Index

We Made The R.M. of Pipestone

Merchant

Ebor Businessman C.J. Craig

 

 





Clyde John Craig was the son of John Clyde Craig of Lanark, Ontario, who brought his family to the Reston district at, the turn of the century.   Although Clyde resided in the Pipestone Municipality for less than twenty years, in that time he started and operated a number of businesses, and was particularly influential in the early days of the village of Ebor.

Clyde lived in Reston In 1907 and 1908 he lived in Reston where he bought a butcher shop, shipped livestock, and homesteaded the SE of 28-8-29.

Later he started an implement business in Ebor and in Ewart. In Ebor he purchased the poolroom and enlarged it for implements.  He built a large building beside it in 1909. He had the post office and lived upstairs. He dealt in real estate and insurance, was on the school board and was weed inspector. He left Ebor for Edmonton but returned to live in the butcher shop, then tore it down to build a blacksmith shop. He also operated store for a few years.

Adapted from Ebor Echoes page 73
Adapted from Trails Along the Pipestone page 7552


 

 
The Village of Ebor

The village of Ebor was surveyed and settled beginning in 1906 with the establishment of the Reston Wolseley C.P.R. Branch line.  The village grew quickly with general stores, an implement dealership, a boarding house, a blacksmith shop and pool room soon established. The railway maintained a section house and station, and two grain elevators served the district.

 

Ebor – 1910

Left to Right: The Craig Building, Implement Shop, Livery Barn, Store, Ritchie Barn



 







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