|

|
The
Early Days Walking Tour is a great way to learn how
the Town of Rimbey became the town it is today.
The Tour takes you through 35 different historic
locations and covers a distance of 4 kms. On
foot it will take a leisurely 2 hours.
The
route will reveal many of Rimbey's earliest buildings.
The original appearance of some of them has been
obscured by the passage of time. It will also
introduce you to the ghosts of a few that are long
gone.
|
| The
Tour begins at the historical Pas-Ka-Poo Park (located
in the north-west part of town). |

1.
Need a Hair Cut?
Go
to Spink's Barber Shop! Imagine settling back in this
old chair and watching the traffic go by on 50th Avenue.
Thomas
Spinks, a retired farmer, opened his barber shop in Rimbey in
1947 at the age of 60. He and his wife Ina lived in the
small area behind.
Thomas
Spinks was a great fiddle player and you might have got a tune
along with a shave. His shop was a centre for town news
until he closed his doors in 1969. He and his wife
continued to live in the building until 1974, when they moved
to the Manor.
The
beautiful simplicity and proportions of this tiny frame
building has made it a favourite with photographers at Pas-Ka-Poo
Park.

2.
Mowbray's Butcher Shop
George
Mowbray was a butcher and a bachelor, and a quiet obliging man
by all accounts. During the 1920's he always had a
wiener ready for children who came in with their mothers.
The
store had sawdust on the floor and a scale sat on the counter
where he wrapped meat in brown paper for his customers.
Mowbray
went out to farms to butcher animals himself, bringing the
meat back to store in his cool room.
When
Jack Parry became the owner in 1946, he expanded the building
to include both a meat market and grocery, with two walk-in
coolers. Parry's Meat and Groceries served Rimbey until
1953, when Parry went into the newspaper business, becoming a
partner with Charles Worton at the Rimbey Record.
The
original appearance of the store has been changed by the
addition of a veranda. Step inside to see a range of
groceries and other goods that would have been sold in
Rimbey's stores into the 1950's.
3.
Kansas Ridge School
You
might not think it possible, but apparently the picking of a
site for the first school in the area led to one of the
trustees of an opposing faction brandishing a gun at a
meeting. The matter was settled in a Lacombe courtroom!

Kansas
Ridge School was built in late 1902, just in time for the
Christmas concert. The children in this photograph,
taken in 1906, represent many of Rimbey's pioneer families:
Bunch, Rimbey, Anderson, Platt, Allison, Coverdale, Donnelly,
Wiese, Lloyd.
By
1920 the school was no longer big enough to hold all Rimbey's
children and while grades 4 to 7 remained in the old school,
others were taught in the Windsor Hotel, and a house in the
village.
The
old 1902 school was moved from its site in 1924 to make room
for a spacious new school, which held all grades, including
high school.
By
the 1960's, before its final move to Pas-Ka-Poo Park, the 1902
school served as a storage shed!
Today
it resembles its earlier self with rows of desks and a
blackboard flanked with Union Jacks.

4.
From High School to Town Office
In
1915, when it was decided to organize a high school in Rimbey,
the building (now at Pas-Ka-Poo Park) was available.
Mabel
Fleming, the first teacher, was quite experienced. A
graduate of Calgary Normal School, she started her career in
1912 in Rocky Mountain House, travelling out on the newly
constructed railway on a hand-powered speeder.
After
a stint in Lacombe, her home town, she came to Rimbey, where
several of her students were older than herself! She
must have been good at her job, as seven of her students went
to University and two became doctors. Mabel settled in
Rimbey, marrying local farmer Sinclair Mellis in 1919, and
became a leading member of the community.
After
1924 when the new school was built, the old school building
was used as the Town Office. Rimbey was incorporated as
a village in 1919 and became a town in 1949.
During
the 1930's, it housed the office of both the village and the
municipal district. Irene Wright began work in the
office in 1938 under Bert Saunders, and in 1944 she became
Town Secretary - a position she held for the next 31 years.
She did it all, from collecting taxes to corresponding with
the Provincial Fire Inspector, and everything in between!

5.
Anglican Church of the Epiphany
At
the turn of the 20th century all the main church denominations
were eager to help fledgling congregations in the Canadian
West. In the case of the Anglican churches, money was
often donated from Britain, and dispensed through the bishops.
The
benefactor of the Rimbey church stipulated that it was to be
built of native timber and with upright logs, rather than
horizontal one (no one knows why).
Delighted
to have a building grant, Anglicans in Rimbey set to work in
1908 under the guidance of their new young minister Rev.
Arthur J. Patstone.
Carpenter
Ben Rimbey donated land on his farm and soon logs were being
hauled to the site just off Jasper Avenue.
The
church, roughly 32 by 21 feet, with a small vestry on one
side, was beautifully finished inside with native wood.
An
organ was purchased and a bell for the tower arrived from Rev.
Patstone's old school in England!
When
the congregation outgrew the church, it was moved to Pas-Ka-Poo
Park in 1966, and has been lovingly restored. Take a
moment to go inside and reflect on what this church meant to
its congregation ninety years ago.
The
photographs on the walls inside came from Rev. Patstone's
album. His communion set, used when traveling from
church to church, is also here. Look for the imitation
stained glass windows, purchased from Ontario in 1928.
As
you leave Pas-Ka-Poo Park, walk east to 51st St.
6.
Watts House
The
garden of the Watts family once grew on this spot, with yields
of strawberries and potatoes. The Watts house, in view
behind the garden, has changed little to this day.
In
1920 Robert and Florence Watts bought the house, which was on
land homesteaded by Robert's father David Henry Watts.
It was right next door to the house where Robert grew up
before going away to war.
Muriel
(Watts) Stevens recalls growing up in the house, and how the
porch was shaded by cascading hops. Her father planted
the spruce trees and the mountain ash. A barn was
located just west of the house.
The
Watts house has been home to a succession of caretakers of
Pas-Ka-Poo Park.
Cross
51st St. to the east side where there is a sidewalk and head
south. At the crosswalk at 54th Avenue, cross over to
the iron railing on the west side of 51st St.
7.
Rimbey's Old Red Brick School
Look
west through the gap in the carragana hedge behind the
railing. This was the site of the Kansas Ridge School.
In
1924 the new school had just opened its doors. Where you
are standing was the pillared gateway flanked by peony beds.
The school had four big, bright classrooms, each holding a few
grades. The school also offered high school grades 9 to
11, though those entering grade 12 had to go to Lacombe.
By
1942 more rooms were needed and the building was expanded and
stuccoed - it then became known as the "White
School". Rimbey's modern school now lies to the
west of the old school site.
Marge
(Iddings) Goings attended grade 11 in 1930/31. She came
into town from the farm to live with her grandparents during
school term. She recalls how many students arrived on
horseback, and tied up their trusty steeds in the barn behind
the school.
Students
had to line up outside each morning, marching in two by two
when the bell rang. Woe betide any student who walked on
the grass!
Percy
Page was the high school teacher and not only did he teach all
subjects, but all three grades!
School
skating parties with big bonfires down at the river were part
of school fun in those days.
Return
to east side of 51st St. From the crosswalk on 52nd
Avenue head east on the north side of the Avenue.
8.
Nazarene Church and Parsonage
On
the corner of 52nd Avenue sits a small white frame church.
In 1915 Jim Rimbey donated land to build a Nazarene Church and
Parsonage (still standing) directly east of it. His son,
Phinneas, was one of the carpenters building the church.
Tragedy
followed when the original church burned in May 1916.
Melvette Rimbey, son of Phinneas, who was not even three years
old, was playing in the church alone when the fire started.
His body was found crouched behind the organ that had been
donated by his grandfather Jim Rimbey.
The
grieving congregation met in a tent pitched near the charred
ruins of the church for service the very next Sunday.
They decided to rebuild, and the church standing today was
finished during 1916. It was later placed on a basement
and given a new porch and windows.
The
small white Church of the Nazarene was spiritual home to many
Rimbeyites. The Young Peoples Society or YP, as it was
generally known, was popular with Rimbey youth during the
1930's.
The
Nazarene congregation grew steadily, and Sunday school numbers
were soon competitive with those of their sister church in Red
Deer. Even on a June Sunday in 1935, when muddy roads
prevented many people from getting into town, 127 children
answered the roll call.
The
church was bursting at the seams by the 1950's, and in 1955 a
new church was constructed, just northwest off 51st Street.
The Seventh Day Adventist Church uses the 1916 building.
Right
next to the church is the Parsonage at 5046 - 52nd Avenue.
Look carefully and you will see where the front door used to
be. The west side of the house is a later addition.
In the 1930's young people visiting the parsonage were
enthralled with the dumb-waiter in the kitchen.
9.
Percy Wilton House (5048 - 52nd Ave.)
The
second house east from the corner, clearly visible in the
historical photo, has changed little since it was built.
It was owned by Percy Wilton, from England, who came to a farm
in the Rimbey area with his parents in 1909.
Wilton
fought in World War I, and returned to make Rimbey his home.
He died in 1967.
Continue
east on 52nd Avenue, formerly called Wilson Avenue.
10.
Hellerud Cottage (5034 - 52nd Ave.)
This
cottage was home to the Hellerud family in the 1920's and may
have been built earlier than 1920. It is typical of the
design of thousands of small gable-roofed houses built across
the prairies. Like this one, many had additions built on
later.
Notice
the decorative diamond butt dimension shingles on the front
gable end. Pre-cut dimension lumber and shingles that
could be relied on to be the stated size were a huge
improvement on having to cut everything yourself.
The
turned veranda posts on this house were also likely purchased
at a local lumber yard.
At
the corner of 50th St., turn south on the west side of the
street.
A
Boulevard to Beautify Rimbey
This
fine wide boulevard was formerly known as Main Street, and no
wonder, it was sixty-six feet wide! As things turned
out, it did not develop to be the Main Street. Jasper
Avenue, now known as 50th Avenue, became the commercial
stretch.
In
May 1939 work began on beautifying the
Boulevard-that-might-have-been.
Well-known
Red Deer surveyor Charlie Snell was soon out resurveying the
grade. The middle strip was raised with curbed edges,
leaving two traffic lanes on either side. The boulevard
was then seeded with grass and planted with sixty-three trees
purchased at 70 cents apiece from the Bowden Nursery.
Continue
south to 50th Avenue.
11.
C. J. Hewitt's House (5102 - 50th St.)
Clifford
James Hewitt built a house at 5102 - 50th Street between 1917
and 1919, now owned by Terry and Janice Shaw. C.J.
Hewitt was one of Rimbey's skilled carpenters, and his house
has remained one of the most impressive in town. It has
a cross-gambrel roof, a type that became popular in Western
Canada after 1904.
This
design was advertised as a practical one as it offered almost
as much space on the second floor as a two story house, but
cost considerably less to build. He certainly put his
carpentry skills to use on finishing this house; a modern
sophistication in the Rimbey of its day.
In
the summer of 1932 Hewitt was working on his veranda, probably
closing it in as it is now. At the same time, the Rimbey
Record noted, he put on an addition and built a garage.
Hewitt
was a man of many talents. He had a contract
construction and carpentry business, and for many years ran
Rimbey's Atlas Lumber Yard, that sold "everything for the
builder" as well as coal. He was also an
undertaker, and had his premises in the half block south of
his house, where Rimbey Builders Supply is now located.
Cliff
Hewitt was involved in everything in Rimbey, from movie
projection to local politics! He served as a reeve in
1927 and by 1933 he was mayor of the village.
On
the outbreak of war, Hewitt signed up. He served
overseas from 1941-1945, leaving his wife Mabel to hold the
family interests in Rimbey. When the war was over, the
Hewitts moved to British Columbia.
In
1948 Bill Mitchell arrived in Rimbey to run the John Deere
Dealership and purchased the Foster Simpson house as the
location for the dealership, which is now the north part of
Rimbey Builders Supply Centre. Mitchell also purchased
the Hewitt house, which remained his family home for many
years.
Cross
50th St. at the intersection with 51st Ave. (formerly Jackson
Avenue).
Imagine
how glad Rimbey residents were in the 1930's when a cement
crossing was put in across 51st Ave. to keep them dry above
the spring and summer mud that plagued Rimbey streets.
It was four feet wide - the first cement crossing in the
village. Earlier crossings were planked.
Walk
along the south side of 51st Ave., past the United Church and
the Cemetery. At the corner of 48th St. turn south to
50th Ave.
12.
Last Resting Ground
Rimbey's
Mount Auburn cemetery is unusual in that it is right in the
middle of town. It was once close to both Presbyterian
and Anglican Churches. Surveyed in 1904, it was
organized by a local stock company and by 1931 it had nearly
250 graves.
In
the summer of 1932 a work bee was organized to beautify the
grounds. The workers flattened the natural mounds in the
landscape and established donated plants and spruce trees,
along with shrubs purchased from Lacombe Nurseries.
The
cemetery is now full and a new cemetery west of town has been
opened. Only those who have already purchased plots here
can be buried among Rimbey's early residents.
In
the southeast corner, off 50th Avenue, lies the Field of
Honour - where some of Rimbey's war veterans are buried.
The gate is always open. If you wander through the main
cemetery you will find some of the Rimbey names mentioned on
the tour. Notice how many graves are of children, whose
plots were often marked with a lamb on the gravestone.
From
the corner of 48th St. and 50th Ave. walk west, alongside the
cemetery.
The
Anglican Church once sat where the Home Hardware and NAPA
stores are now. Its front doors opened onto 49th St.
As
you pass 49th St. look south to the Rimbey Agricultural
Grounds.
Agricultural
Grounds
Rimbey
was always a great centre for horse races and fairs were a
summer tradition even before the agricultural grounds were
developed.
In
1921 the Rimbey Agricultural Society was founded and built
permanent fair grounds with a grandstand. The fair grew
each year with the tenth annual fair in 1931 deemed a major
success despite cool weather.
Livestock
exhibits attracted some people while others preferred the
exhibits of canned fruits and vegetables, cheeses, and
domestic crafts.
The
Society built a new grandstand in 1934, with a roof and sides
to provide protection against the elements for 500 spectators.
Rodeo
came into its own after 1965 when the Rimbey Exhibition
Association was formed and today the chuck wagon races draw
crowds for Rodeo Weekend in June.
Continue
west on 50th Ave.
13.
Fire! Fire! (Old Fire Station next to Town Office)
Alberta's
early villages often suffered disastrous fires. Rimbey
was no exception.
When
fire broke out in frame buildings, built close together, the
flames often raced for half a block before they could be
stopped.
Many
towns rebuilt using brick and placed fire walls between the
buildings, encouraged by the favourable insurance rates for
doing so. Not so in Rimbey!
Despite
the danger, Rimbey continued to build with wood. Fire
destroyed buildings on the north side of Jasper Avenue in
1922, then on the southwest corner in 1923. Another
major fire occurred in 1935, destroying seven businesses,
while individual buildings, including four service stations,
were periodically razed to the ground!
The
town eventually became more diligent about preventing the
devastation.
A
bylaw in 1936 divided the village into business and
residential zones, and dictated that buildings on Jasper
Avenue have metal exterior cladding.
A
formal volunteer fire brigade was formed and Rimbey purchased
a carbon dioxide chemical trailer from the Dominion Fire
Engine Co. of Moose Jaw by 1939, which was housed in Chapman's
garage (now housed at Pas-Ka-Poo Park).
Finally
in 1952, Rimbey, mirroring many other Albertan towns, became
the proud owner of a Barton-American Marsh Ford triple
combination pumper, booster, and hose truck. It had a
single-stage front mount centrifugal pump, 500 gallon booster
tank, electric siren and two spotlights.
The
Fire Hall was built in 1966 to house the shiny new red fire
truck. Rimbey's Fire Department outgrew the Fire Hall in
the late 1980's, moving to a new hall on 49th Avenue.
14.
The Rimbey Record Office
The
two-storey frame building behind the more recently added real
estate office, housed the Rimbey Record, from 1936 to the late
1990's. It is best seen from the east side, where a
loading dock for newspapers is visible.
Look
for the Record's old printing press at the museum in Pas-Ka-Poo
Park. In the days before computers each letter had to be
typeset before the page could be run through the ink rollers.
During
its printed life, the Record operated from a succession of
premises, beginning in 1930 under the hand of W. J. Good.
In
1935 the Record building burned (not this location) and the
paper moved into the Windsor Hotel, which sat on this lot from
1915 to 1936.
On
February 18th, 1936, the hotel burned to the ground, taking
the printing and newspaper business with it! Undaunted
the Record remodeled the old Legion building, installed new
equipment, and was back in print at the beginning of April.
Work
began on the new building that would become its final home in
May 1936. The south end was used as living quarters.
Rimbey's
first newspaper was the Rimbey Pioneer, published for a year
in 1919. In 1921 it was followed by the Rimbey Advance,
until it was wiped out by fire in 1922.
Beginning
in 1930, the Rimbey Record captured small town life in Rimbey
for more than 6 decades, even winning an international award.
That
role has now been ably followed by the Rimbey Review and the
Blindman Valley Horizon as Rimbey embarks on its second
century.
15.
The Empress Theatre (5001 - 50th Ave.)
It
certainly was "show time" in this building for many
decades! The Empress Theatre began life as a community
hall and was used for many different functions such as dances
and film shows.
The
rear lower portion of the building is the community hall built
in 1915, and the two story section at the front is the result
of several later additions.
The
roomy barn-shaped hall hosted "some of the best dances
this side of the larger cities," the Rimbey advance noted
in April 1921. During the 1930's the dance of the year
was the Curlers Ball in March. Floor length dresses
swirled to the music of the local Rudy Platt's Orchestra.
A
lunch was served at midnight then the dancing resumed until
about 3 a.m. Some of the dancers still had a long way to
go home, after picking up their team and cutter at the livery
barn.
The
first silent movies in Rimbey were shown in the hall in 1918
by Rasmus Block.
After
Rasmus, Jake Heinz became Rimbey's main projectionist.
The Delco machine running on Heinz's truck outside to power
the projector lent an added sound effect! A 1930's
projector is now on display at the museum at Pas-Ka-Poo Park.
The
screen was at the south end of the hall, while entry was from
Jasper Avenue through a small porch. The Return of
Tarzan, billed as the most astounding book and screen success
of the decade, drew crowds in July 1921.
C.
J. Hewitt also showed films in the hall, silent movies as well
as talkies. He purchased a Victor 16 mm sound-on-film
projector in the summer of 1935. After the show there
was usually a free dance for patrons until midnight.
By
this time the building operated primarily as a theatre, since
a new community hall served the needs of other functions.
W.
B. Sharp, of Calgary, operated "circuit shows" all
over the province, moving from one hall or theatre to another
for one night showings.
Gone
With the Wind in Technicolor played in Rimbey on Saturday,
July 8th, 1940. Local teenager Fred Schutz was very
eager to see it, and recalls cycling to town from the farm at
Bluffton.
In
1941, W. B. Sharp, who then owned the building, made
improvements to the theatre including a new front and a new
roll-type screen.
In
May 1945 the theatre was purchased by Albert and Lillian
Wiancko. They built a further addition with living
quarters and offices at the front. In the early 1950's
it housed a jeweller, and the Alberta Forestry Rangers, as
well as a doctor and dentist office.
The
Empress Theatre was a popular place with up to three shows
playing on the weekend. Long lineups were a familiar
sight on a Saturday night.
However,
by the mid 1970's television and ease of travel meant local
theatres no longer had the same appeal. In 1975 the
Empress closed its doors.
The
front portion of the building has been stripped of its former
allure, and houses offices.
If
possible, have a look inside. The ticket wicket and
balcony are still there.
Continue
west on 50th Ave. past the old theatre.
16.
Cork's Bakery
A
succession of bakeries has served Rimbey from this building.
Bill Cork arrived in Rimbey in 1911 and setup his bakery
sometime in the late 1920's.
At
5 a.m. each morning he put a batch of freshly kneaded dough in
the big oven at the back of the store. The smell of
rising bread greeted his early customers. Brown or white
- the choice was yours and Cork also made donuts, sweet buns
and long johns with maple walnut icing.
He
supplied bread to the outlying districts as far as Bluffton
and Leedale. The building has been renovated and has had
additions but the centre part is the original building.
17.
The A. B. Cafe
Now
unrecognizable to its former restaurant patrons, the A. B.
Cafe building presently houses the Rimbey Sports store.
Don Wing built the A. B. Cafe in 1919 on the site of the first
feed and livery stable in Rimbey owned by Woods and Peabody.
It was a two-story frame building with a flat roof.
Wing,
the proprietor, immigrated from China in 1915 with his brother
who had a cafe in Wetaskiwin. He soon had a thriving
business including a laundry at the rear of the building, and
expanded the premises in 1931.
Wing
lived upstairs from the Cafe, and also had rooms to rent for
50 cents and up.
He
worked long hours, supporting relatives in China and was a
popular and generous man. As more than one Rimbeyite
recalls, he was particularly good to teenagers. His cafe
was the hangout of the 1930's, when sitting at the counter
with a chocolate bar and orange pop was cool. It was the
place to go for ice cream after a show. The graffiti in
the outhouse out back was known to be well worth the trip!
In
September 1934 Wing returned to his homeland for a visit to
his family and his daughter's wedding. He returned
almost a year later sailing from Hong Kong on the famous CPR
ship The Empress of Japan, arriving in Vancouver 20 days
later.
Soon
he was back behind his counter in the Cafe. Not to be
outdone by local farmers, he reported on the excellent rice
crop in China that year.
In
March 1945 Wing sold his business to Laurence Calkins and
moved to Innisfail. During the 1950's, the building
underwent extensive renovations. The flat roof was
replaced with a gabled roof.
18.
The Jamaica Hotel
On
the site of the present Alberta Treasury Branch, Rimbey's
first hotel made its appearance nearly a hundred years ago.
The hotel had the unlikely name of the Jamaica Hotel.
Ken Wates came to Rimbey after a series of hurricanes had
driven the family from the island in the sun.
In
1907 the Wates opened their hotel, described as
"thoroughly up-to-date" in the town's brochure.
Frank
Peabody, a blacksmith, later took over the Jamaica, made some
additions, and renamed it the Cottage Hotel after a Peabody
family-run establishment in Pennsylvania.
In
1921 the Cottage Hotel advertised comfortable warm rooms with
electric light. You could spend the night for 50 cents.
The best rooms in the house were a dollar. Another 50
cents got you a meal in the dining room.
In
1922 Peabody sold out to James Letroy.
The
Cottage Hotel was the scene of many happenings in Rimbey over
the years. The Rimbey Football Club was founded one
Saturday night in May, 1930 - no doubt in the bar that was
Rimbey's main watering hole. It had sawdust on the
floor, spitoons and was a popular spot with lumberjacks.
An
annual visitor for over two decades was H. J. Snell, a
"sight specialist," who held a clinic in the hotel
each spring.
From
1925 the proprietor of the Cottage Hotel was Harry N. Taylor,
whose own wedding was held in the dining room on May 6th,
1933. The Cottage Hotel was finally torn down in 1962.
Continue
west down 50th Ave.
19.
Thorp House
Look
west and imagine that the Warehouse building is not there.
You will notice a small frame bungalow with a pyramidal roof
behind the store. This is one of the oldest houses in
Rimbey.
Shortly
after the turn of the century it was home to Bert Thorp who
ran the Thorp and Putland general store located just west
along the street.
William
Brooks bought out Thorp's business interest and home in 1912.
He arrived in Rimbey to find the house a little small for a
family of eight so he had a two story addition built on the
west side.
By
the 1930's the house was home to Thorp Braithwaite who built a
grist mill south of the house in 1928, where he did custom
grinding. In 1931 he charged 8 1/2 cents for oats, and 8
cents for barley per 100 lb. lots - if you delivered in ton
lots.
Braithwaite
remodeled the west wing of the house and installed gasoline
pumps in front of the building. He also operated a
battery and welding shop on the premises.
In
1949 he and his wife Jean also opened a hardware and gift
shop, which they ran until 1977.
When
you reach the alley walk west and then turn back to 50th
Avenue through the parking area for Rimbey Foods. Stop
to read the next section just before you reach the sidewalk on
50th Avenue.
20.
Rolston's General Store (now Rimbey Foods)
Charles
Rolston started business in Rimbey in 1919. He purchased
the old general store built by Jim Cox in 1905. It had
previously been run by Thorp and Putland, followed by William
Brooks.
Rolston
advertised his business as the store of quality, service, and
low prices, emphasizing that it "paid to pay in
cash."
The
store was one of those old fashioned packed-to-the-ceiling
kind of places. Groceries, dry goods, footwear, block
salt for cattle, and wallpaper could all be found, measured
out or cut for you by the store clerks.
In
the early 1930's Rolston offered weekly bargains such as five
chocolate bars for 10 cents and 2 tins of Carnation milk for
25 cents or a 4 pound. tin of pure strawberry jam for 49
cents.
When
the train brought in fruit from B. C., farmers rushed to town
from all around to purchase peaches and plums and, later in
the season, rosy apples in big wooden boxes.
Baby
Stilton cheeses, advertised as the "famous Markerville
Brand", were sold at 23 cents a pound.
Once
a year flour arrived in 100 pound bags and was stockpiled at
the rear of the store.
In
1947, after serving as manager for many years, Tom Wilton
purchased the store. The store became Wilton's General
Merchants and the line of goods expanded somewhat with more
ready-made clothing, china and luxury items such as men's
fancy sweaters.
A
sign of impending modernity was the purchase of a National
Cash Register in 1950 when the building was renovated.
The
1923 store still stands as the east side of the present Rimbey
Foods store, but the street facade of the building has been
completely rebuilt.
Continue
west on 50th Ave.
21.
A Hardware Special
Beatty's
hardware building, with its somewhat modified recessed
doorway, forms the west half of the present Rimbey Foods.
Jack
Beatty came to Rimbey from Saskatchewan in 1919 and setup a
hardware store, with living quarters upstairs, on this site.
Beatty got off to a good start, but the fire of 1923 left him
without business or home.
Undeterred
he quickly rebuilt his hardware business on the same site, and
was soon pursuing his customers more vigorously than ever.
By
the early 1930's he ran big advertisements each week in the
Rimbey Record. Beatty gave detailed information on the
brand names he offered, such as Simmons beds and bedding and
Wm. Penn oils and greases.
Window
displays were important in those days. They served to
highlight what was available and to lure customers into stores
that were usually more crowded with goods than now.
Beatty
prided himself on his window displays. In June 1930 one
window featured gifts for June brides and was entered in a
national window display competition.
Beatty
sold whatever was required for the season. He advertised
"all the tools and hardware for mowers and binders"
in August 1931, and Buck Eye Incubators for the chicks of
Spring 1932.
"War
has been declared on Flies, Mosquitoes, Weeds and Pests"
he declared to the town in July 1932, noting that he could
supply "the necessary fighting equipment and
ammunition."
In
late 1942 the Rimbey Record noted he was in Edmonton selecting
toys for Christmas. Due to the war, toys from Germany
and Japan were no longer available, but readers were assured
that the all British made selections were "more
attractive and diversified than ever."
In
1945 Wilfred Cotton joined Jack Beatty as an employee.
He then acquired the business when Jack Beatty died and
operated it for many years under the name W. A. Cotton
Hardware.
22.
The White Drug Store
Today
the drug store built in 1923 houses Shirley's Real Estate.
The
White Drug Store first opened its doors in 1919, to be
destroyed by fire four years later. A new drug store
building rose from the ashes with the familiar boom town
front, designed to make it look bigger than it really was.
The
drug store was run by two red-headed immigrants from the north
of Ireland, William and Alec White. The bachelor pair
boarded at the Cottage Hotel.
Daily,
for 27 years, they made up pills using a pestle and mortar in
the dispensary at the rear of the building. Along
with prescriptions and patent medicines, the White Brothers
sold toiletries, stationery and school supplies.
Music
lovers were offered a bargain for Christmas in 1921, when
Columbia and Victor records were reduced from a dollar to 85
cents apiece. Kodak cameras and film could be purchased
from the early 1920's and liquorice root and old fashioned
humbugs, rarely found these days, were a favourite with kids.
Dr.
Byers had his office at the rear of the building for many
years, where he did minor surgeries and tooth extractions
until he moved into more roomy quarters across the street.
In
1946 the White Brothers sold their business to a young
pharmacist recently qualified from the University of Alberta.
It certainly was a change when Miss Selma Elvira (Mickey)
Jepson arrived. She soon had her hammer and nails out to
work on the old building, which was in need of repair. A
coat of paint soon gave the drug store a new look and the old
prescriptions she found written on the walls were carefully
filed.
In
1947 Jepson received an award from the Rexall Drug Company for
outstanding performance and exceptional service to her
community. Proudly she hung it on a wall in the store,
which now included a thriving veterinary business. In
1955 she sold out to George Wyllie who continued the pharmacy
business.
Turn
south down 51st St.
23.
Michael's Photo Studio
Going
to the photo studio for family or wedding portraits was the
thing to do in the 1950's. Rimbey was lucky when Michael
Jarmoluk arrived in Rimbey in 1949. Together with his
brother Leon, he opened Bros. Studio just south of the theatre
on 50th St., where the Senior's Drop-In Centre is now.
The
business took off, and Michael was well established when Leon
left Rimbey to work as an X-ray technician.
Michael's
photos appeared in the pages of the Rimbey Record every week.
His eagle eye captured the faces of Rimbey and its major
events for nearly four decades.
In
1956 Michael built a new photo studio on 51st St., adding a
second story in 1965. It was a camera and music shop
where you went to buy a Beatles record! Although Michael
sold his business in 1991, the studio still bears his name.
Continue
south, crossing 49th and 48th Ave.
24.
Rimbey's Creamery
The
Creamery began life as a cooperative, the Blindman Valley
Creamery Association, in 1907. The first creamery
building served the area well until 1923. Yes, you
guessed! It burned down and was immediately replaced by
a new building.
This
second frame building formed the core of the building in the
photograph. The roof line, with square cupola, is just
visible behind the post-war remodeled expansion.
In
1945 the Creamery was purchased by the Central Alberta Dairy
Pool. Andy Gillespie started work with the Dairy Pool in
1959, and was the last manager, from 1961 to 1975. He
was in charge of processing milk, grading eggs and churning
butter. Andy recalls how the farmers drove up and placed
their stubby cream cans on the roller track on the loading
area at the front. A push sent the cans on their way to
the scale. There the cream was weighed, tasted, graded
and tested for butterfat content for which the farmer was paid
by the pound. Then the cream was churned into butter.
In
the early 1950's the old wooden churn was replaced by a
stainless one that could churn 1,100 pounds of butter in one
batch. The butter was then packed into boxes, and sent
off.
Quick-freeze
lockers were built on the north side of the building in the
mid 40's. In the days before rural electrification you
could bring a carcass to the butcher shop, have custom cuts
done, and then leave them in the lockers. When you
needed a roast you came into town, got your key, and took out
what you needed!
Rimbeyites
bought their milk in bottles beginning in the 1930's.
The creamery first introduced modern cartons while bottles
were still being delivered door to door. By the mid
70's, delivered bottled milk was a thing of the past.
As
creameries closed in Buck Lake, Adler Flats, Bluffton,
Bentley, and Eckville, Rimbey became the last dairy centre in
the west country.
The
Creamery finally closed its doors in 1975, but is still a
favourite spot for ice cream on a hot day!
Cross
to the west side of 51st St.
Optional
Walk
Rimbey
has excellent baseball diamonds located southwest of the town.
If you wish to catch a game, you can extend your walk.
Join the Lions Walking Trail south from the Ford dealership
that takes you down to the ball diamonds and the Nesting Place
campground.
Baseball,
a Rimbey Tradition
Rimbey
has attracted baseball players from the early days. From
the United States came semi-pro and professional baseball
players such as Joe Kutina of the St. Louis Browns and Floyd
Little and Clyde Eley of the Nebraska State League.
Soon
ball became the passion of Rimbey. In 1914 Rimbey won
the Central Alberta League and the team had its formal photo
taken in Lacombe after a victory there in 1917.
A
fierce rivalry grew between the "old town" and the
"new town" at the tracks, not to mention between
Rimbey and Bentley.
By
1932 the Blindman Valley Softball League had 9 teams with the
Rimbey Record reporting on every game.
Rimbey
was victorious against Morningside in 1932 and the Rimbey
Record exclaimed, "The spectacular catch of the game was
made by Earl Rimbey, who misjudged a drive to the outfield and
had to jump high in the air to retrieve the ball. It was
a hummer of a catch."
Return
north to the 4-way stop (corner of 50th Ave. and 51st St.)
25.
The Grand Hotel
Did
Benjamin Franklin sleep here? No, but the Grand did
begin life as the Ben Franklin in 1947! It was owned by
Art McDonald and Ben Franklin, Joe Morrisroe along with
partners Joe Burke and Charlie Bowen were the second owners.
The
hotel had been open barely six months when it was nearly lost
to fire. Burning tar on the roof sent dark smoke into
the sky. Fortunately it was 3 p.m. on a July weekday and
a bucket brigade soon swept into action. Others filled
every can, barrel and tank in the town and hauled them in
trucks and cars to the hotel corner. The burning tar,
however, proved obstinate. When the water ran out,
apparently someone opened the cesspool, and so the story goes,
the hotel was saved. The contractor who built the hotel
was back two days later re-plastering and re-flooring so that
the coffee shop has been the best place to catch up on
happenings in Rimbey for over fifty years.
In
those days, Alberta's liquor laws meant no rum and coke or any
other hard liquor was sold.
If
you went to the bar on a Saturday night in the early 1950's,
and indeed for many years later, beer was the drink of choice.
It
was the hay-day of the beer parlour in Alberta. The days
of 10 cents for an 8 ounce glass of draft or 28 cents for
bottled beer are long gone. Waiters with ties no longer
serve your table. Gone too is the separate entrance for
Ladies and Escorts, but the bar remains a hive of activity in
Rimbey on Saturday nights.
Cross
to the north side of 50th Ave.

26.
The Beatty House
So
great was his faith in Rimbey's future that Jack Beatty did
not hesitate to build a new home as well as a new store after
fire destroyed his premises in 1923. He chose the
fashionable California bungalow style that swept Edmonton and
other Canadian cities after World War I.
This
modern design was generally promoted as fostering domesticity,
family stability and togetherness.
In
Beatty's house the open plan dining room and living room are
separated by a wide arch and boasts a hardwood floor and a
fireplace featuring local petrified wood.
The
kitchen has a dining nook and built-in china cupboard.
The semi-bungalow has two small bedrooms upstairs, as well as
two on the main floor. Local carpenter Joe Jones added
decorative elements, such as eave brackets and cross hatching
on the upper sash of the windows, that was inspired by the
arts and crafts movement of the day.
Jack
Beatty died in 1956, but his wife Violet lived in the house
until 1984. The house is now a Designated Historic Site.
Designation by the Provincial Government of Alberta provides
important historical buildings and other resources with some
degree of recognition and protection.
Owners
of the designated sites are eligible for assistance in
restoring or maintaining their property. The Beatty
House Committee has worked hard for over a decade to bring the
Beatty property back to its earlier appearance, including the
rebuilding of the field stone wall.
You
are welcome to use the picnic tables and sit in the shade of
the trees.
Cross
to the east side of 51st St. and head east on 50th Ave.
27.
The Cotton House (5050 - 50th Ave.)
The
Cotton house stood on this corner until 2002. Community
Savings has recently erected a bank on this site.
This
was the last building at the west end of Rimbey's Jasper
Avenue for many years. It is unclear who built the
bungalow style home, but it was certainly well constructed in
about the year 1914.
A
major feature of the house was its fireplace mantle made from
petrified wood.
During
the 1920's the house was home to a member of the Alberta
Provincial Police stationed in Rimbey. He kept his horse
in a stable at the rear of the yard.
Ted
George, local service station owner, later owned the house, as
did A. McLees who ran a clothing store.
From
1946 to 1973 it was home to Wilfred and Emma Cotton, owners of
a local hardware store.
Continue
east on 50th Ave.
28.
Roper's Dealership
Harry
Roper took over the International Harvester Dealership from
Leroy Rimbey when he arrived in the village from Bittern Lake,
Alberta in 1930. When the Nu-Way grocery located
directly east closed, he took it over and expanded his
business.
By
the 1930's, Roper was selling gas, which he also delivered to
farmers by the drum.
Active
in the Masonic Lodge and the Lions, Roper was mayor of Rimbey
from 1943 to 1948, and spent his spare time curling.
In
1950, Roper's son Neville took over the IHC dealership from
his father Harry Roper. In 1962, Neville modernized the
buildings appearance with a large glass fronted show room,
leaving the rear of the building as it had been. In
1971, Neville took over the Ford dealership.
As
of 2002, the Roper building was replaced by the Community
Savings bank.
29.
L. S. Cutler's Law Office
Rimbey
had a lawyer who was a Rhodes Scholar! From 1923 to
1943, Lawrence S. Cutler, an Ontario graduate of Oxford
University, practiced law in this small building.
In
1945, Mary Mitchell who had been in the RCAF during the war,
came to Rimbey to visit her sister. She liked it so much
that she stayed and acquired the ladies wear store, operating
in the old Cutler Law Office.
The
store was divided in two after 1945 and two doors were placed
in the recessed entrance. Mr. Turnbull, a jeweler, took
over the west side.
Every
month Mary Mitchell traveled to the city to buy fashion
clothing from an Edmonton wholesaler. Mitchell's Ladies
Wear was a Rimbey landmark until 1983.
30.
Jim Rimbey's House
Jim
Rimbey's house was set back from the street behind large
spruce trees. This was the house of one of Rimbey's
founding fathers.
Jim
Rimbey, brother of Sam and Ben, took out a homestead in 1900
on the section north of what would become Jasper Avenue.
Jim
and his wife Eva got the first house built by the family.
It was a log cabin with a sod roof. Everyone stayed
there until more houses were built. It was the centre of
everything in the new settlement including religious services.
By
1910, Jim and Eva were living in the house. It was a
fine spacious two-story house built with logs and clad with
siding.
Jim
and Eva Rimbey decided to return to the USA in 1920.
Village
photographer, W. H. Wills rented the house in April 1922.
Later
that year Frank and Eliza Peabody took it over and operated a
boarding house for many years. The veranda was a
favourite place from which to survey the passing street scene.
While
attending high school in 1931, Sally Preston worked for her
board there. She helped Mrs. Peabody serve meals from
the big kitchen.
In
1935 local doctor S. J. Byers moved into the house with his
family and opened an office.
Later
it was purchased by "Mac" McGillivary, a retired
farmer turned real estate agent. He lived in the house
and rented out an office to a succession of doctors.
Continue
east on 50th Ave., then turn north on 50th St.
31.
"A Fine Club Room for the Boys"
That
is what the Rimbey Branch of the Royal Canadian Legion wanted
for those who returned from overseas during World War II,
according to the Rimbey Record. The old Veterans Hall
had, however, seen better days, and despite efforts to improve
it in 1941, it was decided to construct a new building ten
years later (still in use today).
Community
activities have always been the focus of the Legion, and the
year 2001 was the 75th Anniversary of the Royal Canadian
Legion, and of Rimbey's Branch #36, which was incorporated in
1926.
Continue
north on 50th St. Cross 51st Ave.
32.
The Rolston House (5105 - 50th St.)
This
older home with a fireplace was built by Tom Rolston who had
the general store on Jasper Avenue.
When
the Rolstons left Rimbey in 1933, the Wiltons not only took
over their store but also their house! Like several
other older homes in Rimbey it sat on a large double lot, and
boasted an automobile garage by 1931.
Cross
to the west side of 50th St. at 52nd Ave.
33.
Odenbach Garden (5218 - 50th St.)
This
corner house was one of Rimbey's finer residences, built by
Ralph Bunch sometime in the 1920's.
John
and Katerina Odenbach, the fourth occupants of the house,
moved into town from the farm in 1949. Odenbach put
lightning rods on the house. He had been hit with
lightning on the farm and was taking no chances!
John
Odenbach was a keen gardener. He and his wife grew
potatoes, raspberries, corn and tomatoes, along with a myriad
of other vegetables in this huge lot.
Each
year the Odenbachs donated much of their produce to the
hospital and auxiliary as well as to Rimbey residents who had
no garden. Today their daughter, Ella Kemmis, tends this
magnificent garden that brings pleasure to so many who walk
by.
Cross
to the north side of 53rd Ave.
34.
Andrews Garden (5302 - 50th St.)
The
house on the corner belonged to William and Alice Andrews.
The couple came to the Gilby area as homesteaders in 1905, and
they retired in Rimbey.
William
Andrews, like his neighbour and friend John Odenbach, was
devoted to his garden. The Rimbey Record held the garden
up as an example to the village in May 1940. "Mr.
Andrews' home...shows his 'green fingers' and his lawns and
gardens already promise great beauty for the summer season.
His hot house boasts tomato plants in blossom, cucumbers and
squash, flower seedlings and a mushroom bed. Not
everyone has the time or energy or the knack of landscaping
but if we did this town could be beautiful."
The
spirit of William Andrews' garden lives on. Each year
volunteer raspberries appear through the gravel in the yard.
Head
west on 53rd Ave., formerly Sifton Ave. Several house on
this street were built in the 1920's and 1930's.
35.
The John Eaton House (5038 - 53rd Ave.)
John
Eaton, his wife Hannah and four children, lived in this house
during the 1920's. From 1919, Jack, as he was known,
hauled mail from Bentley to Rimbey. He set out with a
horse and wagon rain or shine. Jack Eaton collapsed on
the job in 1935 and is buried in Rimbey's Mount Auburn
cemetery.
The
house has a pyramidal roof typical of many Alberta cottage
homes. Look for the detailing on the window frames.
The gable roofed porch extends from the southeast corner of
the house giving good shelter to the entrance.
|