Vantage Points articles are presented with links (Web) to the story on the Vantage Points Website
 and and as print-ready PDF files
.


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Volume 1

Volume 2

Volume 3


Volume 4


Volume 5





Volume 1


Turtle Mountain       Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 1
The creation, habitiation and settlement of a unique area.

Whitewater Lake       Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 2
The creation, habitiation and settlement of a unique area.

Lauder Sandhills       Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 3
The creation, habitiation and settlement of a unique area.
Places Link

Boundary Commission Trail       Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 4
The main highway - west.

Mandan Trail      WebPDF       Vol. I, Page 5
The explorer LaVérendrye used the Mandan Trail on his expedition in 1738 to visit the Mandan villages along the Missouri, thus the trail quite possibly existed prior to the fur trade era.

Yellow Quill Trail       Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 6
The main highway - to the southwest corner.

Skull Swamp       WebPDF    Vol.  I, Page 7
Skull Swamp is an example of the ingenuity possessed by post glacial societies in their bison hunting techniques and how they used the existing landscape to their advantage.
Web Link

Ther Souris Basin Fur Trade      Web  / PDF     Vol.  I, Page 8
The Souris Basin was very important in the fur trade of the 18th and 19th Centuries.

Ash House      Web  / PDF     Vol.  I, Page 9
Ash House was built on the north shore of the Souris as a canoe fort.

Lena House      Web  / PDF     Vol.  I, Page 10
Lena House is one of two fur trading posts which were located on Turtle Mountain, though its exact location has never been determined.

John Pritchard       Web  / PDF      Vol.  I, Page 11
A Normally Competent Fur Trader Loses His Way
Vantage Points Flashbacks      Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Fort Mr. Grant     Web  / PDF      Vol.  I, Page 12
Fort Mr. Grant was built sometime between 1824 and 1826 on the Souris River near Hartney.

Fort Desjarlais      Web  / PDF     Vol.  I, Page 13
Fort Desjarlais is remembered today as the most prominent and successful of the Souris River trading posts.
Places Link

The Red River Cart
    Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 14
The cart played a huge role in the success of both the fur trade and Red River bison hunts.

Métis Bison Hunts          Web  / PDF      Vol.  I, Page 15
The Red River Métis began their organised bison hunts soon after 1820. It didn't take long for the hunts to become a central feature of the Métis way of life as they provided the Métis with their principle source of income for several decades.

Métis Wintering Communities        Web  / PDF   Vol.  I, Page 16
A wintering community generally consisted of hunters and their families and a few Métis fur traders.
Vantage Points Flashbacks (1):   Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Vantage Points Flashbacks:(2)    Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

The Manitoba Land Survey Systems    Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 17
The surveying of prairie land went ahead of settlement, taking no consideration for the natural contours of the landscape whatsoever.

Turtle Mountain Reserve (IR60)
     Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 18
The Turtle Mountain Reserve  became the smallest reserve in Canada, measuring only one square mile.

The Boiler Trail
    Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 19
This trail branched off from the Boundary Commission Trail about a 2.4 kms west of Wakopa and met up with the Trail again at the Old Deloraine Land Titles Office

George Morton's Ventures    Web  / PDF     Vol. I , Page  20
He persuaded businessmen in Kingston to invest in the Morton Dairy Farm Company and received (via his business connections with John A. MacDonald the right to purchase 72 square miles (184 kms²) of land west of Whitewater Lake.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:   Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Turtle Mountain City and Waubeesh   Web  / PDF    Vol. I, Page 21
John Brondgeest envisioned Waubeesh becoming a thriving settlement, and by 1884, it was indeed a chief commercial centre for the region along with Old Deloraine.


Whietwater Village  
Web  / PDF    Vol. I, Page 22
While other small towns  were dying because they were bypassed by the CPR, Whitewater was settled after the railroad came through, thus given a real chance at success.


Newcomb's Hollow  
Web  / PDF    Vol. I, Page 23
The first Land Titles Office in the Turtle Mountain area was a solitary tent that was set up in August of 188


Old Deloraine    Web  / PDF     Vol.  I, Page 24
After the Land Titles Office was established at the edge of Turtle Mountain (by George F. Newcomb), the area began bustling with activity.

Hartney       Web  / PDF       Vol. I, Page  25
James Hartney's interest in the area began later in 1881. He bought two sections of land and hired labourers to work it before he moved to the area in 1882 with his family.

Moberly       Web  / PDF       Vol.  I, Page 26
The Lakeside Resort That Never Was

Turtle Mountain Coal Mining      Web  / PDF      Vol.  I, Page 27
It was true that there were "Millions of Tons of Coal Near Deloraine" as one headline read, but getting the "black diamonds" out of the ground was something else entirely.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:   
Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Web Link


Strathallen School      Web  / PDF       Vol.  I, Page 28
The school was built in 1892 about seven miles (11 kms) southwest of Boissevain along the old No. 3 Highway.


Grande Clairière Convent        Web  / PDF      Vol.  I, Page 29
The beginning of the Grande Clairière Convent was marked in 1898 when Father J. Gaire, the parish priest from Grande Clairière, was visiting the family of one of his parishioners in France.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:    Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Places Link

Great Northern Railway       Web  / PDF      Vol.  I, Page 30
Construction of the Great Northern Railway (GNR) began during the winter of 1905 and finished in 1906, covering the 69.5 miles (110 kms) from St. John's (Devil's Lake), North Dakota to Brandon, Manitoba.
Web Link

The Metigoshe Métis Community   Web  / PDF     Vol.  I, Page 31
The first permanent Métis settlers moved to Turtle Mountain in 1908.

Billy's Point          Web  / PDF      Vol.  I, Page 32
William (Billy) Gosselin, a descendant of the Red River Métis, moved from North Dakota to homestead in Manitoba.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:    Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Ducharme Property       Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 33
One homestead on the northern slopes of Turtle Mountain, about 11 kms southwest of Boissevain, is where two Métis brothers settled sometime in the early 1920s.


Mennonite Settlement in Southwest Manitoba   /   Web  / PDF      Vol. I , Page  34
Mennonites settle on the Canadian Prairies -  Post 1923
Vantage Points Flashbacks:        Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Dunseith Trail       Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 35
The prohibition of beverage alcohol in the early 1900s paved the way for one of the area's most colourful chapters of thrill and intrigue.

Walter Zeiler – Rum-runner   Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 36
He travelled in the dead of night, never under a full moon, and never after it had freshly snowed because of the tracks that would be left by his horse's hooves

Salter and Henderson Mines     Web  / PDF    Vol. I, Page 37
The Henderson coal seam was discovered by John Nestibo and his brother while they were in the process of digging a well.
Vantage Points FlashbacksRadio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Web Link
Video Link

Marsden Schools       Web  / PDF    Vol. I, Page 38
The school became an important feature to the Métis community and helped local people affirm their heritage in this area by being its only Métis school. It doubled by serving as a community centre and dance hall as well.

McCharles Cabin        Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 39
Around 1941, a small house was built by a Métis family just to the north of Lake Dromore. The cabin, constructed from square-cut local black poplar logs, has weathered the years well and remains as a window into an important time and way of life.

Waskada Museum         Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page 40
The Waskada Museum, however, has made its buildings as much of a feature as the artifacts that fill them.

Lorna Smith Nature Centre      Web  / PDF      Vol. I, Page  41
The Lorna Smith Nature Centre just southeast of Boissevain was established in 1983 by the Turtle Mountain Conservation District as part of the reservoir project.

Short Stories: Old Wakopa, Sourisford, Lang's Crossing & the Souris Linear Burial Mounds 
PDF    Vol. I, Page  42

Short Stories: The Empress of Ireland, Brockinton Site , Verona School  PDF    Vol. I, Page  43





 


Volume 2




Rise of the Métis Identity       Web  / PDF    Vol.  II, Page 6
Vantage Points Flashbacks      Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources


Beginning of the Metigoshe Community       Web  / PDF     Vol.  II, Page 8
1908 - Present
 
Red River Jig        Web  / PDF     Vol.  II, Page 9
The steps of the Red River Jig are influenced by the First Nation pow-wow, while at the same time contain the essentials of Scottish and Irish traditional dances


Workingfor Pay & Trapping       PDF     Vol.  II, Page 11 - 13

Harvesting & Hunting      PDF     Vol.  II, Page 14 - 20

Traditional Foods, Holidays & Celebrations, Recreation, and the Red River Jig   
PDF     Vol.  II, Page 21-26
 
Goods and Stores, Transportation, Communication, Healthcare  
PDF     Vol.  II, Page 27 - 31
 
Brockinton Site     
Web  / PDF     Vol. II  Page 33
The Brockinton archaeological site is located along the Souris River valley wall south of Melita. This site was occupied by three different cultures over the last 1600 years. These occupations left behind rare and archaeologically invaluable finds.
 During this site's earliest occupation, it was used as a bison pound.
Places Link
Web Link

Sourisford Linear Burial Mounds         WebPDF      Vol.  2, Page 36
Artifacts from these thousand year-old burial mounds indicate the trade relations that existed upon the plains before convenient modes of transportation.
Web Link

Manchester to Melita /   Web  / PDF     Vol.  II, Page 37
The most successful of the Sourisford communities

Melita Robbery      Web  / PDF     Vol.  II, Page 38
A Midnight Crime Hits Southwest Manitoba . . . September 1923

Pierson         Web  / PDF     Vol.II   , Page 39
The Rise of a Town Planted Beside the Railway   1891 - Present

Copley Church       Web  / PDF     Vol.  II, Page 40
In the extreme southwest corner of the province of Manitoba there sits the ruins of a small church. The first church of any denomination to be built west of the Souris River.

Eunola School   /   Web  / PDF       Vol.  II, Page 41
The doors of this rural schoolhouse have not remained entirely closed with the end of classes
1896 - 1962
Vantage Points Flashbacks:      Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Lyleton Branch    Web  / PDF     Vol.  II, Page 42
Settlers in the area of Waskada and Goodlands in southwestern Manitoba waited in great anticipation for a branch line to be built through their communities.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:    Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Places Link

Manitoba's Borders        Web  / PDF      Vol.  II, Page 43
The original size of the province was only one-eighteenth its present size. It was referred to as the “postage stamp” province due to its square shape.

Captain Large and the Empress of Ireland
      Web  / PDF       Vol.  II, Page 44
A Homemade Steamboat Plies the Souris River ...1909-1913
Vantage Points Flashbacks: Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Places Link
Web Link

Lyleton Shelterbelts       Web  / PDF      Vol. II , Page  45
The first of many shelterbelts to be planted in the region was completed in 1936. It consisted of 2,300 trees which were planted in a row measuring half a mile on C. E. Fennell’s farm.

Oil Exploration      Web  / PDF      Vol.  II, Page 46
The present-day oil boom builds upon a history of success in the oil industry

Assiniboine (Nakota)       Web  / PDF     Vol.  II, Page 47
The Assiniboine were once a Nation that occupied a territory that spanned the prairie provinces (including southwestern Manitoba) and parts of the northern United States.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:      Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Vantage Points Flashbacks:     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Dakota Claim in Canada      WebPDF     Vol. II Page 48
Unlike other First Nations in Canada, the Dakota did not sign treaties with the Canadian government. Because of this they are still fighting for acknowledgment of their Aboriginal title.
Vantage Points Flashbacks     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources


Chinese Settlement in Rural Manitoba     Web  / PDF      Vol.  II, Page 50
Over the span of his nearly 100 years he became a sailor, farmer, veterinarian, gold-panner and dedicated community worker






Volume 3




Mammoth Tusk       WebPDF      Vol.  III, Page 8
This find is one of only eight proboscidean discoveries in Manitoba and one of three tusks, the other finds being teeth.

Bison Rubbing Stone     WebPDF    Vol. III Page 9
In an era where herds of bison are but a memory, the bison rubbing stones remind us of a time well passed . . .
Vantage Points Flashbacks     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

The Souris River     WebPDF      Vol.  III, Page 10

Mullett Site     WebPDF      Vol.  III, Page 12
The period of the site’s occupation likely stretches from the Besant Period (BCE 500 to AD 750) right up to the pre-contact era.

Lauder Sandhills        WebPDF      Vol.  III, Page 13
10,000 BC - Present) The unique environment provided by the Lauder Sandhills attracted bison, which appealed to the early peoples who came to camp and live there.
Places Link

Snyder II Site      WebPDF     Vol. III  Page 15
The Snyder II Archaeological site is on the bank of the Gainsborough Creek just half a kilometer west of its junction with the Souris River. T

Dand Stone Features  WebPDF     Vol. III  Page 16
The purpose behind these mysterious and unique features may never be determined


The American Fort          Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 17
The American Fur Company’s attempt to lay claim to the furs along the Souris River - about 1810 - 1828

Numbered Treaties in Manitoba        WebPDF      Vol.  III, Page 18
Southern Manitoba was included in the signing of Treaty 1 and 2 in 1871 between local First Nations and the government of Canada. This event marked a major shift in land use on the prairies.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:       Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Métis Intermediaries     Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 20
Métis interpreters, present during the signing of Canada’s early Numbered Treaties and an integral part of the Boundary Commission Survey, were more than mere translators – they were peacekeepers and diplomats.

Eva McKay: The Dakota Experience    WebPDF     Vol.  III Page 22
Retelling History: Elder, healer and activist Eva McKay tells of the gross misinterpretation of history as it describes her people

Old Wakopa        Web  / PDF     Vol. III, Page 24
The first “stopping place” for settlers heading west
Vantage Points Flashbacks:   Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Places Link

Old Melita Trail  /   Web  / PDF       Vol. I , Page  25
It is likely that the trail was first created by the surveyors who travelled the area between 1879 and 1880, marking out the land into townships (blocks of 36 square miles).

Lake Max Sawmill      Web  / PDF     Vol.III  , Page 26
In 1880 Mr Bolton established a sawmill on the shore of Lake Max. The next year, entrepreneur George Morton bought the sawmill and used it to produce lumber for nearly every building in the then thriving village of Whitewater.
Vantage Points FlashbacksRadio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Lake Max Recreation      Web  / PDF     Vol.III , Page 27
As the largest lake in what is now Turtle Mountain Provincial Park, Max Lake was the natural location of choice for summer holidaying.

Charles Sankey     Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 30
Over the span of his nearly 100 years he became a sailor, farmer, veterinarian, gold-panner and dedicated community worker
Vantage Points Flashbacks: Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Places Link


Grande Clairiere     Web  / PDF    Vol.  III, Page 31
In the spring of that year new settlers began arriving from France and by July there were 43 homes and almost 150 people in Grande Clairière.  


The Six Buildings of the Waskada Museum     Web  / PDF    Vol.  III, Page 32
In the spring of that year new settlers began arriving from France and by July there were 43 homes and almost 150 people in Grande Clairière.  


All Saint's Church     Web  / PDF    Vol.  III, Page 32
The All Saint’s Church and Cemetery served as a landmark and community centre for over 30 years before the numbers in the parish could no longer support it.

Lake Metigoshe Recreation      Web  / PDF     Vol.III , Page 35
The bulk of Lake Metigoshe lies in North Dakota, with only 60 out of 1,580 acres lying in Canada.

Shirley Colquhoun        Web  / PDF      Vol.  III, Page 36
Samuel Colquhoun was the first person in Canada to take advantage of recreational potential at Lake Metigoshe.

Jim Dandy        Web  / PDF      Vol.  III, Page 38
One of Pierson’s early entrepreneurs
Vantage Points FlashbacksRadio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

St. Paul's Cemetery and Catholic Church    WebPDF     Vol.  III, Page 39
In the spring of 1917 the Belgian community living on the slopes of Turtle Mountain and their priest, Father P. E. Halde decided to build themselves a church wherein they could pursue their worship of the Catholic faith.

Turtle Mountain Forestry Reserve  
Web  / PDF      Vol.  III, Page 41
In 1895 the Minister of the Interior set aside 75,000 acres as the “Turtle Mountain Timber Reserve.”

Purple Hill Church             Web  / PDF      Vol.  III, Page 42
In 1898 the Purple Hill Church, located in the Medora area, was opened and dedicated.

Prairie Skills Centre /   Web  / PDF   Vol. III   , Page  43
The many careers of a small-town stone churh    1896 - Present

Elva Elevator       Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 44
It was  oldest remaining elevator in Canada!  (1894 - 2019)
Places Link

Chain Lakes Quaker Church        Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 46
The area around Chain Lakes was settled by Quakers—also commonly known as “Friends.”
Vantage Points Flashbacks:    Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

A. E. Hill Store: The Hart-Cam Museum       Web  / PDF      Vol.  III, Page 47
The 120 year old building that today houses the Hart-Cam Museum spent most of its life serving as a general store. It later became a restaurant, museum . . . and Hollywood film set? Yes indeed – not only once, but twice!

George King General Store      Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 49
Built in 1904, it was once also the home of the Boissevain and Morton Library and Archives.

Waskada Park   Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 50
On a walk south of the townsite one day, a vision presented itself to Sankey: a recreational park, surrounded by trees, with space for sports activities and community events.


The Blue Flea     Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 51 
The Lauder Subdivision of the CPR (which came to be known as the Blue Flea) was constructed due to a request which came from one Thomas Dand.

Ben Arde: Mountainside Store Operator      Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 53
1949 - 1962
Ben Arde was born in Saskatchewan in October of 1926. His parents farmed there until the 1930s. When Ben was eight his father, originally from Wakopa, moved his family back to Manitoba, this time settling south of Mountainside.
Places Link

Mining Coal During the Depression     Web  / PDF     Vol.  III, Page 55
Beginning in the 1880s and revived again in the 1930s, coal mining contributed to the economy in Deloraine, Goodlands, and surrounding communities.
Vantage Points FlashbacksRadio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Web Link



 


Volume 4



Dreaming Up Dobbyn City    Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 8
This "Speculative" or "Paper" City" was planned near what wouild become Melita during the Manitoba Boom. Its owner/promoter soon turned to other, more successful, ventures.
Places Link

Melgund - Almost a Village      Web  / PDF       Vol. IV , Page  9
Before Hartney and Lauder beame villages, Melgund was on the map. Although it never became a centre of commerce, it did endure as acommunity.

Railway Schemes and Dreams     Web  / PDF    Vol. IV, Page  10
While many of the railway proposals may have been based more on hopes than on available investors, most were practical, indeed modest, attempts to address a local Manitoba need.

A Disturbance in the Classroom - By Edith King      Web  / PDF      Vol. IV   , Page  12
At the blackboard the young teacher determinedly was writing an exercise for the class. From behind her came a sudden but definite flip, flip, flip of an inkwell.

How to Build a "Soddy"       Web  / PDF    Vol. IV , Page  13
Soddies were the ultimate in low-cost housing.

The Anchorage       Web  / PDF    Vol. IV , Page  14
The Anchorage was not, as one might expect when first hearing of it, a public hall. It was a private home.

Little Schools on the Prairie       Web  / PDF    Vol. IV   , Page  16
Single young women were the sought-after choice as teachers. In fact many jurisdictions specifically ruled out married women in the position.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:       Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources


Sam Heaslip - The "Stage Coach" Mailman    Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 17
In the early 1880’s the main road from Old Deloraine to Brandon was the Heaslip Trail named for Sam Heaslip who established the trail and used it to deliver the mail.

A Tale of Two Mill Fires     Web  / PDF      Vol.  IV, Page 18
The story of milling in Boissevain begins shortly after the town was established as an important commercial centre on the new CPR line. In those days a progressive town needed a mill.

From Trails to Rails     Web  / PDF     Vol. IV , Page  19
Whole villages like Deloraine, Waubeesh and Wassawa were moved to new locations when the rail line passed them by.

The Halfway House      Web  / PDF      Vol.  IV, Page 21
When you discover that your homestead happens to be in the right location, and you don’t mind some company from time to time, why not go into the business?

Deloraine's Dr. Thornton     Web  / PDF      Vol.  IV, Page 22
In Deloraine, in the first part of the twentieth century, if someone mentioned "The Doctor" it could refer to only one person: Dr. Thornton.
Vantage Points Flashbacks: Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Waskada's Blacksmith: Ren Amos     Web  / PDF    Vol.  IV, Page 23
Over a span of half a century, Ren operated his blacksmith shop. He had to rebuild it twice. His wife often helped him in the shop and together they lived and worked through countless changes in agricultural methods.

Tena's Boarding House     Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 24
In today’s world how many people come home from work only to face another round of domestic chores? Not at Tena’s.

The Home Bank Scandal Hits Lyleton      Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 25
 On or about August of 1923, Stan Hill, the Manager of the Lyleton Branch of the Home Bank of Canada received a short telegram, delivered in code. It read; "Cease business, close the door."

The Beef Ring      Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 27
Before freezers were in every home feramers found a way to share fresh beef.

A Piece of the Broomhill Store       Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 27
Perhaps when local Postmaster William Kilkenny and his brother John built it in 1908, they were not only optimistic, but also ahead of their time.
Places Link

The First Phone in Boissevain      Web  / PDF      Vol.  IV, Page 28
In 1904 a local exchange was located in Hilton's Drug Store, but only a few residences were hooked up. Then in 1906 the Bell Telephone Company began installing its own phones in Boissevain homes.

Delivered by Train - Prairie Style     Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 29
The extension of the CN line from Adelpha on to Deloraine brought service to Mountainside and area.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Order it From Eaton's      Web  / PDF     Vol. IV, Page 30
Those first black & white, text-only, catalogues offered mainly clothing but the options soon included everything from books to furniture and farm tools.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:   Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

The Edwards Sisters - Business Partners     Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 31
What did Mr. and Mrs. Edwards think when Alice and Ida, at quite a young age, took the unusual step of moving to a nearby community and going into business?
Vantage Points Flashbacks:    Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Mrs. Weightman Comes to Canada       Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 32
Mrs. Weightman, a widow from Berwickshire, in northern England, and her children, arrived at their homestead in the spring of 1882 after a fifty-six day journey from Edinburgh, Scotland. 
Vantage Points Flashbacks: Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Mary Hathway's Homestead      Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 34
Mary’s brother-in-law, Reverend Davies, drove her to the Land Titles Office where a long lineup stood waiting for opening time.
Vantage Points Flashbacks: Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Fultonville     Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 36
"Fultonville", as the locals dubbed their venture, started off with three horses, a walking plow, a hoe, some pickaxes and a spade.

Cricket Anyone? : The Waubeesh English Settlement        Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 38
There were many attempts in Western Canada for groups from Britain to duplicate the sort of life they were used to in their home country.

Chief Inkpaduta     WebPDF      Vol.  IV, Page 39
We may never be sure which way to see Inkpaduta, but we can be fairly certain that while in Canada, he lived a peaceful life.

Sitting Eagle      WebPDF      Vol.  IV, Page 40
He and his Grandfather H'damani were among the few who declined a $200 government pay-off to relocate to a reserve near Pipestone. By 1909, only H’damani, his grandson Chaske (later known as Sitting Eagle) and a few others remained.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Walter Thomas - Against All Odds      Web  / PDF      Vol.  IV, Page 42
t was in late March 1880. A spell of warm weather had melted much of the snow, when Walter set out for Winnipeg to get more provisions.
Vantage Points Flashbacks     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Walter Thomas - Kitchen Table Surgery        Web  / PDF      Vol.  IV, Page 43
He learned later that it was fortunate that muzzle was close to the arm and the flame from it burned the flesh and arteries so that very little blood escaped.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:    Radio Broadcast  |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Places Link

Prairie Fire!      Web  / PDF      Vol.  IV, Page 44
It was a landscape shaped by the prairie fire, and the fires served their ecological purpose.

1885 - A Troubled Summer     WebPDF     Vol.  IV, Page 46
With the benefit of hindsight we know that any escalation of that conflict was unlikely. But the settlers in rural Manitoba didn’t know that.

The Blizzard - By Marion Robinson    Web  / PDF    Vol. IV   , Page  48
It was a terrifying night. There was a long string of shaky stove pipes almost the length of the room, and with each terrific impact of the wind they shuddered and groaned.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Norman Breakey - The Inventor from Pierson       Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 49
  So, who can we thank for this handy implement which saves time, effort and laundry costs? Well that’s a bit of a sad story.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:   Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Places Link

What the Rats of Cranmer Knew     Web  / PDF       Vol.  IV, Page 50
The collapse of an elevator in Cranmer could have been dangerous, but there was some warning.
Vantage Points Flashbacks   Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Places Link

Pauline Johnson Comes to Town     Web  /  PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 51
The celebrated poet toured extensively across Canada. She even came to Napinka, where she made quite an impression.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:    Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Alton Breault - Adventures of a Radar Repairman       Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 52
It was top secret - he and his companions at the training facility at Yatesbury, England, couldn’t tell even their servicemen buddies what they were working on. 

The Rescue of the Hathaway Thresher     Web  / PDF     Vol.  IV, Page 54
It was the world’s first rotary thresher, a significant departure from the design then in use and a forerunner of the axial flow system used in modern threshers.

Mr. Barneby's Visit     Web  / PDF      Vol.  IV, Page 55
In the summer of 1883 English writer and traveler, William Henry Barneby set out to tour the newly opened lands in western North America.

Border Stories     Web  / PDF      Vol.  IV, Page 56
Maybe all stories that stimulate an interest in a subject are good stories.

Mr. Bryan's Whistle Stop      Web  / PDF       Vol.  IV, Page 58       
“One time, Mr. William Jennings Bryan, a noted politician in U.S.A. was trying for the presidency. He came to Canada on the Great Northern Railway..."
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Volume 5


The Souris Plains in 1491     WebPDF     Vol.  V, Page 1
What was life like on the Souirs Plains before the Europeans arrived? It was interesting and by any measure, the home to many very successful civilizations.
Vantage Points Flashbacks      Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Web Link 1
Web Link 2

Who Were the First Farmers on the Plains?      WebPDF       Vol.  V, Page 2
Ongoing archealogical research south of Melita is providing additional information about pre-contact agricultural activitiy in our region
Vantage Points Flashbacks:     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Web Link

The Mission School     WebPDF     Vol.  V, Page 3
In 1892 the local Endeavor Society obtained some funds and set up a school in a donated cabin on the Turtle Mountain Reserve.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Document Link

Shutting Down IR#60    WebPDF     Vol. V, Page 4 & 5
In 1889 Indian Agent J.A. Markle, based in Birtle, raised the possibility of relocating H’damani’s band.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Document Link

The Fish Lake Cemetery        Web  / PDF      Vol. V, Page 6
Graves are unmarked, but remembered in this small Metis Cemetery near Lake Metogoshe

Places Link

By Ships, Trains and Ox-Carts     Web  / PDF     Vol.  V, Page 7
A look at the routes taken from Ontario to Maniotba's Southwest Corner

Mr. Logan Comes To Lauder     Web  / PDF   Vol.  V, Page 8
The journey of one of Lauder's founding fathers.

Places Link

A Railway Builder’s Challenge— Crossing the River     Web  / PDF     Vol.  V, Page 9
The wooden trestles were used to cross steep ravines, and later filled with earth
Places Link

The Three Bridges at Riverside    Web  / PDF  Vol.  V, Page 10
This well-used crossing of the Souris River has seen a few changes.
Places Link

The Harvest Excursion – Definitely not a Vacation               Web  / PDF     Vol.  V, Page 11
Harvesting is a time-sensitive operation, and labor intensive as well. When the time came to get that good crop off the field there were simply not enough men around to do the job. 

Observations of a War Bride     Web  / PDF    Vol.  V, Page 12
Vera Booker was one of 48,000 young women who came to Can- ada as a war bride during and after the Second World.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:      Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

At the Butterfield Post Office       WebPDF      Vol.  V, Page 13
The first Post Office and Stopping Place in the far southwestern reaches of Manitoba was called Butterfield.
Places

The Two Desfords       Web  / PDF       Vol.  V, Page 14
The Desford community began in the late 1870's along the Old Commission Trail about twelve kilometres south- southeast of Boissevain.

Jimmy Jock – Minto Cemetery’s First Resident      Web  / PDF Vol.  V, Page 15
Jimmy Jock died in 1901 at the age of 74 and was buried in the then-empty Minto Cemetery. Even today the ravine he settled bears his name, celebrating a man of uncommon character and stamina
Vantage Points Flashbacks: Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources
Places Link

Naming Medora             Web  / PDF     Vol. V, Page 16
Who choses the name of a new town?
 
Napinka at the Crossroads    Web  / PDF     Vol.  V, Page 17
In 1890’s there was no north-south line in the district. By connecting at Napinka the CPR made the route to Brandon a little shorter. The decision created a boom in Napinka
Places Link

Main Street in Bede             Web  / PDF     Vol. V, Page 18
Welcome to Bede. Not so much a ghost town, but rather another community that didn’t quite become a village.

Too Many Schools?             Web  / PDF     Vol. V, Page 19
The first schools in the regions were Menota and Napinka in 1884. Between 1885 and 1895 another fifteen were established. .

Albert Titus – a Napinka Character       Web  / PDF      Vol.  V, Page 20
Ab's claim to fame was as a chronicler of the times through his many articles for the local papers. 
Places

The Belgian Connection       Web  / PDF      Vol.  V, Page 21
Ab's claim to fame was as a chronicler of the times through his many articles for the local papers. 

The Diana Icelandic Cemetery      WebPDF    Vol. V, Page 22
lcelandic settlers originally come to the New Iceland settlement at Gimli beginning in 1876. Some later moved on to the Grund area between Baldur and Glenboro, and when homesteads were becoming harder to find, a few moved west to the area between Sinclair and Tilston.

The Berns Boys Come to Tilston     WebPDF       Vol. V, Page 23
US immigration to Manitoba was quite common for a while. One particular family left its mark on Tilston.
Places Link

The Pierson CPR Demonstration Farm     WebPDF      Vol. V, Page 24
The Pierson site, one of 13 on the prairies, included a full line of modern buildings, including a two-story four bedroom house. 

The Neighbourhood Lime Kiln       Web /  PDF     Vol.  V, Page 25
To prepare for a burn, stones were placed in the kiln leaving an arch at the bottom to hold the fire. The process took three days to re- duce the limestone to powder.

Snow Plane to the Rescue!         Web  / PDF     Vol.  V, Page 26
Simply put, a snowplane was a sleigh with a body on it and a propeller on the back end of a motor. Like the horse and sleigh before it, it didn’t need roads.  

Built to Last - Concrete Block Buildings        Web  / PDF     Vol.  V, Page 27
For a few years in the early 20th century, many buildings in southern Manitoba were built with locally cast concrete blocks.  

The Local Egg Grading Station              Web  / PDF     Vol.  V, Page 28
The Melita Creamery had 6 full-time egg handlers, who worked almost day and night during the peak season.
Podcast Link

Some Assembly Required: Mail Order Homes        Web  / PDF       Vol.  V, Page 29
Although Eaton’s was the most widely known provider of the mail order buildings, the largest company in the business in Canada was the Canadian Aladdin Co. Ltd.

Private Banks           Web  / PDF      Vol.  V, Page 30
As towns developed, increased commerce spurred the need for financial services. Those services were at first provided by private banks.
Places Link

Nurse Halladay and Boissevain’s First Hospitals      Web  / PDF      Vol.  V, Page 31
When the time came to open the doors on this new and much appreciated service, Nurse Halladay was appointed Matron.

Why Locomotives Had Cow Catchers        Web  / PDF      Vol. V, Page 32
A 1948 derailment in Medora was caused by a sleeping cow on the track.
Vantage Points Flashbacks     Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

An Elephant Story – By Jerry Drier             Web  / PDF     Vol. V, Page 33
Vantage Points Flashbacks:    Radio Broadcast   |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

The Hartney Air Training Field     Web  / PDF   Vol. V, Page 34
The Relief Field 1 for No. 17 Service Flying Training Schoolbased at RCAF Station Souris had a large hangar and personnel of eighty men and twenty-five officers.
Vantage Points Flashbacks:    Radio Broadcast Intro   Radio Broadcast |   Illustrated Text  |  Resources

Crime and Punishment in Hartney      Web  / PDF       Vol. V, Page 35
Hartney’s first (and only?) murder mystery.

Walpole Murdoch – Pioneer Newsman     Web  / PDF    Vol. V, Page 36
For ten years Murdoch was a familiar figure on Hartney's streets and at community affairs.  "Unconventional" might be one way of descibing him.

Murder for a Homestead      Web  / PDF      Vol.  V, Page 37
Two murders, a national manhunt and a near escape. It all started on a farm near Boissevain.

Gone to the Dogs     WebPDF     Vol. V, Page 38
In 1955 the Broomhill Curling Club received permission to sponsor the All American Field Trails complete with championship stakes. 

Prisoners of War – Harvest Help       WebPDF       Vol. V, Page 39
The prisoner farmhands were lightly guarded and often permitted to go shopping or attend church.  An unknown number stayed after release and became Canadians.

The Case of the Nazi (?) Farmhand      WebPDF     Vol. V, Page 40
Why is there a sketch of Adolph Hitler on a vintage threshing machine near Pierson?

Who Was Walter Farwell?     Web  / PDF      Vol. V, Page 41
Perhaps a small town in a new land is the perfect place to start over? Why does Hartney have a street named after a gambler and bigamist?
Places Link

Boissevain’s Dr. Bird    Web  / PDF     Vol.  V, Page 42
Dr Bird had to deal with many emergency procedures by the dim light in a homesteader’s bedroom.

The Small Town Photo Studio         Web  / PDF       Vol.  V, Page 43
Once settlers got established they went looking for less essential amenities, like family portraits. Every town used to a have a photographer or two.

Home Delivery - The Drayman        Web  / PDF     Vol. V, Page 44
In addition to doing the daily deliveries from the station, the draymen did deliveries from merchants to customers. In the days before everyone had a car, many businesses would deliver.

The Rural Press - A Survival Story             Web  / PDF       Vol.  V, Page 45
A new village might have been considered to have “arrived” when it had a paper. For quite a while some towns had competing papers.

The Riverside Canucks of Baseball Fame       Web  / PDF      Vol. V, Page 46
The Riverside Canucks played for over 40 years at Riverside Park, on the banks of the Souris River north of Minto. They are in the Manitoba Baseball Hall of Fame.
Places Link

Getting Ready for the Christmas Concert    
Web  / PDF      Vol. V, Page 47
Ask someone who attended a one-room rural school about the memorable times and you can be pretty sure the conversation will include reminiscence about Christmas concerts.

Train Time    Web  / PDF    Vol. V, Page 48
For many years Train Time was the occasion of the day in small town Manitoba.


The Latest Thing – The Telephone      Web  / PDF     Vol. V, Page 49
The whole system was run by people and depended upon the skill and the personality of the operator.

“Connie” Riddell             Web  / PDF       Vol. V, Page 52
Because he worked for the CPR, and was subject to job trans- fers, he was instrumental in the sporting lives of three communities.

What's on in Melita This Week?     Web  / PDF     Vol. V, Page 53
The Melita Opera House was one of several venues offering a wide variety of touring entertainers.
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