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1880 |

In early 1880, the Transcontinental
Pacific Railway reached Medicine Hat. The newly opened Alberta
Territory created unique economic needs which would inevitably develop
a number of equally unique settlements. Stirling was one of
these.
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1890 |
By 1890 the increasing need for coal to
fuel the locomotives led to the building of a rail line from Medicine
Hat to Lethbridge, and another from Lethbridge south to Great Falls.
Galt's Alberta Railway and Coal Company built the needed lines in
exchange for over a million acres of land valued at $2.50 an acre,
however the anticipated wealth to the Railway failed to materialize.
The new spur lines went through some of
the most arid and forbidding land in western Canada. The vast
wind-swept plains were considered unsuitable for anything but
ranching, even by offering the land for $1,00 an acre if the developer
buyers were found. The offer did however attract the attention
of a high official of the Mormon church. John Taylor from Utah
had a first-hand knowledge of the financial benefits of an efficient
irrigation system. |
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1896 |
However Taylor viewed the disjointed
distribution of the CPR lands as a limiting factor on efficient
development. Rather than numerous self-contained Systems as
encouraged by the land owners, Mormon officials along with Magrath and
Galt, pressed Ottawa to solidify the individual holdings into one
block. This was finally achieved in 1896 when the holdings were
consolidated under the name of the Alberta Irrigation Company.
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1897 |
In the autumn of 1897, a delegation from
the Alberta Irrigation Company met with officials of the Mormon
church. Both parties agreed that the project would be mutually
beneficial. The irrigation company needed labourers and
permanent settlers who could sustain the irrigation system; and the
Church was in need of new opportunities to assist their poorer members
in providing for themselves.
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1898 |
By April 1898 the contract between the
Mormon Church and the Alberta Irrigation Company was signed. It
called for the construction of a 50 mile long canal between the two
settlements of at least 250 persons each. The two townsites -
one at each end of the canal - were surveyed on land the Church was to
earn. $100,000 in wages for the contractors were to be paid 1/2
in cash and 1/2 in land valued at $3.00 per acre. Work was to
commence within the year and was to be completed by December 1899.
Even though the subsequent advertising was
intensive and benefits were described in glowing terms, the Mormon
contractors were unable to attract voluntary workers or immigrants.
The Church, fearing the possibility of defaulting on its commitment of
contract began "calling" men to serve missions in Alberta. Some
were "called" for the duration of the construction, others were to
form a permanent settlement. For a member of the Mormon Church
to receive a "call" of this magnitude was an extremely serious matter.
For them it was not an economic decision;
they had already refused to move on economic grounds. This was a
call to "do the Lord's work." The faithful did not hesitate!
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1899 |
The small group of 30 settlers arrived at
Stirling on May 5, 1899. This vanguard was to prepare for those
who were to follow. Houses were built, wells dug, feed for
livestock provided, fuel supplies secured, and over all the work on
the canal had to be completed.
Wave after wave of immigrants came and by
November 14, 1899 the canal was completed and the water gates were
opened at Magrath . . . two weeks ahead of schedule. The
contract was fulfilled!
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1900 |
Completion of the contract presented a
whole new set of problems for those who had been called to establish a
permanent settlement. The Church officials in Utah had been
informed that the two new settlements were stable and able to stand
alone. But with the canal contract completed there was no money
being earned and it was causing real hardship. In order to
alleviate the problem, Theodore Brandley again contracted the townsmen
to build 12 miles of the rail track between Stirling and Cardston.
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1901 |
Economic stability being restored, the
little settlement now numbering 400 souls, was declared a Village on
September 8, 1901. And so the village has remained, its
population expanding or contracting depending on the economy of the
time.
But vagaries of economics - while
certainly influencing the physical development and growth of the
village, did not undermine the social values of the tightly-knit and
like-minded inhabitants. Often the demands of the external
economy were ignored if the demands conflicted with their ideals that
were felt to violate "the Lord's work."
The villagers, going quietly about their
business, supporting their families and doing the Lord's work as they
saw it produced the sturdy, understated Village we see today.
Beautiful in its simplicity!!
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