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Mrs. & Mrs. Joseph Hicks

Mr. Joseph Hicks was born in Manotick, Ontario, on January 6th, 1859.  His father, Wellington Hicks, was Dutch and came to Canada from Holland with his father as a boy.  His mother, Cecelia Lane, was Pennsylvania Dutch.

Joe Hicks was a younger member of a family of ten, five boys and five girls.  As a young lad, Joe was always fighting, so his father sent him for boxing lessons.  One day while practising, Joe lost her temper and lashed out at his trainer.  The trainer gave him a real boxing beating, and Joe never fought anyone again.  Thereafter he had wonderful control of his temper.

While a young boy, his father strapped a pair of wooden skates to his boots, carried him out on to the Rideau Canal, set him down on the ice and told him to skate.  So with perseverance and bumps, he skated.

In 1880, he left home and went to Minneapolis and was cook in a bake shop.

In 1882 he went West with the C.P.R. construction crew when they were building the main line across Canada.  He started working with horses, but the foreman insisted that he change and be the cook.  He stayed on as cook till the crew moved on from Calgary, then he quit and came back to Manitoba.

He lived two and one half miles south of Ninga with his brother, Amos, and sister, Elizabeth, for several years.  Later, about 1886, he took up a homestead S.E. 18-3-18, one mile south of Ninga.

On January 29th, 1890, he married Eleanor Rigby, daughter of Captain John Rigby.  They lived in a one-room frame house.  They had both oxen and horses.  One day a big ox, called Jumbo, came to the house door and somehow or another got his big wide horns through the door and was stuck.  Mrs. Hicks (Nellie) who always made the best of everything and met all emergencies with faith and hope, just took  hold of the ox’s big horns and twisted his head till the horns were almost perpendicular and then shoved Jumbo back out of the door.

Mr. Hicks had one of the first threshing outfits in the district and spent the falls threshing for the farmers.

Three sons were born on this homestead.

In 1897 he moved to NInga and operated a butcher shop for about five years.  While in town he became a member of the Methodist church board and worked on the board till the church was built and paid for.  A daughter and a son, Leslie, were born in Ninga.  Then Joe Hicks bought the Charlie Seefield farm just one quarter of a mile south of NInga and farmed and lived there till he retired and moved into town again in 1936.

Four more sons were born on this farm.

In 1914 Wellie and Clarence went to Shaunavon, Saskatchewan, to run a garage and taxi business.  In 1916 Clarence enlisted with the 100th Battalion and went overseas.  He was killed in action at Loos, France, in 1917.

Once again Joe was in the butcher business.  Harry Guy returned from overseas and ran the butcher shop for a few years.  Also Lawrence Thompson had a turn on it.  Then Mr. Hicks again, and finally he sold out about 1921 or ’22.

In 1915 Joe Hicks pioneered a herd of five hundred head of cattle in a pasture at Lake William, and there have been cattle pastured in there ever since.  The first herdsman was son, Garnet.

Mr. Hicks had little education.  He was a councillor for several years.  He was a healthy man, a good father and husband.  He liked music, and visitors were always welcome and were invited to share what food they had.

Mr. Hicks often said, “No one should live alone, and children should never be left alone.”

Mrs. Hicks as girl had to help her father with the farm work and farm chores.  She had to walk several miles to Oak Ridge School.  As a girl she often had to go and help the neighbouring women.  Church was held in different homes.
One fall, Eleanor Rigby was standing watching the grain pour down from a thresher into a bin and whoops, she landed right in the bin of grain.  A Mr. Joseph Hicks had thrown her in and later took her for his wife.

Mrs. Hicks was president of the Ninga W.C.T.U. for many years.  She was a good mother and no matter how busy, she always found time to caress a hurt child or read or tell a story to a sobbing wee one.  Many cooking tricks she learned from her husband.  Her home was open to all who called.

Mr. Hicks died on April 8th, 1947.  The reverend B. W. Allison had the funeral service and he said, “Mr. Hicks was one man who really lived up to the poem, “Let me live by the side of the road And be a friend to man.’”
Mrs. Hicks died January 9th, 1951.  She was buried on a beautiful sunny morning with a lovely mirage to the north.  She always loved the sunrises and sunsets and mirages.

The Hicks family, eight boys and one girl, all joined the Methodist church.  Three of the boys have served terms as Sunday School superintendents, and most of the family have been Sunday School teachers.  Agnes was Sunday School and church organist for five years and then for several periods later.  Leslie, Gerald, and Albert all attended Manitoba Agricultural College.  Eddie took normal teachers’ training.  Garnet also enlisted in the army in the first war and played in the band.  Lorne, the youngest, joined the Canadian Navy in the last war.  All members of this family but Wellie played in a band or orchestra at some time.  Wellie tried music, too, but a violin, and took a few lessons.  All the family were skaters, as their mother and dad had been.  Most of the boys played hockey and baseball.

All members of this family are living in south-western Manitoba, but Wellie lives at Creston, B. C.

By Mrs. Fred Orriss (Agnes Hicks, Boissevain, with some corrections by Garnet Hicks, Killarney

Not mentioned, remains of an old lime kiln.

Children of Joseph and Eleanor Hicks:  John Wellington; Elias Garnet; Clarence Wilfred; Frances May Agnes (Mrs. Fred Orriss); Leslie Ernest; Gilbert Gerald; Henry Albert; Edmond Cuthbert, and Lorne Hector.