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Introduction

Overview


We have attempted to relate these site to the history of the region through a series of short articles on:

1. Historic Claims of the area
2. Analysis Critera - Where sites fit in terms of the Community Heritage
3. Community Layout
4. Notable People

The project is intended as a "Beginning" rather than a Finished Product. Local groups and individuals are invited to amend and add to it. New information is always welcome and we will make every effort to add anthing that is sent to us.

One goal is to collect as much information about our older buildings as we can. This will be found in the Sites section, and we would appreciate corrections, additions, comments and questions as we complete the project.

 
Community Historical Claims

The Municipality of Two Borders was formed in 2015 from the former Municipalities of Arthur, Albert and Edward. Aptly named, it occupied a huge expanse of land in the southwest corner of Manitoba along the borders with North Dakota and Saskatchewan. 

By the end of the settlement era three sets of railway tracks accessed the region. In the early1890’s, the CPR line had been extended from Brandon, through Napinka and Melita, then on to Elva and Pierson. In 1902 a branch of the CNR cut across the southern reaches putting Coulter and Lyleton on the map. About 1906 the CPR extended a branch from Lauder through Bernice, Bede, Broomhill and Tilston. By that time 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.

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

 

Sourisford was the first settlement in the region. Here the locals celebrate at the 1908 Pioneer Picnic.

Prior to the arrival of the Euro-settlers the region was linked to the rest of the province by two trails. The Yellowquill trail, starting near Portage and running along parts of the Souris River towards what is now the southwest corner of the province, had long been used by Aboriginal bands, Metis hunters, and fur traders. The Boundary Commission crossed the southern reaches of the territory in 1874 and the trail and crossings they left were used by the first Euro- settlers to head west from Emerson.

In 1879 The Elliotts and Goulds settled at Sourisford, the crossing of the Souris established by the Boundary Commission.

Some of these first settlers came with the hope that a rail line would soon cross the district. In the meantime they had 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.


About 1881 a little village called Manchester developed, just over a kilometre west of where Melita now sits. Services included a store, post office and blacksmith shop. Resourceful entrepreneurs promoted it as an investment opportunity during the Manitoba Boom of 1881-1882, but it remained a tiny village. When locals applied for a Post Office they were told that the name was taken and the name Melita was chosen. A few years late the little village moved to the new rail line and became a town.


 

Manchester Ad from 1882.


Later in 1881 more settlers, mainly from Ontario, approached the district from the north having taken the new CPR line west from Winnipeg as far as it went, and using oxen to haul their goods the rest of the way.  The beginning of regular railway service to Brandon brought many more in the spring of 1882, also mainly from Ontario. The area was well settled by the time the railway arrived in 1890.

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 a school which might double as a church and community hall. Copley, Broomhill, Eunola, and Menota, were such communities. 



The region’s first church: St. George’s Anglican Church, Copley, built in 1892


Across Manitoba the arrival of rail lines triggered the creation of villages, typically composed of a railway station, elevator(s) and a cluster of services. Schools and post offices were then generally moved to new locations in the village.


 
By the 1920’s roads were already beginning to replace some of the rail traffic.

The establishment in the early 1890’s of the towns of Melita, Elva and Pierson in the midst of this well-populated and productive farmland led to an initial burst of commercial enterprises. The usual banks, general stores, drug and jewellery stores appeared. Additional lines added more villages. As the CN extended westward from Waskada, Coulter and Lyleton became villages while Dalny and Cameron remained sidings. The CP line westward from Lauder created stops at Bernice and Bede, an embryo village at Broomhill, and a substantial village at Tilston.

 

Pierson in 1905.


The towns of Pierson and Melita were the first towns in the region and they remain the dominant commercial centres today. Elva Tilston, Coulter, Lyleton fulfilled an important economic and social role as did Bernice, Bede and Broomhill.

 

A fine home in Elva


The re-alignment of communities around the new villages changed the dynamics of commercial, social, and spiritual life. Religious services that had taken place in homes and schools were moved to the newly erected Churches. Grain and livestock need only be taken as far as the railway station. Shopping for consumer goods and agricultural supplies was done in local outlets. Dances, performances and all manners of entertainment and cultural activities moved to community halls. All these things and more made the village the community focal point.



Church of England, Pierson

The commercial utility of these centres faded as the improved mobility of consumers, the “rationalization” of rail lines and grain delivery, and the changing nature of farming each had its impact. Their social/cultural role as centres of community activities is still evident. Although no retail services remain in Coulter, Elva, Lyleton and Tilston, each retains some of its village character.

 

Lyleton’s Main Street

The exploitation of regional oil reserves has created a renewed economic activity in the area, the full results of which are yet to be seen.

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





Analysis Criteria

Aboriginal Peoples

When the first settlers arrived in the region it was obvious to them that they were not the first inhabitants of this land. Native people often passed through and evidence of past inhabitants was more visible in those days, be it in the form of campsites and prairie trails. Settlers often encountered and interacted with the Dakota people from the Turtle Mountain and Oak Lake areas.

Settlers and Defining Culture

Anticipating the great settlement boom of the 1880’s a trickle of adventurous souls lead the way into this land in the late 1870’s.  The Souris River valley was attractive in that it provided ample water as well logs for building and fuel.

Until 1889 settlement focused on the settlements at Sourisford and Melita and scattered post offices such as Butterfield and Napinka. Settlers first approached the district taking the Boundary Commission Trail from Emerson. When rail service reached Brandon in late 1881 that route became popular. Local histories indicate that most of these early settlers came from Ontario.

Other Settlement/Ethnic Groups

The establishment of the railway though the region eventually altered the predominantly Anglo-Saxon settlement somewhat, but many Two Borders families can trace their roots back to Ontario. 

Economic Engines

Farming formed the economic basis of virtually all prairie settlements but many communities have succeeded in establishing relatively small-scale but significant economic engines, generally related to agriculture and local resource development. 

Commercial Growth

The establishment in 1890 of the towns of Melita and Pierson in the midst of well-populated and productive farmland led to an initial burst of commercial enterprises. The usual banks, general stores, drug and jewelry stores appeared. Some of these would naturally be housed in quickly erected-frame buildings, but because the economic importance of the towns seemed quite secure, many substantial commercial and residential buildings appeared in those first years.




Community Form and Layout

The layouts of the towns of Pierson. Elva, Lyleton, Coulter, and Tilston were a direct response to the railway line to which each owes its existence. 

Pierson

The railway runs west-east and the town was surveyed to conform. Broadway Avenue, which quickly evolved into the “Main” business street runs perpendicular to the tracks and away from the station. That street soon housed a wide variety of retail and service outlets. More avenues spread to the east and west to accommodate a rising need for residences.

The orientation of streets in a railway town often conforms to the direction of the rail line. If the line passes through in a southwesterly direction, a “Railway Avenue” will run parallel to it – with a grid of side streets conforming to the orientation. The alternative is to ignore the direction of the railway and to orient streets in a north-south, east west grid.

Elva

The streets in Elva use the former system, with two avenues oriented to the southwesterly direction of the rail line and seven streets intersecting to form a long narrow rectangle. Railway Avenue became the primary business street.

Lyleton

The rail line runs in an east west direction through Lyleton allowing both an orientation with the rail line and an orderly north-south and east west grid of streets. In this case one of the “side” streets, Souris Street, became the location for most businesses.

Tilston

Tilston also has a Railway Avenue running east-west with commercial activity primarily on a side street (Morris).

Coulter

The rail runs in a southwesterly direction through Coulter. Two avenues run parallel to it, one on each side of the track and two short side streets complete the layout for this tiny village.


Notable Citizens in the Municipality of Two Borders


Breakey, Norman

Inventor of the Paint Roller, grew up in Pierson. His family started one of the early Boarding Houses.

Dobbyn, John

Mr. Dobbyn had  “Dobbyn City” surveyed on 36-3-27 in anticipation of a coming rail line.
 
Dodds, G.L.

Mr. Dodds had a Hardware & General store in Manchester. He moved to the new townsite in 1890. He served as a Land Agent for CPR and Canada North West Land Co. He sold farms and traveled to Ontario to solicit settlers.

Dandy, James

First Postmaster, noted businessman, community leader in Pierson.

Dann, Henry

Postmaster at Butterfield, 1884.

Duncan, James

James Duncan worked as a blacksmith at Manchester in the early 1880’s.

Elliot, Gordon

Mr. Gordon worked with Prof. Montgomery of Toronto in 1913-14 he while he was at Sourisford, excavating mounds of the “Mound Builders”. Two years later worked with W.B. Nickerson of the Archaeological Survey looking at mounds in the Snowflake, Alexander & Arden areas.


Elliot, J.B.

Sourisford pioneer of 1879. Operated a Stopping House.

Fulton,

The Fulton family operated a cooperative farm which the locals called “Fultonville”, northwest of Pierson.

Gould, Alf

Sourisford Pioneer, Postmaster. Opened stores in Sourisford, Coulter and Pierson.

Henderson, Joseph

First Reeve of the R.M. of Edward, 1905 – 1907

Graham, R.M

Mr. Graham arrived in 1882 and set up a store and post office in 1883, followed by a blacksmith’s shop that he rented out. The site became the village of Manchester – soon changed to Melita. In 1891 he bought a store in Melita from Coughill.

Kilkenny, William

Built and operated the Broomhill store in 1908. In the Kilkenny family until it closed in 1964.

Large, Captain Rolston

Captain Large built the Empress of Ireland, a steam powered boat that saw service on the Souris River in 1909, 1910.


Livingston, Dr. A.M. 

Dr. Livingston had property near Melita / Manchester (Livingston’s Crossing?)

Lyle, Andrew

Postmaster at Lyleton, 1890

Morrison, Dr. John

First resident Doctor in Pierson, 1891. Appointed Provincial Coroner in 1906.

Pierson, Jean Louis

Dutch financier, and C.P.R investor.

Thomas, W.F.

Mr. Thomas was a pioneer and ferry service operator. He served as the original clerk of the new Municipality of Arthur – a position he held for nearly 50 years.  Mr. Thomas was first settler to build a house in the area (1881).

Salisbury, John

John Salisbury homesteaded E 32-4-26 in 1883

Sinclair, Dr.

Dr. Sinclair developed the townsite of Manchester on 32-3-26.

Williams, John

Mr. Williams was the earliest settler on the “Penninsula” south of Melita. He was a Councilor (1882), Reeve, and MLA (1907). He became Minister of Agriculture in 1922.
 
West, Charles

Charles was living in a dugout shanty on the west bank of the Souris River when Walter F. Thomas, James Kinley and Alfred Dugay arrived in 1879.