![]() ![]() ![]() Today is the location of our Saturday Farmers’ Market, which is a popular place to chat over a cinnamon bun hot out of the oven and a cup of coffee. Lubeck Hall is a good example of the sort of community hall that dotted the area, built so that the scattered farm population could have a place to come together, to dance and play and get the news. Two projects we are currently working on are a Ukrainian Heritage building and a working blacksmith’s shop in our new Blacksmith building. We also have a large collection of agricultural equipment and machinery, hand tools and early tractors and vehicles, including a Bombardier “Nodwell” the track vehicle that kept the Canadian north connected. Inside it boasts an amazing display of local wildlife set in an autumn boreal forest and a comprehensive display of the sort of hand tools that were used to build settlers homes, as well as early chain saws. The Wildlife and Forestry exhibits are housing in a stunning contemporary log building. In 1945 Morgan’s Confectionary began as John and Mary Morgan’s clothing store, later the couple also had a cafe, grocery, the bus depot and sold all manner of licenses in Hines Creek, after John’s passing in 1967 Mary returned and started the confectionary, running it until she was 91. We also have a caboose, NAR 13021 which was built in Montreal in 1949, and served as bedroom, office, and kitchen for three railmen. Although tiny and crude, the temporary shelters resorted to while out on the trapline made this a welcome home base. The museum also has a Trapper’s log cabin which while not that old (1975) is no different from a much earlier trapper’s cabin. James Anglican Church in Stratford, Ontario, prior to that the congregation had to make due with meeting in schools and homes and with Miss Eva Hasell’s Sunday School Caravan. James Anglican (1938) was erected through a donation from the Women’s Auxiliary of St. There are two historic churches, Christ Lutheran Church (1928-1932) preserved and restored by children of the original builders and St. Hines Creek School #4430 is a one room log structure which allows one to imagine what it must have been like to ride to school three on a pony or try to learn when it was so cold out that the wood stove had to be stoked to the point that it was quite literally red hot. These three homes are furnished with time appropriate artifacts to give visitors the feeling that the owners’ might return at any moment. The museum has three historic houses: the Pohaboff House (1928) which is a good example of the sort of small hand-hewn log house built by arriving immigrant settlers the Carter House (1938) is an unusually large and somewhat grand home, especially as it was built during the Great Depression as Art Carter (of Carter Camp) owned a sawmill the French “Half-House” (1948-1949) is exactly that, only half the two story home was ever constructed due to financial problems, the staircase is incredibly narrow. Hines Creek became a transportation hub with the arrival of the first train in December of 1930 and at one point there were five grain elevators along the tracks. This entailed the moving of the village, from its original site on the creek from which it takes its name, to the present day location. The tracks were built only to the point that freight rates would have increased and no further. The museum celebrates the history of the Hines Creek area which is unique because it was the end of the railway line. The End of Steel Museum opened to the public in 1985 and has been growing and evolving ever since. Bringing the homesteading history of Hines Creek to life. ![]()
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