It all Started in Rivers – The North American Lumber Story

 

 
 
News of plans of the Grand Trunk Pacific to build a railway across the Prairies was well reported across North America. By 1906 work was underway and businessmen from far and wide saw opportunities. The general route was known and there came a time when one could be pretty sure that a new town would arise near the crossing of the Little Saskatchewan River. Several Manitobans made plans to move and get in on the ground floor so to speak.

Some came from Brandon and Rapid City. R.S. McKenzie came from all the way from Portage.

Even farther away, in the northwestern corner of North Dakota, plans were being made. Edward A. Konantz, owned the Citizen’s Lumber Company of Bow Bells. In 1906 he enlisted the help of Charles Lee as a general Manager and established the North American Lumber & Supply Company.

As the name might suggest, they had big plans.

So while it might seem odd that they picked the newly conceived town of Rivers in Manitoba, to open their first Lumber Yard, it actually made a lot of sense. The town was destined to be someplace. Spots on the new rail line made it easy to get supplies and there would be a lot of building going on.

That’s the way it worked out in Rivers. In 1907 it was barely a town at all – but that meant that it had a lot of growing to do. By the fall of 1908, Rivers had dozens of new buildings, the new lumber yard was doing a great business, and by the end of that year the partners had established 16 more yards, with a total of 19 yards in place by the spring of 1909.
The first yard at Rivers was located on First Avenue and opened in 1907, before Grand Trunk Railroad accepted shipments into Rivers. Materials both for construction of buildings and for stock were hauled from Wheatland. They started making sales at Rivers after mid-summer of that year. Charles Lee remained as General Manger for many years.

 

This view of Rivers in 1908 shows the North American Lumber Co., near the centre, on Second Street.

North American Lumber suffered through the Great Depression along with the rest of Canada, but by 1936, 56 yards had survived the worst part of the depression.

Through the ‘40s and ‘50s, the company continued to grow and diversify, establishing even more of a presence in rural Manitoba and Brandon.

 

The original buildings were replaced in the early 1950’s, and when the operation was taken over by Home Hardware in 2018 it was the oldest established business in Rivers.


*Adapted from The North American Lumber Co. Website
http://www.mywestman.ca/community-news/6787-canada-s-1st-north-american-lumber-started-in-rivers