COUNTY OF PAINTEARTH No. 18 - Excerpts taken from the "Story of Rural Municipal Government in Alberta 1909 to 1983" By the Association of the Municipal Districts and Counties Contributed for use in Alberta Digital Archives by Darlene Homme *************************************************************************** ALBERTA DIGITAL ARCHIVES NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed Alberta Digital archivist with proof of this consent. The submitter has given permission to the Alberta Digital Archives to store the file permanently for free access. *************************************************************************** In compiling information on the early days of the area now designated as the County of Paintearth No. 18, we wish to extend our thanks to these contributors from widely separated portions of the former municipal districts which now comprise County No. 18. They are Mr. R. W. Elliott for M.D. Stocks and M.D. Coronation; Mr. C.F. Pals for M.D. Sullivan Lake and M.D. Progress; and Mr. P. L. Farnails for M.D. Dublin. M.D. Stocks consisted of nine townships formed at a meeting held at Sugar Bowl School in 1916. The men first chosen as councilors were Roll Preston, C.W. Elliott, Raoul Carbon, Jack Gilbertson, Ed McKay, and Chester Hobbs. Mr. Hobbs is the only surviving member of that original council. C.W. Elliott was Reeve. They hired Dave Roberts as secretary-treasurer at $400.00 per year. Their first meetings were held at Sugar Bowl School for three or four years until John Nelson was chosen as the next secretary. He built a 12' x 12' office in his own farmyard about ten miles south-west of Hughenden. His starting salary was $500.00 per year. Mr. Nelson served until 1944 when M.D. Stocks was disbanded, with three townships going to M.D. Paintearth and six to M.D. Provost. M.D. Coronation, comprised of 14 sections, was a little larger than many of its neighbors. Organized in 1915, it was originally called M.D. Whiteside and remained under that name for several years. The election, conducted by Herb High, placed William Waltham as reeve; with Harry Sheardown, Shorty Parker, Joe Graham, John Miller and W.D. Hazelwood as council members. No member of this original council is now living. Mr. 0. D. Cochrane was appointed the first secretary-treasurer and meetings were held in his office, which stood immediately north of the site now occupied by the Toronto Dominion Bank. After a few years, Mr. Eric Gibson became secretary and remained in that capacity until the larger unit of Paintearth was formed in 1944. The annual meetings were held in the Bob Densmore Hall over his implement agency building. A new brick building was constructed in 1926 and later sold to the town of Coronation for their town office. Formed in 1913, M.D. Sullivan Lake took over all assets and liabilities of Improvement District 18-J-4. The council, consisting of Messrs. J.H. Roberts, E. Owens, B. Govaerts, and H. Arthur, set their wages at $3.00 per day with $1.00 more to the reeve, subject to a ten-day limit for meetings and ten days' supervision in the course of the year. The first account paid was in the amount of 25 cents to L. L. Pettie for repairing a fresno handle. Mr. C.N. Hughes became secretary-treasurer for two years at $672 per year, with the requirement that he provide a building, or a portion of a building, at his own expense for use as an office, and keep the same open at all reasonable hours for municipal business. The office should be closed when the secretary was absent on municipal business, but not for a period exceeding six days at a time. Later, W.A. Sherer served as secretary from 1915 to 1918; and J.J. Davis was appointed to that office in Castor. This arrangement was maintained until 1935, when the district became insolvent and was dissolved. Allocations for road work usually amounted to $500 to $600 per year for each division, and the work of making road allowances passable for horse-drawn traffic was done by four-horse fresnos, at $5.20 per day for the man and his four-horse team. Wages earned were applied to taxes since no cash payments were made. The number of days' work allowed was calculated on the number of quarter- sections a farmer owned, and in most years amounted to one and one-half to two days per quarter. During the '30's, the financial position of the M.D. declined as drought stricken crops forced people to neglect their taxes. Even large corporations, such as the C.P.R. and various mortgage companies, reneged on tax payments in the depression years. Requisitions to school districts could not be paid because the banks would not give further loans. In July 1935, all councilors were notified by the Department of Municipal Affairs that their services were no longer required, as Mr. A.E. Potts had been appointed administrator on a temporary basis. He recommended that the south part of the Municipal District should be included in the Special Areas which were being organized at that time, and that the north portion be added to M.D. Progress. The first minutes of M.D. Progress are missing, but reports of the early educational system will prove an interesting record for the reader. The smaller school units comprised an area approximately four miles square, at the center of which was located the one-roomed school house. The three-man board had a local secretary-treasurer who served without pay. These units existed until 1940, when the larger Castor School Division was formed with a larger board and a full-time secretary to look after the affairs of sixty-seven of the smaller school districts. The early days were influenced by dry years and a chronic shortage of money. The teachers' minimum salary was set at $840 per year, but districts which were especially short of money had no difficulty obtaining permission to hire teachers at $600 per year. The one-roomed schools served from six to forty pupils and offered grades one to eleven, all by one teacher. These might appear to be highly unsatisfactory working conditions, but it has been recorded that, on one occasion when rumor had it the teacher was resigning, fifty applications were received for the position-and it had not even been advertised. To finance the operation of the schools, a rate of 8 mills was levied on land assessments. Very little was received by way of government grants. In the minds of the taxpayers, raising the mill rate for school taxes was considered as nothing short of a criminal offence, so the mill rate remained the same for many years at a time. Schools were heated by a coal furnace, with the cost of the fuel (delivered) being $4.00 per ton. It was a common occurrence to lose half a day's school while the smoke was being cleared from a troublesome furnace. It is fitting to record here that Mr. A.R. Newsham, who began his career as Secretary-treasurer in the Local Improvement District in 1904, carried on in the same capacity with M.D. Progress, and continued on with the staff of M.D. Paintearth when it was formed in 1944. M.D. Dublin, a Local Improvement District in 1906, was established north of Halkirk and consisted of four townships in 39 and 40, across ranges 15 and 16. Mr. A. E. Edgworth was the first secretary-treasurer. Here too, road work was done by farmers in payment of their taxes, with the work laid out by a foreman who was paid $2.00 per day. Operating cash came from the taxes on the lands of non-residents who had bought on speculation. Prairie trails served as roads until farm units were fenced; travelers were then forced to use the road allowances. The first road building equipment generally consisted of a road plough and six or eight slips, or road scrapers, as they were called. Aside from the administrative municipal aspect of pioneer days, some of the experiences of the early settlers testify to their tough fiber and dauntless spirits in carving out their farms in this new land. They endured and survived the most extreme hardships. For example, the winter of 1907 was rated as one of the most severe. It was 50 degrees below zero, with deep snow for months on end. Insufficient feed supplies gave the cattle the appearance of hides stretched over bare bones drifting before the wind. They stumbled into towns and over coulee banks where they perished, and the piles of bones remained where they fell for many years. Huge snowdrifts in some of the lower coulees lasted until late June. In those days, the threshing was done by steam outfits and a crew of ten to fifteen men usually went with each machine. It was not until several years later that the first gas tractors came into the country. Those first models did not have much power. Some tractor-operating Frenchmen are still remembered for their experience with an I.H.C. unit-they crossed a furrow with it and found it did not have enough power to pull itself out. However, as the gas tractors became more efficient the smaller threshing machines became common, and the lumbering old steam giants eventually vanished from the scene. Today, they stand as monuments to a bygone era in western pioneer museums. The wheat raised in the first few years had to be hauled to Stettler. A load of 60 bushels would be hauled on a lumber wagon for a full day's journey. Sometimes it was difficult to find a place to sell it as there was only one elevator the first year. Most of it was sold to track buyers and had to be shoveled into the rail cars. Haulers found the town so crowded that they often had to sleep on the floor in the hotel, and sometimes in the livery barn loft. Another day would be taken up with the trip back home and the loading up of another load. The going price was around 50 to 60 cents per bushel. As the settlers became more established, the married men brought out their families and that meant development of some social life-picnics in the summer and dances in the winter. Omega School was a favorite place for Christmas doings and parties. The boys of the district had a baseball club which used to meet at Higgins' store on Saturday afternoon for practice. One memorable and very complete picnic was held at O'Dellville School. The day was taken up by all kinds of athletic feats, including foot-racing, throwing the caber (a strenuous Scottish game) baseball, wrestling, and many other sports. Of course, they had a sort of a rodeo too which demonstrated some of the best roping in the West. The picnic ended with a big dance at night, and finally all arrived back home in time to go to work in the morning. As has been indicated throughout this narrative, there was a gradual evolution of local government. From the small school districts came the large Castor School Division, and from the smaller municipal districts came the large Municipal District of Paintearth containing some 45 townships. One of the first tasks after the establishment of the larger unit was the selection of a name. The incumbent Minister of Municipal Affairs, Mr. E. C. Gerhart, who was also the M.L.A. for Coronation, suggested the selection of a name of historical value rather than the name of a town. In the northern part of the new municipal district is a creek called Paintearth, so named by the early Indians after a red clay they used to smear their faces with before going on the warpath. This clay is found in many places along the creek bed. Accordingly this name was adopted for the new municipal district and, in 1962, carried over to the County of Paintearth No. 18 when the municipal and school administration united. 1983 UPDATE The forty year period from 1939 when the Castor School Division #27 was formed from 77 rural districts and from 1944 when the enlarged Municipal District of Paintearth #53 developed, proved to be one of unprecedented growth and change. A comparison of the 1944 municipal budget with that of 1982 can best illustrate this growth and also the expenditure necessary to meet expanding services. The 1944 assessment base, of $4,814,000.00 almost completely farm land, at a mill rate of 10 mills along with other revenues of $33,171.00 yielded $65,590.00 to cover municipal expenses and provided a reserve of $16,279.00 for non collection. This last factor was exceptionally high for the amount of the levy and no doubt still reflected problems that the tax collector had inherited from the dirty 30's. This could be substantiated from a figure of $9400 in the expenditure side to cover welfare, which at that time included old age pensions and child welfare, as well as direct relief. Public works expenditures of $415,000.00 and administration at $8600.00 were the two other main expenditures. The 1982 assessment base of $37,000,000.00 ($7 M-rural and $20 M-electric power and $10 M-industrial) at 65 mills yielded $2,450,000.00 for municipal purposes. Other revenues of $450,000.00 almost equally split between the county's own sources and provincial sources completed the revenue side. It is interesting to note that the county derived $150,000.00 in interest earnings from funds on deposit reflecting a very solid financial base. This was doubly confirmed when no budgeted figure was allowed for non collection of taxes. Expenditures reflected changes with only $900.00 for public health as welfare was assumed by senior levels of government. Public works showed its continuing importance expending $2,800,000.00 agricultural services required $77,000.00 and a completely new area, recreation, required $90,000.00 to complete the major expenditures. Administration naturally increased with the magnitude of the municipal operation to round out at $170,000.00. School and education budgets also reflected a similar increase in all departments, but student population has slowly declined to just below 1000. Rather than quoting mill rates and assessment a brief point from the 1939 budget showing over 70 schools operating with total teacher salaries at $60,000.00, points up the vast change when in 1982 a comparable number of teachers drew $1,900,000.00 in salaries. Inflationary costs accounted for much of the increase, along with additional services offered to residents of the county. At the beginning of the four decades council and school board members had very few committees to serve on - the major ones being less than half a dozen. These increased through the span of time until council members or their appointees served on 28 internal and external bodies. The formation of the county in 1962 reduced the elected members to seven persons thereby increasing the individual work load. Education and public works were closely associated as 77 small schools became 4 major school centralization with a fleet of buses to gather the students. Better roads were needed with changes from gravel surface to paving as traffic demanded. Snowplowing daily became essential and the snowplow clubs of the 1950's gave way to a municipal service. Radio communications between buses and snowplows provided a necessary safety factor during winter storms. Co-operation with Theresetta R.C.S.D. in the busing of students and with Neutral Hills S.D. and Theresetta in hiring of local superintendents and assistants proved very helpful to all concerned. Educational programs were enhanced by shop and home economics in 1964, an opportunity room for mentally handicapped in 1970, Driver Education in 1971 and full continuing education in 1973. Approval was given for 4-H and youth groups to use school facilities and in 1978 an unused portion of Brownfield centralization was leased to the Forty Plus Club for 20 years for $1.00 for a senior citizen drop-in center. Buildings too had to be extended, maintained and upgraded to meet changing programs. Teacherages were built to attract teachers when they were in short supply in the early 60's. Cooperation too was very effective with the towns of Castor and Coronation and the Village of Halkirk in providing an ambulance and service in 1974. In the same year two fire trucks were purchased with the urbans agreeing to house and man them and over the years both urban and rural worked together to provide for garbage disposal. In 1981 funds from the 75th provincial anniversary committee were used to the extent of $40,000.00 to buy a Handicap bus to provide outings for persons otherwise unable to get around. The balance of the fund was divided 21 ways to charitable and recreational societies. In 1971 council commissioned a study of rural gas supply which led to the foundation of Paintearth Gas Co-op. The county also installed its own gas system to serve the Hamlet of Brownfield but sold it in 1982 to the aforementioned Co-op. This brief summary shows some of the major increases in the service to tax payers over a 40 year term. Most have required many hours of work by elected council members and hired county personnel. The solid financial base and the effective programs at the end of this era speak well for the dedication and devotion of council members and their employees over the period.