Our Heritage  People / Index

We Made Carberry


Notable People from Our Past


THE THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE who have made Carberry and area their home, since its inception in 1882, 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 booklet recognizes and honours these people.

On the following pages you will encounter the collection of people who have made a real difference. We have chosen to explore and describe these people through a  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 Carberry can be effectively and succinctly defined. In doing so, by necessity, we have of course left out many who also contributed.


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 140 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. Places like Carberry, and the smaller rural communities surrounding it in 1900, were active, lively and fun.

Many changes have come about since that time. The country has been transformed from the bare prairie, to a partially wooded landscape with well built, homes, excellent roads, hydro service, telephones and the latest in digital communications.

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 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 uphold-
ing and carrying on the 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. 



The region in 1876, just prior to the arrival of the first settlers



The region in 1892

A Short Historical Sketch

The town of Carberry, in many ways a classic railway town, has some interesting and important claims that set it apart from its contemporaries. Like many other towns established along the C.P.R. Main Line its location was dictated by the railway and various scattered established businesses had to be re-established along the line. But with Carberry the C.P.R. actually established the town twice, moving the station when land speculation threatened railway profits and control.  When the railway arrived a town called DeWinton was started about 2 km east of the current Carberry site. Stores, a post office and hotel were built. When the CPR discovered that some of its representative were engaging in land speculation for personal profit it quickly (overnight it is said) moved the town to its current location.

Although many towns are named after, or by, C.P.R. directors, Carberry may was likely the last town named by J.J. Hill before he left the C.P.R. to concentrate on his American interests.  Like many prairie towns, its economy was, and still is, based on serving the surrounding agricultural settlement, but Carberry has supplemented that base with other varied enterprises and one particularly large-scale economic endeavor. Most towns had a consolidation era during which a substantial main street business district was quickly lined with two-story commercial buildings, but Carberry has retained both the scope of its commercial district and in many cases the buildings themselves. And while many towns with have a few dominant business leaders who helped shape the commercial landscape, Carberry had one in particular, James White, that left a lasting impact.

By 1879 several people had taken up homesteads in the “Big Plain” region and a post office was established at Fairview and operated by John Baron, a few kilometres north of Carberry, and soon there were settlers scattered through the region. Once the exact location of the line was evident, a series of towns were established between Portage La Prairie and Calgary - “Railway Towns” in the truest sense. Fairview was on the line of the preliminary survey but when that survey was changed or fine-tuned as the track approached, the new town of De Winton, one of the first of that era’s “Railway Towns” sprang up in 1882.



Winnipeg Daily Times, April 5, 1882

By January of 1882 De Winton lots were being advertised for sale in Winnipeg newspapers. The C.P.R. in this case countered that speculation by moving its station. De Winton soon became Carberry, a few kilometers to the west, and entered its early period of rapid growth. Like many other towns established along the C.P.R. Main various scattered established businesses had to be re-established along the line.



Early businesses, with the Western Hotel to the left.

The town grew quickly and steadily in the security of its ready access to markets and supplies. A headline in the Winnipeg Daily Sun of October 20, 1882 proclaimed: “A Million Bushels of Grain Harvested in the Big Plain” and the story reported that Mr. Perley had built a hotel and that the town had “large stores by Mssrs. Perley, R.F Lyons, Wise and Dalton and Smith & McCall.” The report also mentions ”two lumber yards, feed and sale stables, blacksmith shops, a doctor and nearly all the requirements of a growing town”.  The settlers, predominantly from Ontario brought their protestant religion and practical business sense and applied both to their new surroundings. The consolidation era, which might be said to run from 1895 until 1915, saw considerable commercial expansion, much of it lead by James White a contractor and businessman responsible for many fine brick buildings, including two notable churches, and for a host of commercial enterprises including a Sash and Door Factory and a foundry. Other entrepreneurs such as Dave Kerr and Elias Jones who invented, and manufactured the “Jones Stacker and Blower” contributed to economic diversity.

Mr. White and his contemporaries have left their mark in the well-defined commercial downtown that exists largely intact today with a two block long “Heritage District” recently established to pay tribute to the towns past and to consolidate its future.


Sources

The stories presented on the following pages were mainly sourced from a close reading of our three excellent local history books:

Carberry Plains, Century 1, 1982, Carberry History Committee.

The Carberry Plains, 75 Years of Progress, 1959, Carberry Agricultural Society.

The People of the Big Plain, Carberry - North Cypress, 2007, Carberry North Cypress History Book Committee





  

Our Heritage  People / Index