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Magrath Days! 

23/7/2012

 
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Magrath Parade 1962
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Magrath Celebrations, Pool, 1962
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Magrath Parade 1962
It's Magrath Days this week! In honor of it,let's take a flash back to the floats of the past. Feel free to comment and leave your favorite parade and Magrath Day memories.  

History is Relative

17/7/2012

 
What is history? I remember the day in Grade 3 when I clicked that History sounded and was spelled a lot like His-story. I know most of you probably made this connection way earlier, but I take a few more clicks than the rest of us so please forgive me. Anyways the more and more I work at the museum the more clicking that happens. History isn't some giant event we're all prepared for. I don't think anyone wakes up aware that that day, they are going to be involved in some life changing event. What we consider history is just when someone is living their lives, in their day, and someone was smart enough to take note of it and learn from it. 

Yesterday my little cousin came through the Magrath Museum and was just amazed to see his Grandma on the wall as one of the dancers in the Magrath 50 Year Celebration Program. He couldn't understand why ordinary us deserved to be in a museum because all we did was live. But that's the cool part, we've lived, and we've mattered and we've contributed simply by being here and being apart of Magrath. We take note, and we have a lot of notes. My grandparents stories and histories have been recorded and are on file, and I bet yours have too. We have files and files of stories and stories. Memories from the likes of Nyal Fletcher, Lawrence Turner, Elizabeth Strong. Come find your stories and roots, because not only is history relative, it's even more fun when you are related. And don't forget, in 20 years, someone may think your stories are worth taking note of. 

Let's Trade

12/7/2012

 
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The Trading Company, or today known as Rooster's, has come a long way considering it started out in a tent. We have a few memories from one of our favorite destinations on Main Street, so let's take a look at some shall we? Memories as recorded by Lorena Rodgers:

Alf Ririe and Marj Balderson, people from the store like Johnny Bourne and Junior Turner are spoken of with legendary status.

For a small community store, customers could find things at the Trading Company that just were not available anywhere else.

Ken Robinson, originally of Del Bonita and now living in Magrath, remembers when he couldn’t find any place in southern Alberta to buy horseshoes, not even Lethbridge, but he could find them at the Trading Company. Some of the old horseshoes are now in the Trading Company display.

Marietta Wilcox says the same was true for fabric. Originally of Del Bonita, her mother always stopped at the Trading Company as it had the best fabric. “You couldn’t get tricot anywhere else.”

George Harker relates that when he was three or four years old he found a penny on the road. At the Trading Company he could buy three fishhooks for a penny or four hooks for a penny. He remembers he bought three because “the ones that were four for a penny looked too small to catch any fish.”

Duane Thomson says you could find anything you wanted at the Trading Company or Johnny Bourne would order it in for you. While working at the Research Centre in Lethbridge, he knew if they couldn’t find something they needed in Lethbridge they could get it from the Trading Company.

A few years after Duane married, he moved back to Magrath with his young family. His wife Carma remembers being welcomed to town at the Trading Company. “Johnny Bourne said hi and said I must be Duane Thomson’s wife. ‘What’s your name? Where are you from? Who’re your parents? When’s your birthday?’ And of course he remembered my birthday from then on. He gave the kids candy, and we felt genuinely welcomed into the community.”

Patricia Dudley says when her children were young, one of her boys came home from the Trading Company with something he had not paid for. She took him back to the store to return the item and the boy got a “talking to” from Junior Turner. Rather then scolding him, he told him that the Dudley name is a very honoured name in Magrath and he needed to live up to the family name. Patricia expressed how grateful she was for how Junior handled that situation, and the lesson stuck with her son.

Seeing a display in the exhibit representing the butcher department, Donna Thompson remembered working there as a youth. “Wrapping the liver was the worst,” she said, recalling how the meat would slip around in the brown paper packaging and demonstrating the technique to wrap it quickly and keep it from falling out on the counter. “I really wanted to get transferred to the ladies’ clothing department.” No luck with that, but she did get moved to the grocery floor.

As part of the family that ran the Trading Company, Wes Balderson says that as he grew up he remembers talk about the store being dinner table conversation. His wife Lorraine says, “I don’t think the kids thought groceries cost any money. They didn’t know that dad later got the bill for it.”


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  • Home
  • Collections
    • Magrath Veterans Pages >
      • Magrath Veterans Stories
      • Magrath Veterans WWI Killed in Action
      • Magrath Veterans WWII Killed in Action
    • Early Pioneers >
      • Early Settlers pre 1899 in Magrath area
      • Early Pioneers (1899) of Magrath
      • Early Pioneers (1900) of Magrath
      • Early Pioneers (1901) of Magrath
      • Early Pioneers (1902) of Magrath
      • Early Pioneers (1903) of Magrath
      • Early Pioneers (1904) of Magrath
      • Early Pioneers (1905) of Magrath
    • Magrath Current History
    • Social Media Posts
    • Blast from the Past
    • Covered Wagon
    • Cenotaph
    • Gallery
    • Kids
  • Contact Us
  • Films
    • Schools Film
    • Trading Company Film
    • Inclement Weather Film
    • Businesses Film
    • Sports Film
    • Swimming Pool Film
    • The Bell
  • Links
    • Town of Magrath
    • Magrath Pioneer Archive
  • Search
  • Kiosk
  • Trail Markers
    • Stepping into History
    • Gumbo Point
    • Sand / Spill Gate
    • Galt Dan & Head Gates
  • Magrath Pioneer Newspaper