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Mayors, Reeves extend best wishes for 2013

  The Drumheller Mail is continuing to share New Year's wishes from Mayors and Reeves in the area. This week, the Mayors of Carbon and Hussar, and the Reeve of Wheatland County give their thoughts on 2012 and what’s in store for 2013.


Carbon

Valorie Reed, Mayor of Carbon


    “On behalf of my council I want to wish everybody a Happy New Year.  I wish health, happiness and prosperity for each and every one of you.
    We had a very busy 2012 in Carbon. We celebrated our Centennial in fine style in August. We had hundreds of former Carbon residents come home to see family and friends and had many great visits. The weekend was full of fun for all ages. The Carbon Lions spearheaded the Carbon Lions Centennial Park and hundreds of hours of volunteer labour went into this massive project. It is so beautiful with the engraved bricks, park benches, tables, trees, and shrubs. It is a wonderful legacy for the residents of Carbon and area. There is still some work to be done and that will happen this spring and summer.
    Our 2013 will be busy as we work toward our plans for a new fire hall, as we have out grown our present space. Our new subdivision is open and we have sold two lots and hopefully we will see some more dwellings built this year. Our campground bookings have already started, so it looks like another busy year for our village.”


Hussar

Bruce Kaufman, Mayor of Hussar


    “Happy New Year and have a safe and successful one. I would say the highlights for 2012 were cleaning up the village, making it much more attractive, a lot of trees were planted, and we’ll be doing even more this year.
    We have the funding approved to upgrade our streets and ongoing funding to upgrade our pump house down the road.
    The lift station is up and running and we just completed an upgrade to that to take away any possibility of any future flooding.
    This year, we hope to start early in the spring to upgrade Centre Street with pavement, curbs, and gutters. We’re working on getting quotes on 2nd Avenue. We also have the funds in hand to repair a bunch of water leaks on the sidewalks and roads.
    We’re doing very good and have come a long way. It looks very bright for the future.”


Wheatland County

Glenn Koester, Reeve of Wheatland County


    Happy New Year from everyone at Wheatland County.
    One of the highlights for me was we handed out the first of our Community Enhancement Grants. I’m looking forward to keeping it going and helping more projects through it. People really appreciated the funding for their communities.
    For 2013, we’ll be continuing with our road plan and paving more roads. The bridge in Redland is being worked on and it will be nice to see that back up and running at full strength again.
    We helped the new fire hall in Rockyford and it’s a very nice hall.
    We got our Municipal Growth Study done last year. We’ve started the process for our new Municipal Development Plan last year. Hopefully we can get it done in the spring this year."


Contest begins for Small Town Saturday Night

    Drumheller is looking to rock with the Big Valley Jamboree in the spring.
    It was announced recently that the Big Valley Jamboree will be holding its second Small Town Saturday Night contest. The community that wins will then host a concert featuring many of the stars who will be headlining the Jamboree.
     “We’ll definitely enter. Especially with our centennial year, we’ll put something together and get on this,” said Bob Cromwell, Economic Development Officer for the Town of Drumheller.
    To enter, communities must put together a two-minute video that showcases local events and attractions, shows community spirit, shows a love of country music, and, most importantly, is creative. The goal would be to explain why the show should come to town.
    Last year, the small town of Legal, 50 kilometres north of Edmonton, won the contest and hosted the first ever Small Town Saturday Night.
    A group had been working to enter a video last year.
    “Last year, it was an incredible video who won it,” said Cromwell. “We put a team together last year, came up with a concept, and tasked a few things out, including animation, but things just seemed to fizzle and we didn’t submit.”
    The final day for submissions is February 28. Afterwards, the judges choose the top ten entries and then online voting begins to determine the winner. The winner is announced at the end of March and the concert will be held on April 27.
    Anyone with ideas for the video or who wants to become involved can leave their suggestions on the Town of Drumheller Facebook page.

Royal visit medallion bears hints to lives lived

    Often history fades as the main players disappear. This may be the case with the members of the Dewar family in Drumheller, But Fred Orosz has a few clues about lives lived that include a possible visit with the King and Queen.
    Orosz worked with Dekeyser Auctions and a few years ago they held the estate auction of Marion Dewar. She lived on 3rd Avenue in what was her family’s home and she was known to have owned many cats.
    Two artifacts found that Orosz managed to get hold of were two medals with ribbons, mementoes from the royal visit to Calgary in 1939. The badges were labeled as for being guests of the visit at the Al Azhar Temple and are dated May 26, 1939.
    Whether these mementoes were Marion’s, or whether they belonged to her parents is not known. There were more mementoes including Marion and her twin sister’s degrees from the University of Saskatchewan and a healthy collection of photos, which shed a little light on a prominent family during the coal mining years, and the Hills of Home bore some of the family’s story.
    Marion’s parents were both born in Nova Scotia. Her mother Sadie came west in 1909 to work as a teacher in Bellevue. She had a 10-year career teaching in schools in Blairmore, Frank, Coleman and Fernie. She came to Drumheller to teach Grade 1 and 2 in about 1918. This was the height of the Spanish Flu epidemic and she accounted to her daughter stories of people wearing masks and coffins at the train station as she travelled.
    Marion’s father Jim’s road to the valley was a little longer and winding. He headed west in 1897-1898 to the Yukon during the gold rush. Not much was known about his time up north but in 1912, he visited his cousin Donald Dewar in Calgary.
    Donald had an interest in the Newcastle Mine with Jesse Gouge.  The mine was in need of an accountant and Jim took the job.
    Marion’s mother was boarding at the home of Dan Macaulay and that was where she met Jim.  According to the account in The Hills of Home, She moved back to live in Fernie, but found life wasn’t as interesting without Jim, and she returned to Drumheller. In October 1921, the couple was married in Winnipeg.
    In 1924, Sadie gave birth to triplets, but only Marion and her sister Dorothy survived. The Hills of Home doesn’t detail too much, except what appears to be a happy childhood.    
    The collection of photos of Orosz shows a close-knit family. At a time when photos were an expensive luxury, the family has dozens of the two girls with their parents and their collie. A couple Toronto Conservatory report cards show Marion studied piano and she had a degree in Household Science from the University of Saskatchewan. Her sister also attended the school. She worked in Manitoba as a dietician. 
    The interesting curiosity however is the medals from the royal visit.
    While many remember just two years ago the pomp and circumstance when William and Kate came for the Calgary Stampede, such a visit was just as big in 1939, if not bigger. In fact, on May 26, 1939, the day King George VI and Queen Elizabeth visited, a statutory holiday was declared in Drumheller.  
    The City of Drumheller Council chipped in to help pay the train fares to make it possible for any student from Drumheller to make the trek to see the royal couple. An estimated 600 students boarded the trains the Friday before the visit.
    The twins would have been in their early teens at the time of the royal visit, however it is not clear whether this medallion was for a private party with an audience with the royals or a simple memento given out to school children.
    Marion’s sister Dorothy passed away in 1964 and Marion came home to care for her widowed mother. Marion was an active member of the Knox United Church and a member of the Drumheller Walking Club. She passed away in 2004.
    Orosz says he is planning to donate the items from Marion’s home to the Homestead Museum, including the medallions. While the history behind the medallions is not clear, it is apparent they were important enough for Marion to keep for her lifetime.

An undated portrait of Jim Dewar and his daughters Marion and Dorothy. Jim was an accountant at the Newcastle Mine. Above is a photo of two medallions from the 1939 royal visitation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth.


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