3. Excerpts
from "Stories of Pioneer
Days at
Killarney"
Pioneer
Days in the Rowland District . By J. E. Haight
Owing to lack of time and space, I must confine this article chiefly to
the actual homesteaders. What is generally known as the Rowland
district consists of Township 4, Range 18 and part of the South half of
Township 4, Range 17. Mr. George Haight colonized the greater part of
the South half of 4-18, bringing from the County of Oxford, Ontario,
the early homesteaders, taking for himself and his four sons,
homesteads and preemptions. The application for entry for lands were
then made at the land office at Deloraine. In the years 1882 and 1883,
the most of the entries were made for this part of Township 4-18. The
Bleakley Bros, Woodrow Bros, Johnson Bros, Arthur Squires, T, E. Bill.
Joseph McKay. In the northern part, were the Mitchell Bros, 'Wm.
Bertrand, James Russell and several others from other parts of Oxford
County. Mr. A. Mustard, although a pretty small boy when he came in
1883, has the right to claim an important part in the development of
this section of the country. Most of these homesteaders were young men
and unmarried, I think at this time, there were only four married men
in the Township, so when the ladies began to come, you may be sure they
received a right royal welcome. On July 27th, 1883, Mrs. Geo. Haight,
Miss Cunliff and the writer arrived at Rowland, via Brandon, from
Brandon to Rowland per horse team and democrat. They arrived a little
too soon, however to receive a grand reception. Mr. S. J. Woodrow was
getting together all the men and ox teams in the neighborhood to come
out to meet us. He also had a part of a brass band to accompany the
procession.
An item worthy of note just here might be that the first white
child to be borne in Township 4-18, was a little Miss McKay,
however she may have thought it not wise to stay here, so soon went
with her parents to their home in Ontario.
In 1884 came Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Bailey, the parents of the worthy
manager of the Royal Bank of this town. Mr. Bailey was a tailor by
trade and it was he who made the wedding suit of the writer of this
article.
Later came Mr. and Mrs. James Wye, The Muirhead Bros, Mr. David Lister
and his father, and others to purchase R. R., H. B, and School lands.
The homesteads by this time were about all taken, except herer and
there an abandoned quarter section. In the southwest part of 4-17, were
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McKnight, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. McKnight, the Smale Bros,
Will Henry, Stockdale Bros. and Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Wilson.
The nearest post office was at Langvale, about 13 miles away and some
of the young husky fellows thought it nothing to walk over in an
afternoon for the mail for themselves and their neighbors, especially
when they were expecting a letter from the “girl I left behind me.”
When the post office was established at Rowland in 1883, with Geo.
l-Iaight as post master, the late Mr. Chas. Bate was appointed in Her
MajeSty’s Service to carry the mail from Killarney to Langyale and
Rowland. Later Mr. James Russell, with his faithful old grey horse,
“Dan” and backboard took over the service.
In 1887, on January 7th, we began to get two mails per week, previous
to this only one per weekend some times none at all. In 1882, it was
fully expected that the Manitoba Southwestern Railway would pass from
Glendenning through the southern part of Township 4 westward, so with
high hopes what was expected to become a thriving town was located on
Section 10-4-18. A stopping place, store, blacksmith shop, with Neil
Johnson as first smith, al arge feed and sales stable; consisting-of
poplar poles and prairie brick, and a commodious tent were erected.
This location was in a direct line from Brandon to the historic village
of Wakopa and the international boundary.
But alas, the long cherished hopes of the pioneers were not to be
realized, for in 1885, the railway came, leaving Rowland, the nucleus
of a busy, prosperous, commercial center four miles north of its iron
way. Thus the verification of the thought as expressed by the poet,
“Hopes are allusions and not what they seem.” Today there is nothing
left 'to mark the spot.
Some notable persons were entertained in the humble farm homes in those
days. Among them were Lord John Pollock, of London, Eng, Professor
Tanner, of Edinborough, Scotland. These two were accompanied by Mr. J.
W. Dafoe, later editor of the Winnipeg Free Press. He was on duty as
reporter. It was Mrs."Geo. Haight, who did the entertaining on this
occasion.
When Professor Tanner returned to his home in Scotland, he wrote a poem
about the great west country, part of which I here quote: “There a man
is a man, if he is willing to toil. And the humblest may gather the
fruits of the soil. There children are plenty and he who hath most hath
help for his fortunes and riches to boast. There the young may exult
and the aged may rest, away far away in the land of the West.”
Those were the good old days, there, was friendliness and
companionableness, for every man was as good as his neighbor, they had
hearts that could feel for his neighbor’s woe and share in his joy with
a friendly glow, with sympathies. large enough to enfold all men as
brothers. They were bound together by one common tie in the days of the
early eighties. If one was unfortunate and behind with his work, the
word was, “come on boys, we’ll help him out,” With no thought of how
much are we going to get for it.
Parties? yes, lots of them, surprise parties too, in sleigh loads:
drawn by oxen, or perhaps an ox and a cow, or a horse and an ox. One
amusing sight the writer saw was a horse and an ox hitched to a top
buggy conveying a man and his wife to church service, on Sunday. The
preacher was no less a person than the late Dr. Stewart who later
became professor in Wesley College. Winnipeg. He, I think, was the first
inspector of schools in this southern district. He and Mr. Wm. Ryan of
this town, who was then Reeve of Turtle Mountain Municipality, formed
the Bethel School District in 1887. The meeting was held in what was
then called a “house”, dimensions, 10 x 12. Divine services were held
in stopping places and in private homes until Rowland school house was
built in 1886 and Bethel School in 1887.
The» first sermon preached in Bethel was on November 4th, 1888. Rev. Mr.
Lowery was the preacher and there were thirty in attendance. Services
and Sunday School, entertainments and public gatherings were held in
the Rowland school house from the early days up to the time when the
church was built in 1913. The Rev. G. Teeter was the first to start a
movement towards the building of this church. Following: Mr. Teeter
came Rev. J. B. E. Anderson and during his ministry of several years,
the church was planned, financed, work begun and well on to completion.
Then came Rev. Mr. Stock, under whom the building was finished, opened
and dedicated to the worship and service of God, on November 16th,
1913, Thus there now stands in the centre of a thriving community this
beautiful and well equipped little church as a tribute to the labor and
sacrifice of a united people and all free of debt
The first political meeting ever held in the district was in the
stopping place under the auspices of the “Farmers Union,“ Mr. James
Lang of Langvale was the speaker. The Municipality of Riverside in
which lies the Rowland district never had a place where liquor could
legally be sold. It came under Local Option in the early days as the
result of a petition circulated by Rev. Mr. Kinley and Mr. A. Mitchell,
such solid men as Mr.Thos Morrow, late of Killarney, the McMillans,
Mitchells, Loves, Chesters, Bills, Hopwoods and many others, upheld the
temperance cause, when an effort was made to repeal in 1908 and it
failed, no effort has been made since and still they are fighting on.
Game was plentiful in the pioneer days. Geese, ducks, sandhill cranes,
and chicken. Fur-bearing animals were also numerous, Red fox, of which
the writer dressed 32 in one winter and the pelts were sold at from
$1.50 to $2.00 each. Mink, badger and there was also in evidence that
very much despised little animal which when danger approached had the
faculty of effusing an extremely obnoxious effiluvia which plainly
said, please let me alone and all will be well.
Sometimes the graceful jumping deer might be seen leisurely strolling
over the prairie and in the timber areas, moose and elk were to be
found.
In concluding these memories of the pioneer days, I have, to say that
most of the brave men and women who turned the virgin soil of the wide
open prairie into fields of productiveness, who endured the hardships
and privations of pioneering, built homes, churches and schools and
made it a goodly land in which to live, these have left their mark and
passed on, showing that this is a world of change. In thinking of this,
it seems to me that I might fittingly quote these words. “Like as a
plank of driftwood, cast on an angry main, another plank encounters,
meets, touches, parts again. So it is with life forever o’er life’s
dark troubled sea, we, meet, we greet, we sever, drifting eternally.”
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