We Made The R.M. of Pipestone

Medical Services

Nurse Eliza (Challener) Smith

 

 
 



Eliza Challener was a young nurse who had come west from Toronto in response to an invitation from Reston's doctor, A. B. Chapman. One of her assignments was looking after a man whose disposition was reportedly unpredictable if not uncontrollable. He might be violent. Consequently, the municipal council decided that the attending nurse should herself be attended by a man during her night duty at the sick man's house. Reluctant to delegate the task, a young Councillor named A.E. Smith took duty himself. While the patient got expert care, Mr. Smith made Eliza's acquaintance and, before long, married her.

Their four children were not yet teenagers — in fact, the youngest was only four — when the 1919 influenza epidemic placed heavy demands on Mrs. Smith, one of very few fully qualified nurses in the district. For a time she quarantined herself, living in a shed at the farm, separated from her family to diminish the risk of spreading the dreaded killer-flu of her
patients.

The Smiths' friendship with Dr. and Mrs. Chapman paralleled their mutual interest in community affairs: both families took leading roles in municipal government, recreation and the local fair among other community enterprises.

In 1904 Mrs. Smith was the first lady to curl in Reston, and it is reported that she still would throw a few rocks into the 1970’s.

Adapted from Trails Along the Pipestone, page 509, 602















Our Heritage  People / Index