Saskatchewan Gen Web Project - SASKATCHEWAN AND ITS PEOPLE by JOHN HAWKES Vol 1I 1924


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SASKATCHEWAN AND ITS PEOPLE
1924



         

THE BARR COLONY. (con't)


humorist, and the colonists sensibly enriched his stock of stories. He went in again the first fall, and travelled over five hundred miles in order to see how the settlers were fixed for the winter. Many of the colonists were away working and many had left. He reported about 850 in the main colony at Lloydminster and 250 outside the reserve; at Jack Fish Lake were 114; at Bresaylor 39, and at Elgin Hill, south of Battleford 39. He thought about twenty families would need assistance, in the winter. He said the average broken was about two and a half acres; some had thirty or forty acres broken, but many had merely a kitchen garden. He put the number in the movement at 1,600.

Mr. Speers made arrangements for certain families to be accommodat- ed in the police barracks at Battleford. Good, large, well banked tents (previously referred to) with big stoves were to be provided pending the erection of a large immigration building, the material for which would be hauled from Fort Pitt. There appears to have been delay owing to the low water in the Saskatchewan, on which river the material was to be floated down to the Fort. A good many settlers were working near by on a grade of the Canadian Northern Railway. Hay was short; enough had not been put up in the first instance, and a good deal had been destroyed by prairie fires.

Much more might be written about this great colony but we will only add that it stands out as an example of what British tenacity and endur- ance can achieve in the face of inexperience and other difficulties. The hamlet of 1901 is now a thriving town of fifteen hundred inhabitants and is in the centre of one of the best farmed districts in Canada.

We are informed that Bishop Lloyd has it in contemplation to write a history of the Barr Colony to be published in book form. We are sure if His Lordship carries out his intention, the public will have an inter- esting book almost unique of its kind. Bibliography follows:



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THE STORY
OF
SASKATCHEWAN
AND ITS PEOPLE



By JOHN HAWKES
Legislative Librarian



Volume II
Illustrated



CHICAGO - REGINA
THE S.J. CLARKE PUBLISHING COMPANY
1924




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