post Interpretive Centre, $15,000; Bukowina $5,000; GibbonsResidence, Edmonton, $6,000; School Roadside Point of Interest Sign, $ 1 ,500; Hillhurst United Church, Calgar>', $2,200; Barrhead Newspapers: Preser\-ation and Public Kaughman Residence, Cardston, $4,500; Availability, $5 ,000; Pioneer Families of South- Knight/Hancock Residence, Raymond, $3 ,000; em Alberta Biographies, $2,500; A Historical Knox Evangelical Free Church, Edmonton, Review and Photographic Display of the Cas- $2,000; Nimmons Residence, Calgar>', $3,500; tle Mountain and Banff Intemment Camps, Ramsay House, Calgary, J 7, 500; Richards $3,000; Nobleford Heritage Park Interpretive Block, Edmonton, $5,000; St. Peter's Roman Signage, $800; Fort Macleod Historic Area Catholic Church, Strome, $5,000; Ferris Resi- Plaques, $1,500; Portage from the Past, Peter dence, Edmonton, $5,000; Eraser and Seabloom Fidler Country, $5,000; Commemorative Block, Calgary, $15,000; Molstad House, Plaque: George R. Ball Family Windmill, $500; Edmonton, $5,000; Our Lady of the Rosar\- Historic Calgar^- Week 1992, $1,000; Hospital, Castor, $18,000; Puffer/Chung Build- ing (Chung side), Lacombe, $4,000; Puffer/ Page 6 The Cornerstone Summer 1992 Publications: Barnstormers, Bushpilots, Bombers, and Airbuses, $4,000; History of t he 65th Mount Royal Rifles in Western Canada, Reminder $1,500; County of Leduc No. 25 History, $3,000; l^Jostalgic Stories of Jasper's Past, $2,800; Historic Fort Macleod Walking Tour, Application deadlines are 1 F eb- ruary and 1 September each year, $1,285; losegun Reflections: History of Fox for grants in the following catego- Creek, $3,000; ries: Research: Inventory and Assessment of Feasibility &. Planning Studies AGT's Historic Buildings, $6,300; Flying Historic Resource Preservation Workhorse of the North: The Story of Fairchild Workshops, Seminars, Conferences 71C CF-ATZ, $7,500; Practice of Architec- Research ture and Construction in Calgary, 1900-1940, Professional Development $6,750; Banff Heritage Resources Inventory Education and Assessment, $10,000; Alberta Midland Publications Railway Research Project, $2,500; Medalta's Heritage Awareness Advertiques and Named Products, $5,000; Cemeteries United Church Artifact Collection Project, Transportation/Industrial Artifact $10,000; East Calgary (Inglewood) Building Preservation Inventory, $10,000; Turner Valley Oral His- tory Project, $10,000; Canadian Anthracite For further information, please Coal Company Ltd., $5,000; I Remember contact Monika McNabb, Grants When: Recollections of Everyday Life in South- Officer, Alberta Historical Re- west Alberta, $7,500; CNR Big Valley: Rail- sources Foundation, 8820 - 112 way Centre 1910-1991, $5,000; Saskatoon Street, Edmonton, T6G 2P8. Mountain Historical Resources Complex, $8,000; Roger Soderstrom Scholarships: Mortlach Restaurants continued from page 1 7 Research Project, $6,000; Survival and Adap- museum, the Cornelia Wood Library and tation: An A nalysis of Dryland Farming in the Archives, The Homesteaders' Kitchen, Gal- 1940s and 1950s in Southeast Alberta, $2,000; lery Restaurant, an old-fashioned candy store, a h andicraft store, a b anquet and meeting room. Workshops, Seminars, Conferences: Dan- It f eatures period artifacts and furnishings, dis- ish Canadian Conference (1 1th), $500; Inter- plays of p ioneer themes and families. Teen drama performed on weekends, with buffet pretation Canada's Spring Training, $750. Fridays. For reservations call: 963-2777. Cemeteries: St. Paul's Church Cemetery, Cardston, $2,000; Colinton Cemetery, Athabasca, $2,000; St. George's Stretton Cem- etery, near Marwayne, $1,150; North Park Pio- neer Cemetery, Marwayne, $1,100; Newbrook Pioneer Cemetery, Thorhild $ 1 ,500; Svea Cem- etery, Wetaskiwin, $2,000. Summer 1992 The Comerstone Page? xamples of ^ Walterdale Playhouse (Old Firehall No. 6, 1910) Edmonton : $ 15, 000 for architectural designs necessary to upgrade the floor and roof system to meet building code starviards. Built as Strathcona Firehall No.l , t his heal brick laridmark was re- named Firehall No. 6 when Strathcona and Edmonton amalgamated in 1912 and was in use until 1 954 . A furniture warehouse for the next 20 years, it deteriorated until Walterdale Theatre Associates leased it i n 1 974 and began restoration . Almost completely ongind outside , t his is t he oldest remainingfirehall in E dmonton and Calgai-y . ( Reg- istered Histonc Resource ) , Okotoks Town HaU Building (1903) Okotoks: $9,250 for an engineering study on the condition of the fowidation and a feasibility study onfacade and interior rehabilitation. Builtby heal pioneer carpenter Charles Minue for the town's first mayor, Dr. Fred Stockton, the buck and sandstone structure with its arched unridou's and elaborate cornice has been a medical office, dentist's office, drugstore, general store , b usiness office, home to the Union Bank of Canada (Okotoks' first bank) , a nd court house. Newbrook Observatory and Residence (1951-52) Newbrook: $10,000 for a study to restore, preserve, ar\d devehp the site. One of s everal north- ern observation sta- tions, built f rom 1946 on by the Canadian government in coop- eraaon with the Americans, to study the upper atmosphere, this Dominion Observatory made the headlines on 4 O ctober 1957 when photographs by staff member Art Griff en confirmed the existence of t he world' s f irst artificial satellite . S putnik I . Page 8 The Cornerstone Summer 1992 Saskatoon Mountain Historical Resource Complex Beaverlodge: $10,000 for a f easibility stvidy to identify themes and the economic basis for an interpretive centre and $8,000 for archaeological testing. Applicants hope proposed excavations will uncover further evidence of the earliest knovun human occupation in northern Alberta, about 10,000 years ago. Sheriff Robertson House (1913) Edmonton : $ 7 , 750 for exterior rehabilitation work. W. Scott Robertson came to the village of Edmonton in 1881, bought a general store, and became wealthy from land investment. He was appointed Deputy Sheriff of the district in 1 884 , then Edmonton's first Sheriff in 1905 after the Province was formed. Robertson was active in the social and cultural life of t he community and built an opera hall on Jasper Avenue . His house is a n^excellent and unusual exam- ple oft he internation- ally significant Prai- rie Style p ioneered by American architect Frank Lloyd Wright in 1900. (Provincial Historic Resource) Wood's Douglas Fir Tree Sanctuary Calgary: $7,500 to develop a c ontrolled access and site protection. The Sanctuary contains one of the last stands of t he Rocky Mountain Douglas fir, Alberta's largest tree, known to grow up to a bout 50 metres high and a metre across. In other areas , t his species has almost disap- peared due t o f ire a nd lum- bering. Two trees at this site are 95 and 284 years old. (Provincial Historic Resource) Summer 1992 The Cornerstone Page 9 Knight/Hancock Residence (1926) Raymond: S3,CCCfor exterior painting. In- terested inr anching and sugar beet production. Utah entrepreneur Jesse Knight sent his sons to this area in J 9 01 . T he family bought 56,600 acres of land and created the toun of R aymond, named for eldest son. Oscar Raymond Knight. Raymond Knight set up the region s sugar beet industry and became a renowned horseman and rodeo organ- izer. His h ouse combines an overall Prairie Style, developed by American architects Frank Lloyd Wright andLouis L . S ulln an . u nh classical detail- ing ofv raditioruil Georgian Reiiial. (Registered Historic Resource) St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church (1927) Strome: S5 .000 to upgi-ade the heating system and restore exterior stairs . T his church played a r ole in the social deielopmem of t he SpringLake dismct before WWU . I t i cas an early centre for German settlers who had moved to the areafrom the U.S. after 1 903 . ( R egisteredHistoricResource) Fraser and Seabloom Block (1912) Calgary : S J 5 , 000 for facade restoration. Promoted and inteip)reted by the Old Time Calgary Society, this commercial building u.ith businesses on the ground floor and apartments above is on the Historic Walking Tour of t he neivly designated historical district of Inglewood, the oldest settled area of t he city . The Fraser and Seabloom Block's brick facade . f eaturing extensive and unusual sandstone uork. is one of t he most ort-iate along Xinih Avenue. (Potential Registered Historic Resource) Page 10 The Cornerstone Summer 1992

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