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RIGHT: The veranda of the " Brick House" on the Sar-nia Ranch, four miles south of Walsh. The house was built in 1905 or earlier. There were three main floors and an attic, where dances were held. J . A . Grant, seated at the right, came from Sarnia, Ontario. He drilled some of the early gas wells in Medicine Hat area, around 1890. He also test- drilled the Gait coal beds at Lethbridge before the Gait Company developed its mines. He later took a steam- engine drilling rig to Waterton Lake and started to drill on " Oil Creek" on the way to Red Rock Canyon. The rig, the first in the area, burned, so he went into sheep ranching and later raised cattle and horses. Seated with Mr. Grant is Mrs. Grant's mother, his daughter Mrs. Beat-tie and his grandson Jack. Mrs. Grant is on the veranda. The rug in front was made from a coyote hide tanned by Metis. MIDDLE LEFT: Charles Adair's two- storey house of squared logs and homemade shingles built on the banks of the Pembina River at Sunnybend. MIDDLE RIGHT: Water closet, biffy, back house, toilet, little house out back — by any name it would smell the same. It was in common use until the 1950s. Eaton's catalogue furnished the tissue. BOTTOM: The Doc Hays dairy farm south of Carstairs 1918. Milking began at 4: 00 A . M . and 120 cows were milked by hand by eight men. 118
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Yesterday |
Subject | Publications; AWI; Agriculture ; Rural |
Description | Yesterday - A Pictorial History of Agriculture in Alberta |
Language | en |
Format | application/pdf |
Type | text |
Source | Alberta Women's Institutes |
Identifier | awi0811107 |
Date | 1980 |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Description
Title | Page 120 |
Format | application/pdf |
Source | AWI Collection |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Transcript | RIGHT: The veranda of the " Brick House" on the Sar-nia Ranch, four miles south of Walsh. The house was built in 1905 or earlier. There were three main floors and an attic, where dances were held. J . A . Grant, seated at the right, came from Sarnia, Ontario. He drilled some of the early gas wells in Medicine Hat area, around 1890. He also test- drilled the Gait coal beds at Lethbridge before the Gait Company developed its mines. He later took a steam- engine drilling rig to Waterton Lake and started to drill on " Oil Creek" on the way to Red Rock Canyon. The rig, the first in the area, burned, so he went into sheep ranching and later raised cattle and horses. Seated with Mr. Grant is Mrs. Grant's mother, his daughter Mrs. Beat-tie and his grandson Jack. Mrs. Grant is on the veranda. The rug in front was made from a coyote hide tanned by Metis. MIDDLE LEFT: Charles Adair's two- storey house of squared logs and homemade shingles built on the banks of the Pembina River at Sunnybend. MIDDLE RIGHT: Water closet, biffy, back house, toilet, little house out back — by any name it would smell the same. It was in common use until the 1950s. Eaton's catalogue furnished the tissue. BOTTOM: The Doc Hays dairy farm south of Carstairs 1918. Milking began at 4: 00 A . M . and 120 cows were milked by hand by eight men. 118 |
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