Saturday, March 15, 2014

SOME NOTES FROM PEARL INNES

I see some pictures of my family on these pages.
My grandfather Fred Innes and Grandmother Lulu Winnifred Mitchell
Moved to Minitonas in abt 1918 from southern Manitoba.

Fred and Winny Innes had these children:

Howard Innes b 1915 Waskada Mb
Doris Innes b 1917 Waskada Mb Married ..no children
Lila Innes b 1922 Minitonas MB Married Two children Dwight & Valerie
Melvin Innes b 1925 Minitonas Mb Married ...no children

Howard (my father ) M Mary Tripp They lived and farmed north of Bowsamn MB
which is north of Minitonas abt 20 miles

Children
Lloyd Howard Innes b 1936 d 1981
Pearl Mary Innes b 1940 This would be me.
Betty-Ann Innes b 1943
Mervin Keith Innes b 1947 d 1991
Beryle May Innes b 1949
Ronals Albert b 1952

As a young girl I went with my grandparents visiting to the Henderson Family and
the Martin family ;

And I see a saw mill marked Martins ....... a descendent of Thos Martins is my Daughter-in-law Catherine Hilda Walstrom.  Her Mother was Irene Martin.
Catherine ( Cathy) is married to my eldest son Lonnie Lloyd Williamson
and they live in Calgary Alberta.
A friend of mine just sent me your site , I was very interested and had a few smiles going over the pictures .
Thought I would just drop a line .
I do Genealogy as a hobby.
I have a Marjorie Strachan m to John Innes of Lauchais b 1538-1618
They had no children , and he left land and money to his brother

I just moved to Saskatoon the fall of 2012, I was raised in the Swan River Valley and all my children were born there , I moved to Yorkton In 1976 , and now retired in Saskatoon.
You can add my E mail  pearl.nelson@sasktel.net  


Regards Pearl Innes

Sunday, May 16, 2010

GOODBYE TO THE SWAN RIVER VALLEY !

One last swing past "Sleepy Hollow," the first home in Manitoba, and the Strachans are on their way to a newer future than they would have suspected. The Kovar company went flat in Canada because of new import tariffs and the invention of chemical weed killers. The family went on to Oregon and POW! The Great Depression!! Just scraped through that and BLAM !!! WWII.


Caption: "Last look at our first Manitoba home." Looks like that "add-on" is finally underway.


Caption: How the raspberries have grown since we left Sleepy Hollow! My grandfather was a genius grower of raspberries! We cousins scavanged the bushes behind the little house in Portland where the senior Strachans ended up. Sam died in 1951 (76 years old) and Beulah in 1953 (82 years old). The last of the next generation to die was May, who died in 2006 (99 years old).


So up, up and away! This is Seth, destined to be a WWII bomber pilot and transport pilot -- then a pilot for TWA for many years.

Friday, May 14, 2010

A SENTIMENTAL VISIT TO THE SIMS RANCH

Now "the Sims place" has become a "ranch," a status upgrade! But the Strachans have decided on a new economic strategy and they intend to live in Brandon in the best house they've owned so far. In fact it is where Martha Ostenso, famous author, once lived. Their work now will be the assembling and marketing of Kovar Quackgrass pullers.


The Sims house is almost as big as the Ostenso house but it's hard to beat a good screened porch! The Sims mom, pup and boys must be comfortable there. I think the only Strachan in the photo is Beulah in the middle, so May must have taken the photo. The caption says, "'Billy' Sims home." He must be one of the boys.


It's October, 1927, and there's bite in the air but warm enough to linger a moment, holding hands, on the front steps. Sheila is on the left, then Mrs. Sims & Beulah.


May and Sheila Prosser mime a little farm work by perching on the Fordall.


The caption says, "Now they inspect the grain separator." If that's a straw stack behind them, the work has been done recently and the machine not moved.


But people DO move and here are Beulah and May ready for their new life in Brandon.


Walk on by.

Monday, May 10, 2010

WITH HENDERSONS TO BOUGHEN'S NURSERY AT VALLEY RIVER, MANITOBA

September, 1927, and things are beginning to change, but first more picnics!


Caption: "Starting line up at Hendersons."
The original photos are tiny, but enlarging them on the computer, I believe Bruce is at the left, then Beulah, then Sam. Skipping the man in the straw boater, the next is Glenn and then May. Seth may be the second from the right.


Caption: "Portrait of McLaughlin Buick car and people." Even enlarged, I don't know these people. I get the impression that my father didn't either, so it must have been the vehicle that was important.


Caption: "Turn off to Valley River. We change cars." What intrigues my eye is that church in the background. Is it half-built or being demolished? Does the pastor live in the house to the right?


This may have been a separate expedition. It's at Madge Lake and is meant to be a demonstration of "table manners." In short, a "pignik." Sam and Beulah Strachan together at the left. May dripping the last drop (must be Folgers) from a cup into some gentleman's mouth at the right. I think the most egregious demonstrators are the two closest in the center: Glenn and Seth. I wonder how many of these young ladies were smitten?

Saturday, May 8, 2010

KOVARIZING

Three views of the tedious work of tilling the land, made somewhat easier by the inventions of the industrial revolution. I'm not sure I've seen a tractor with fenders before.


The caption says: "Father starts the Fordson & Kovar on a new quack grass field."


Caption: "Seth continues on the quack grass."


Caption: "Quack grass is gone by fall."

A descendant of the Kovar family made contact a few years ago. He's keeping an archive of the family business, which designed and manufactured more than just the Quackgrass harrow at their plant in Minnesota.

The tractor also has a family story: "Fordson was a brand name used on a range of mass produced all-purpose tractors manufactured by Henry Ford and Son from 1917 until 1920 when it was merged into the Ford Motor Company, which used the name until 1964. . . The first Fordson Model F was completed in 1916 and was the first lightweight, mass produced tractor in the world, making it possible for the average farmer to own a tractor for the first time. It went into mass production in 1917 and sold for $750. The original Fordson used a 20 horsepower, four-cylinder vaporising oil engine, a three-speed spur gear transmission (the three forward speeds ranged from approximately 21⁄4 to 61⁄4 mph), and a worm gear reduction set in the differential.

Friday, May 7, 2010

SUMMER CEREMONIES

When the flowers are in bloom and the roads are passable, the festivals are in order.


Caption says, "Memorial Day Service (Minitonas, Manitoba, July 31 1927) It's a particularly lovely photo. The sacrifices of WWI, the War to End Wars, were still sharp and noble and the emotion of the people was sincere, unmixed.


And now we go to Dominion Day, July 2, a bit of patriotism to pre-empt the Fourth of July, which was, of course, an act of rebellion and secession! This is the Swan River band.


And here are the proper floats, the way we still do them in small towns. Things were going pretty well and no one saw what was just around the economic corner.

EXPERIMENTS WITH FLASH POWDER

This is the summer of 1927 which must be just before the invention of the flashbulb -- one had to set off some powder in a little open box.


Reactions appear to be very mixed. Glenn, farthest to the left and all dressed up for some reason, looks joyful. Sam, "Papa," is also grinning. Bruce, the usual perpetrator, is a little over-the-top in more ways than one. May, also dressed up, is happy. But Beulah looks dubious and Seth, bottom middle, looks overcome!


By now the Strachans and the Hendersons are a little more composed. It is Bruce who is front and center and still looking a little over-excited. May has passed out! Sam and Beulah are resigned. The Hendersons are amazed. Glenn is behind Bruce. That leaves Seth to be the photographer.

The little pump organ made the trip to Portland, Oregon, and I played it as a child when I had to stand up to make the foot pumps work. I have no idea what family portrait was hanging on the wall or where it went. May might have painted the little landscape. Late in life she painted quite a lot.