Our Heritage  People / Index

We Made the Municipality of Pipestone


Notable People from Our Past


THE THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE who have made  the  Municipality of Pipestone their home over the years, since its inception in 1884, have been a fascinating group, full of strength and wisdom, wit and vigour, kindness and foresight.

Some of these people are also significant, key figures in our history. They have either come to define the region by their very being, or they have changed our communities through their actions and decisions.

This project recognizes and honours these people.

On the following pages you will encounter the collection of peoplewho have made a real difference. The useful way we have chosen to explore and describe these people has been to focus on traditional occupations and avocations. With one key person typically defining each entry (a merchant, a school teacher, a brick-maker, etc.) we expect that the rich and deep experience of life and work in the Municipality of Pipestone can be effectively and succinctly defined.

The people profiled in this booklet are special, but we have also endeavoured to feature others with slightly lesser claims to significance who help define or enhance a certain entry. And where possible we have also added information and details on certain occupations and avocations so that readers can come to fully understand and appreciate who these people were, what they did, and how they did it.

This booklet was developed through a project called Notable People, an initiative of the Historic Resources Branch of Manitoba Culture, Heritage and Tourism. That project allowed us to develop a comprehensive inventory of potential candidates, and to carefully analyze and assess the relative significance of the 180 individuals profiled. We are grateful to the Province for this support and direction.

It is easy at the turn of the 21st century to forget the origins and qualities of Manitoba’s smaller communities. But at their beginnings these were very industrious places, with young, ambitious people, full of life, and with great dreams for their new home. It is also important to recall that these places were also self-sustaining, with nearly everything one would need made at hand. Much of what was required for daily life was manufactured here, from bricks to dresses, harnesses to flour. Place like Reston, Pipestone and Sinclair and the smaller rural communities surrounding them in 1900 was active, lively and fun.

It is important to set the stage for the following stories, and we are fortunate to have the words of Ellen Guthrie Bulloch, who in 1929 created our first local history book, Pioneers of the Pipestone. We quote often from that remarkable little book, which we highly recommend to anyone interested in the early days of “The Settlement” as the loosely defined community centred around the Lanark School was called.

Mrs Bulloch, in her conclusion, wrote:

To trace the growth of the district from the very beginning until the coming of the railway and towns has been a most interesting, if rather a difficult task….

Many changes have come about during this time and it has been a wonderful experience to see the country develop from the bare prairie without a tree or shrub except along the river, to a country partially wooded, well built, homes, excellent gravelled roads, telephones and at this time of writing.

The very first crops were cut with scythe and cradle, hay mowed and raked by hand, and threshing done with horse power in some cases. Plows of one furrow with one team of horses or oxen were used and the whole process of farm work was much slower than it is today.

Gradually the people began to realize the possibilities of the soil and climate. More and better gardens were grown, trees, shrubs and flowers planted, fruit of many kinds, especially the smaller varieties grown. As the land was broken and the prairie fires which burned over the land every season in the first years no longer ravaged, the poplar bluffs began to spring up around sloughs and have spread until now the bare prairie of the early days has disappeared entirely.

Today many of the men and women who bravely faced pioneer conditions in this new land have passed on to their reward and only those who lived during that period or experienced like conditions in some other part of the country can realize how much courage, faith and endurance was required to carry on in spite of all the difficulties encountered.

Thus to this later generation is passed on the task of upholding and carrying on thee work so well begun by the pioneers, trying to realize their dreams and ambitions for this new land, and each individual contributing his or her share towards that development so far as possible. Realizing also as the pioneers did that spiritual as well as material development is necessary if the proper growth is to be attained, may we go on keeping these aims and ideals ever in mind, trusting and striving for the fullest possible development lest we break faith with those who have gone before, the Pioneers of the Pipestone.


Community History


By the end of the settlement era three sets of tracks crossed the Municipality of Pipestone. In 1892, the C.P.R. line had been extended from Souris into the northern part of the R.M. and would eventually create the towns of Pipestone, Reston and Sinclair. In 1902 a branch of the C.N.R cut across and the southern reaches putting Scarth, Woodnorth, Cromer and Butler on the map. Shortly thereafter the C.P.R. created the Reston-Wolseley line giving birth to Ewart and Ebor. By 1906, farmers throughout the municipality had reliable connections with the rest of the province allowing much easier marketing of their produce and much improved access to agricultural equipment and consumer goods

The first towns may not have appeared until after 1890, but the region itself already had a long and interesting history. The wooded valley of the Pipestone had long been a place of shelter, a gathering place for various aboriginal peoples, and a buffalo hunting ground. 

In 1881 the arrival of the transcontinental railway, first at Brandon, then Oak Lake and Virden, allowed settlers easier access to this territory.

The first settlers in the Pipestone Valley were Dan McKinnon and A. McLean who arrived on May 28th, 1881. They were followed within days by William and James Lothian. Their names and others live on through mention of McKinnon’s Crossing and Guthrie’s Grove in the local histories.

Some of these first settlers came with the hope that a rail line would soon cross the district. That didn’t happen and it left the people of Pipestone to make long trips for supplies and to market their produce. That didn’t stop them from establishing farms schools and churches, raising families, and generally getting on with life.

For the first ten years after farming operations commenced, the scattered rural nature of settlement in the area was characterized by various small rural centres, often just a post office, usually in a farm home, and perhaps woirh a school which might double as a church and community hall. Lanark School and nearby Reston Post Office which was located on the Bullock farm, was once such community.  Elm Valley School and Post Office in the Cromer Area was another centre to the west, Manda and Woodnorth Post Offices were central and Belleview was on the eastern reaches of the district.



This map was created prior to 1890. The locations identified as “Reston” and “Pipestone” refer to Post office locations as the railway (and the villages) had not yet arrived.


In 1892 Canadian Pacific Railroad, completed a line from Souris into the northern part of the Municipality of Pipestone. The towns of Pipestone and Reston were quickly established. Service to the rest of the municipality was improved with additional lines in the early 1900’s.

With the arrival of rail lines we saw the usual creation of villages centred around a railway station, elevator(s) and a cluster of services. Schools and Post Offices were then generally moved to new locations in the village.

The establishment in 1892 of the towns of Pipestone and Reston in the midst of well-populated and productive farmland led to an initial burst of commercial enterprises. The usual banks, general stores, drug and jewellery stores appeared. Some of these would naturally be housed in quickly erected-frame buildings, but soon a few noteworthy buildings such as the stone G.S. Monroe Store, the brick Berry House and Berry Block and the frame Pipestone Presbyterian Church were erected, all of which remain. Several of those built near the turn of the century created the downtown streetscape in Reston, the general outline of which does still exist today.



Reston in 1912

In most Manitoba communities, the “Establishment” era is defined by the replacement of “Pioneer” log, sod and rough lumber buildings by more ambitious constructions of milled lumber. With that definition in mind the towns in the municipality of Pipestone can be said to have almost skipped the Pioneer stage and proceeded directly to Establishment.

The rural areas of course did go through these phases. The Consolidation period can be said to have started in the early 1900’s with the erection of the several “downtown” brick blocks in Reston, the Arlington Hotel in Pipestone and retail expansion in general.

In the early years of the twentieth century Reston consolidated its position as the primary trading centre for the region while Pipestone, though a vibrant community, offered more limited commercial services.







  

Our Heritage  People / Index