We Made Melita

We Made Melita

Tradesperson

Harness Maker Robert Love

 

 



Robert Love came to Melita around 1900 and established himself as a leather worker making and repairing harnesses and shoes.  These were vital services in a pioneer farming community. By 1910 he was operating “The Melita Shoe Hospital” in a building which later housed “Lefty’s Grill” and is still standing on Melita’s Main Street. Before that he had operated in out of the back of the Blackwell Block, one of the original Manchester buildings that were moved to the new town.

Some time in the 1920’s Mr. Love, perhaps seeing the inevitable decline in harness making and shoe repair, became an agent for Wawanesa Insurance, taking over from another Melita business pioneer, A.B. Estlin. He continued in the insurance business until 1951 when he was bought out by Murray Cameron and the business became C. & C. Agencies.

His long service to the community in a commercial capacity was important, but it was his service in various community endeavours that perhaps was more influential.

On September 13, 1913 he purchased property for erection of a building to house moving pictures and other forms of entertainment. It was 30 feet by 90 with a 20 foot stage and a floor on a slope. Seating capacity was 400. The first moving picture was shown in December of 1913. Excerpts from the Melita Enterprise during the ensuing years are filled with ads reflecting the great variety of entertainment provided in this venue. The Opera House was destroyed by fire in 1917.

On a recreational and cultural level we see that he was a founding member of the Lawn Tennis Club as Secretary-Treasurer, as well as a founding member of the Glee Club in that same year. He was Grand Master of the I.O.O.F. in 1915. He served the Victoria United Church as Clerk of Session and Superintendent of the Sunday School for 12 years, resigning in 1946. He was Secretary-Treasurer of the Manitoba School Trustee’s Association in 1928 and also served on the Melita town council.

 
Adapted from Our First Century, page 301, 373, 553


The Old Harness Shop

Today, any sizable town needs at least one service station to keep the wheels of transportation turning. Not so long ago, any village worthy of a place name could boast at least two skilled trademen who kept horses and their equipment fit for service -- a blacksmith and a harness maker.

In days gone by, the harness maker was an important member of the community. Whenever someone rode a horse, drove a buggy or hitched up a team to plow a field, it was leather straps that quite literally "harnessed" the muscle power of the animals so that humans could control it and use it for productive work. Just as skilled mechanics are essential in the modern world, in the age of horse power the survival of the community depended to a large extent on the skill of people who knew how to work with leather. Using simple but specialized tools, the harness maker could repair broken harness (or "tack") and manufacture new equipment when required. If he were especially gifted, he might have been called upon to make buggy whips or riding crops. The epitome of the harness maker's art was saddlery -- a skill unto itself. It required an experienced artisan to repair a broken saddle, and a trained craftsman to fashion a new one.

The vocation that may be less in demand than it was a hundred years ago, but which remains critically important to anyone who works with horses, even today.

In rural Canada, the harness maker's shop sometimes did double duty as the temporary workshop of an itinerant cobbler. The business relationship between the harness maker and the shoe maker was a natural association, because both craftsmen worked with leather. A hundred years ago, most boots and shoes were custom made. In villages too small to support a full-time cobbler, folks from the neighboring farms would visit the harness shop when they came to town, choose a shoe style from drawings or from a few samples, and leave a pencil tracing of the outline of their feet. When the shoe maker made his rounds every few months, he would set to work filling the accumulated orders, often relying on nothing more than these tracings to judge the sizes! 

 
http://www.durham.net/~neilmac/harness.htm


We Made Melita