Family History Collection  -   Index



Frederick Fairhall

By Mrs. Alex. Mitchell

Mr. Tom Greenway, who afterwards became premier of Manitoba, brought settlers to Manitoba.  Emerson was the destination by rail.  From there, my father, Frederick Fairhall, and family travelled to Crystal City by covered wagon, where they lived a year, and where I saw my first Red River cart which the Indians used.

As the people who owned the house we were living in wished to occupy their dwelling, the Blackwell family invited us to stay with them at Long River.  My mother assisted with the household tasks.

When our shanty on the south half of Section 10-4-17 was finished we moved there.  Later on a log house was erected on the same land.

The first wheat grown was sold for thirty cents a bushel.  Flour was obtained by taking wheat to Gregory’s mill on the Souris River.  It made lovely bread.  Wheat for sale had to be taken to Brandon, the nearest market.  Father and a neighbour, Mr. Wesley, would take two loads of wheat in sacks to market.  It took the price of one load to pay expenses for the two.
James Baldwin had a small store in his house on his farm north of our place.

Our first home missionary was the Reverend Andrew Stewart who afterwards became Dr. Stewart, a professor of Wesley College in Winnipeg.  My father was a local preacher.  He conducted funeral for two different children, in the absence of the minister.  Divine services were held in the home of Mr. Robert Squires, on the farm now owned by Mr. Joe Pelechaty.  Later in school houses.
The Reverend William Elliot was our next minister.  He afterwards went to Japan as a missionary, with his wife who was a Miss Robinson.

Our first school was Fairfield, still standing, and Father was the first secretary-treasurer.  Our first teacher was William Rodgers.  School was only held for six months in the year, owing to the cold  weather in the winter.  Children who attended were the Fishers, Burns, Squires, and three from my home.  Later the Worden children who lived where Mr. Joe Pelechaty lives now, near the school.
Mr. Fisher owned an organ.  One night the family brought the organ along to our home, and we had a party.  His son, Fred, played the organ.

Mr. Worden used to get barrels of apples from Ontario.  These were a great treat to neighbour children in those days.

Thomas M. Fairhall

Thomas Fairhall was born on April 20, 1965, son to Mrs. and Mrs. Frederick Fairhall of Lucan, Ontario.  The Fairhall family was a large one, Frederick having married twice.  His first wife died after bearing four children.  From the marriage with his second wife, Sarah Long, ten children were born and eight raised to maturity.  They lived on a small farm near the village of Lucan, suffering the usual hardships of a large family getting a living on a small Ontario farm.  Frederick Fairhall was a man of very deep religious convictions and he endeavored to bring his family up with a true spiritual training.  Thomas Fairhall was the second oldest son and the third oldest member of the family.  He was my father and I am endeavoring to tell his life history from stories I remember him telling us of the trials, the enjoyment, the experiences of his life.  These stories were told to me long ago and I have to depend on my memory which is not too good, for his life story.  Many important things will be left out simply because I have forgotten them.

I can remember him telling of his early school days in a small rural school in Ontario.  The standard of education in those days was very low and the young men worked out in the summer and went to school in the winter.  Many young men were still going to public school when they were seventeen or eighteen, most schools were taught by men teachers who believed in the rule of using the cane and asking questions later.  My father told of his fear regarding the feuds between the older pupils and the school teachers.  He remembered the teacher trying to cane a pupil who was much bigger than himself; the cane was used until the blood started, then the pupil grabbed the stick and broke it over the teacher’s head.  All this made life in school quite unbearable for my father and after passing into grade four my grandfather gave him the choice of continuing in school or helping him on the farm.  Needless to say, my father chose the latter and for the rest of his days felt that he had made the wrong choice.

My father told many stories of Ontario.  The maple sugar season where his job was to lead the horse drawing a stone boat with a barrel on it from tree to tree and dump the sap into the barrel, taking it to a big vat where the sap was boiled in what they called “sugaring off.”  In the harvest season his job was to gather up grain cut by a sickle and bind it into sheaves, in turn the sheaves were stooked and after curing were loaded into wagons and drawn in to the barn floor where the grain was threshed.  He told of the twelfth of July celebrations where the Orangemen held large parades led by drum and fife bands.  Although my father was just a boy and not an Orangeman he was allowed to beat the drum on occasion.  He also told of knowing the Donley family, a notorious family of what was known as the Black Irish.  The family consisted of quite a few boys noted for their lawlessness. The mother apparently encouraged them and felt the only way a son of hers could become a real man was to kill another in a gunfight.  Jack Donley was one of the worst of the boys and in a robbery attempt killed one of the business men of Lucan.  A police posse started a man hunt for Jack and he was eventually captured by William Hodgins, the town policeman.  Mr. Hodgins later migrated to Manitoba and farmed six miles north of Killarney.

About this time the Hon. Thomas Greenway, who was then Minister of Immigration, came back to Ontario giving glowing accounts of the possibilities of farming in Manitoba.  That province was just opening up and of course, the people of Ontario felt that Manitoba was indeed the wild and woolly west so most of the natives, including my grandfather, were skeptical about Mr. Greenway’s reports.  However, after seeing some potatoes and samples of wheat which Mr. Greenway had with him, and hearing that land was practically given away, my grandfather began to have some second thoughts.  His family was much too large for the farm they were living on and he felt they would have to move.  The family discussed the situation and decided to split up.  The children of the first marriage were grown up by this time, and decided to remain in Ontario.  The children of the second marriage all agreed to come to Manitoba.  In the year 1881 when my father was 16 years old, my grandfather and grandmother, with all their family, gathered up their belongings and started out for the west.  My memory is a bit faulty here, but I believe they came on a mixed train to Emerson and drove by team and wagon from Emerson to Crystal City where the Land Titles office was located.  My father told of an odd experience the day they landed at Emerson.  Apparently when packing their belongings at Lucan, my grandfather felt it expedient to have their money put in various pieces in their luggage in case of theft, so a certain amount was packed in each child’s bundle.  On arriving at Emerson, grandfather was taking stock of all their goods and could not find the money in Aunt Martha’s (Mrs. Tom Hillier) bundle.  The whole family searched through everything and as the amount of money was considerable at that time, they all felt it a terrible loss when it was not located.  My grandfather always held family worship every evening before going to bed and my father remembered him praying for some light to be given them.  They all went to bed and during the night, grandfather had a dream.  In the dream he was told where to look for the money.  In the morning, he went directly to one of the trunks and found the money exactly where he had been told to look.  That, said my father, was the first time he was sure that a prayer could be answered.

On arriving at Crystal City grandfather and his oldest son George Fairhall applied for homesteads in what is now the Killarney district.  At that time there were no railroads and it was only a guess where they would go.  The railroad officials had made two surveys; one called the north survey, which would send the railroads north west from Crystal City bordering the south side of the lakes Louise, Lorne and Pelican going west through what is now known as the Rowland district.  The south survey was where the C.P.R. eventually placed its tracks.  My grandfather and Uncle George decided on Section 12-3-17, on the south  survey.  The clerk at the Land Titles Office felt the north survey would be where the railroad would eventually be built so my grandfather changed his mind and decided to take land on the north survey, settling on sec. 10-4-17. It served to show how the element of chance, or luck, prevailed.  The railroad was placed on the south survey and my grandfather’s farm was eight miles from town instead of two if he had insisted on his first choice.

Uncle George Fairhall was handy with tools so he took on a job as carpenter while my grandfather and my father did the settling duties on sec. 10-4-17.  Father told of the trying experiences driving from Crystal City to the homestead.  Apparently 1881 was a year of much moisture.  The rivers were all flooding, causing great difficulties in crossing them.  Grandfather and father had a team of horses hitched to a wagon with a hayrack on it; on the rack was a walking plow, a stove and the necessary articles to get a sod stable built.  When they came to a river, they had to unhitch the horses and father would swim them across dragging a rope.  Grandfather stayed on the wagon and tried to keep everything intact while it was towed across.  By the time they got to sec. 10, grandfather was nearly played out and felt they had made a very bad move coming to Manitoba.  Before they got the things off the rack and turned it over for a shelter it was raining as my dad said “cats and dogs.”  They got the stove going but grandfather took and chill and could not get warm. Father remembered seeing a homestead about seven miles south east, so he decided they had better try to get back to that place.  They hitched the team to the wagon bunk and got to the only house within miles which turned out to be owned by the Mason brothers, and where Byron Mason later raised his fine family.  Dad said he was never go glad to see any place in his life.  They stayed with the Masons seven days and it rained every day.  It was getting late in the season so Dad and grandfather did what was absolutely necessary on sec. 10 and drove back to Crystal City for the winter.  Dad spent the winter working on the farm of Hon. Thomas Greenway, three quarters of a mile south of Crystal City.  During that winter Uncle George fell from a scaffold and was killed.  Grandfather went to the Land Titles office to see if my father could take over Uncle George’s homestead even though he was not old enough.  The Land Titles officer suggested it would be quite in order for my father to do the settling duties on the homestead and when he came of age would receive the title.  That is how Frederick Fairhall got title to the south half of sec. 10-4-17, and Thomas Fairhall got title to the north half.

The team of horses Grandfather had brought from Ontario were not very heavy and they traded them in for a yoke of oxen.  Dad said if any animal could cause a man to swear, an ox was it.  He told about the oxen getting hot and heading straight for a slough, no matter what he did.  How he would throw stones at them until they decided to come out.  However, he got so he could handle them quite well, at least he must have because he was hired to plow out the road allowance marker for that district.

Life on the prairie was pretty rugged but according to my father was thoroughly enjoyed by the Fairhall family.  The stories told by Thomas Greenway were quite true and the wheat and vegetables grown on sec. 10 were quite satisfactory to my grandfather.  The first two crops were hauled to Brandon by ox team.  I believe it took four days to make the round trip, and took the price of one load to pay the expenses for two loads.  Father lived with the rest of the family during the early part of his homesteading, but finally bult himself a log house and batched with a school teacher by the name of William Taylor who was teaching school to make enough money to take an engineering course.  Dad was greatly interested in engineering and felt that if he had only taken more schooling, he could have become a railroad engineer. He also told of having a young chap by the name of Hugh Townsend living with him one winter.  Hugh was a professional boxer and they turned the old shack into a gymnasium where all the young fellows of the district came to try out their skills.  Dad was an ardent ball player and although never classed as a top notcher, he thoroughly enjoyed the game. I can still see him taking up a bat when he was nearly seventy years old and wanting to see if he could still hit the ball.

In the fall of 1898, my father felt it was time he gave up bachelorhood and persuaded Georgina McCulloch to share married life with him, so on Dec. 27, 1898 they were married and lived on the old homestead until the fall of 1938.  That fall I decided to get married and my father and mother purchased a home in Killarney where they lived until my father died in 1941.

During his life farming in Manitoba my father had his share of ups and downs.  He told of the prairie fires that swept across the open grassland and endangered the homesteads.  How he and his brother-in-law, Thomas Hillier, spent all one winter cutting logs in Turtle Mountain and drawing them a distance of thirty miles in order to build their first big stock barns.  I can remember when our barn burned to the ground in the fall of 1923, Dad was on his way to Killarney with a load of wheat.  Uncle Will McKnight heard about the fire and he jumped into his car, met Dad and brought him home.  The only thing he said when he viewed the wreckage was, “There goes a lot of hard work.” 

I can remember him going to town one winter day to get some coal and to bring my sister Irene home from High School.  One of those quick blizzards came up shortly after they left town at 4:30 p.m.  The storm was so thick we could not see the barn – fifty yards from the house – and at 9:30 p.m. Dad and Irene were still not home.  People were phoning from town equally worried along with us.  Dad was an excellent navigator in a storm but the team was young and lost the road.  Dad figured that if he kept the wind at a certain point he would hit our fence and get his bearings.  However, unknown to him, the wind had changed, and instead of reaching our fence his team was wandering out in the middle of sec. II.  By this time they were nearly played out and Dad decided it would be wise to wrap up and stay where they were till morning as it was not too cold.  He got out of the sleigh while the horses were getting their wind, and found a bluff of trees which he thought he recognized as being about a mile from home.  When he saw this bluff he was practically sure of his directions so he kept going, realizing the wind could have changed.  Shortly after 10 p.m. we heard a sound of harness rattling and I ran out in time to see the team, looking like grey ghosts, come past the corner of the house.  Needless to say, we all breathed sighs of relief, and Dad again said that something kept telling him to keep going when he decided to stay on the prairie.  It was thirty below zero next morning.
Thomas Fairhall lived seventy-six years.  During those years he put a lot into them and left very fine memories when he passed on.  He took a very active part in church, school, and municipal affairs, and above all, left his family with the assurance that, as an all around good father, he was “tops.”

These are a few memorable incidents from my father’s life.  I am sorry I cannot recall more.

George Fairhall