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Last updateWed, 24 Apr 2024 4pm

Pioneer Trail sewers make pillows for cardiac patients

    A Drumheller man who spent time in the cardiology unit of the Foothills Hospital in Calgary found a way to give back, and received some help from skilled sewing fingers at the Pioneer Trail Centre.
    Leroy Graham spent time at the ward to get a double bypass operation. He was talking to one of the nurses and he asked what they needed, and she told him huggy pillows.
    Huggy pillows are just that. These are pillows for recovering patients to hug, not only for comfort, but to keep the breastbone immobilized after surgery.
    He told the nurse he would see what he could do. Knowing he was from Drumheller, she requested the pillows have dinosaurs on them.
    There is a mighty contingent of sewers at the Pioneer Trail Centre who are pretty handy with a needle and thread. They have also been very generous  in making items for those in need over the years.
    They snapped up the last of the dinosaur flannel material from Bits and Pieces in downtown Drumheller and began making pillows.
    Last week, they delivered 22 hand-crafted huggy pillows to the Cardiac Ward at the Foothills Hospital.

(l-r) Daisy Smith, Leroy Graham and Barb Barker show off the pillows made by sewers at the Pioneer Trail Centre. Missing is Barbara Tedrick.


Morrin SADD groups spreads awareness on White Out day

    On December 19 the Morrin School Students Against Drinking & Driving (SADD) Chapter held their second annual White Out Day event.
    A White Out Day is an event that is meant to provide a visual of just how many people are lost to drinking and driving throughout the course of a day. In North America, one life is lost every 23 minutes due to impaired driving (roughly 3 per hour).
    Students in Grades 7-12 (and a few staff members) volunteered to have their names put into a random draw to be selected to represent actual victims of impaired driving from all over North America.
    Throughout the course of the day, students were randomly selected every 23 minutes and their faces were painted white. As the event drew to a close, there were 16 teachers and students who represented lives lost to impaired driving.
    At the end of the day, students and staff were called into the gym to listen to the stories of the victims whom the randomly chosen “victims” were representing.
    16 lives were lost, and they each had a different story to tell.

 

Atlas receives mining bucket with tale to tell

    If buckets could talk, the tales they would tell.
    After a donation by Ed Cheney on Thursday, January 10, the Atlas Coal Mine now have a mining bucket that has quite the story. It is believed this particular bucket was present during some of the highs and lows of the history of the Drumheller Valley.
    “His (Cheney’s) dad (Ralph) purchased the bucket from a junk dealer in town and it is believed it came from the Star Mine. Whether or not it came from the Star Mine, it’s a pretty rare and special thing,” said Jay Russell, Atlas Coal Mine program director.
    “Mine buckets were used to hoist men, coal, tools, and rock, and were often employed in mine construction. We are very pleased to receive this historically important artifact.”
    After Ralph Cheney purchased the bucket for his crane business, it was used in the construction of some of Drumheller’s most iconic features.
    “This particular bucket was not just used in the mine, it was used in the transition years for Drumheller; going from a boomtown to a tourist town. It was used in the construction of at least two major things,” said Russell. “One was as a man lift to put the letters on the Drumheller Inn and landscaping around the Royal Tyrrell Museum during its construction.”

Linda Digby (left), Director of the Atlas Coal Mine, and Kelly Eddy stand inside the newest edition to the collections; a mine bucket. The bucket would have been used to hoist coal, rock, tools, and even men. The bucket was later used to put the “INN” on the Drumheller Inn and in the construction of the Royal Tyrrell Museum.


    Prior to that, the history of the bucket is less certain, but certainly encompasses most, if not all, of the history of mining in the Valley. Mining buckets, perhaps even the very one the Atlas received, were involved in several deaths in the mines.
    “These buckets were used in the early days of mining here. In 1928, a miner was killed when working in a shaft. The bucket let go and fell on him. In 1935, a pitboss at Willow Creek was inspecting new mine in Rosedale and was lowered in bucket. He hit gas, fell unconscious, fell out of the bucket, and died,” said Russell.
    “If it (the Atlas bucket) is from the Star Mine that would be interesting, because in 1956, a miner fell out of a bucket to his death. The bucket would have ties to our history, our transition, and to our Miners’ Memorial.”
    Mining buckets are rare. When mines shut down, the were sold as scrap metal or were repurposed for other industries.
    The Atlas hopes to incorporate the bucket into another exhibit.
    “This in an important artifact and represents an aspect of mining we’re just learning about. We’d like to make it an exhibit here, but it’s in the preliminary stages at this point,” said Russell. “It’s unique, an important artifact, and a piece of our history.”

A mine bucket (maybe the very one the Atlas received) being used at the Miller Mine, between Wayne and Beynon, circa 1918.


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