We Made Melita

We Made Melita

Medical Services

Veterinarian William Leslie

 

 



Doc Leslie came to Melita sometime before 1900 and moved with his wife and daughter into the little house across the road from the United Grain Growers Elevator. This remained his home until his death in the early 1940's. Mrs. Leslie was a well
known teacher in Manitoba, becoming a member of the Senate of the Agricultural College which later became the University of Manitoba.   

Doc found that the veterinary practice would not support him when tractors and the depression both took their place in history. He then became a farm inspector for Osler, Hamilton and Nanton, the Credit Financier, and other firms that owned the farm land during the depression. This was not always a popular job as he often had to deal with the former
owners who now were renting their own farms back and had to answer to the firms through Doc. However he traveled upwards to 200 miles a day checking on farms and making needed arrangements so that farmers could continue working the land. He had a gameleg and as a consequence he did not like to walk out into fields so he and his model A Ford often were seen going through the ditch, through a fence that Doc somehow never seemed to notice in time, across the field and to the spot where the farmer was working. Then with his conversation completed, he would reverse his way back to the road, and the farmer would stand there either purple with rage or shaking his head at the damage. He always drove a model A
for this had a high wheel base thus allowing him to drive over the grain etc. As a consequence he ran at least three model A's into the ground and seemed to have the current car always in for repairs.

Doc told of the time that the bank was robbed and the robbers collected at the United Grain Elevator just below his bedroom window. He apparently stuck his head out to see what was wrong and gave one of his famous bellows at the men making all the noise in the middle of the night while Mrs. Leslie, with an equally strong voice shouted at him to get his head in
or he would get it blown off. The Sure's store window on Main street still had the bullet hole in it during the thirties that was the result of the one and only shot that supposedly was fired during the robbery, although how this could have been the case when shells were left near the elevator office, was never ex-
plained.

Doc Leslie was one of the characters of the town that seemed to have its fair share but he was good hearted, helping others where he could and although he was often rough and gruff, the twinkle in his eye gave him away.

Doc was also very active in the Curling Club and his name appears often in connections with community activities.

Adapted from Our First Century, page  611

 
Veterinary Medicine in Manitoba

In 1874 with 24-year-old Dr. Wesley F. Lipsett  travelled to the newly created province of Manitoba as a recent graduate from the Ontario Veterinary College. Dr. Lipsett purchased a farm in Meadow Lea just west of Winnipeg where he began farming and established a clientele for his veterinary services.

1879 - Manitoba’s First Animal Health Care Act

Dr. Lipsett’s interest in politics saw him elected to Manitoba’s fourth Legislative Assembly in 1879 as the Woodlands representative. High on his political agenda was advocating for improved care for the province’s livestock. On June 25, 1879, the first Act regarding animal health was passed in Manitoba. An Act Respecting Infectious and Contagious Diseases of Domestic Animals encouraged people to identify for inspection animals they suspected were suffering from a contagious disease. Historically, this Act had additional significance since it specified the appointment of a veterinary inspector licensed to practice in Manitoba. At the time, no licensing body existed for veterinarians so the Act effectively paved the way for creation of a veterinary association.

1881 - Manitoba’s First Veterinary Association

Manitoba’s first veterinary inspector was Dr. Willet J. Hinman an Ontario Veterinary College graduate from the class of 1875. Dr. Hinman’s first annual report drove home the point that Manitoba needed more veterinary inspectors. In a meeting with John Norquay, Manitoba’s premier at the time, Drs Lipsett and Hinman and a few other veterinarians in the province discussed the need for a veterinary association. The outcome was the passing of An Act Respecting Veterinary Surgeons on May 25, 1881. This Act stated that all people practicing veterinary medicine as of June 1881 and licensed according to the provisions of the Act were deemed to form the Veterinary Association of the Province of Manitoba.


1890 – Two New Acts for Veterinarians
Unsatisfied with the state of affairs for the profession, Manitoba’s veterinarians gathered on December 17, 1889, to reform the Veterinary Association of Manitoba. Of first priority was the drafting of updated legislation. On March 31, 1890, the Veterinary Association Act 1890 was passed into law, providing the association with the authority to oversee registration of veterinarians in the province once more. By year’s end, 20 veterinarians were registered.

On the same day, legislature also passed An Act Respecting the Diseases of Animals that established positions for district veterinarians who would work for the government as required.  In 1893, this Act would be amended to include the appointment of a provincial veterinarian who would administer the Act. Dr. J.S. Thompson was the first to hold this position from the period of 1893 to 1904.

Adapted from the Manitoba Veterinary Medical Association

http://www.mvma.ca/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=153&Itemid=81




We Made Melita