Huronia Museum will remain closed today, Monday, December 30, 2019, due to weather conditions.
We apologize for any inconvenience.
Huronia Museum will remain closed today, Monday, December 30, 2019, due to weather conditions.
We apologize for any inconvenience.
The photos found in this blog post are the property of Huronia Museum, Midland, Ontario. Any reproduction for commercial use without permission is prohibited. Any other distribution must credit Huronia Museum. Please contact the museum with any questions you may have.
Due to the busy season, we are condensing the final two weeks of 1959 into one post. This post will be short on news but will have all the photos we can find. The staff of the Huronia Museum wishes everyone a happy and healthy holiday season and all the best in the coming year!
Click on photos to enlarge.
This has been a big week in CPR shipping circles at Port McNicoll, with no less than three receptions to honour retiring personnel. Miss Rose Juneau of Victoria Harbour, who spent 47 years in the laundry department, was honoured Tuesday. Taking part in the presentations were, left to right, E. J. Cadeau, R. Young, Miss Juneau, A. A. Bell and S. F. Malin, steamship superintendent.
Clean-cut lines of this combined boathouse and sun-deck at Thunder Bay Beach are reflected in the freshness of new-fallen snow on a sunny December day. More utilitarian in style, but perhaps just as useful for its prime purpose, is the older boathouse at the right.
Now 96 and still going strong, Mrs. John Hare of Waubaushene is seen above with two of her daughters, Mrs. R. J. Wilson, left, and Mrs. Arthur Ireland of Alliston. Mrs. Hare, who lived in Coldwater for 15 years and Midland for nearly 50, has lived with her daughter in Waubaushene for the past seven years.
Long one of Midland’s top women trundlers, Mrs. (May) Ken Williams set a new mark for herself, and Midland Bowling Academy, last Monday night when she rolled a 417 single. She fired ten consecutive strikes before running afoul of the headpin. It was the highest single ever rolled here, for men or women. Mrs. Williams also compiled a 919 triple for the night, topped only by Mrs. Spicer’s 959 for the women and Gord Ross’ 1,015 to head the men’s scores.
Charles O’Dale was appointed a director of Ontario Land Surveyors Association, Northern Region, at a meeting in North Bay Dec. 14. The Northern Region extends from the north half of Simcoe County to James Bay and west to Thunder Bay. Mr. O’Dale is one of six regional directors and, specifically, is the director for Simcoe County and Muskoka, Parry Sound and Haliburton Districts.
Midland and district citizens have been sharing their Christmas by contributing their bit to the familiar Salvation Army “pot” on King Street. Lieut. William Johnston of the Midland Citadel said the response with funds to help the less fortunate families so far this season has been good.
Santa Claus stopped off at St. Andrews Hospital, Midland, on his way back to the North Pole Christmas morning long enough to leave a baby girl for Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Herron, 195 Yonge Street, East, Midland. A first child for the Herrons, Suzanne Barbara arrived at 11 a.m. and weighed in at 7 lbs. 2 1/2 ounces. She was the only Christmas arrival at St. Andrews this year.
James Lenzo of Quebec Street, Midland, holds his home-grown watermelon which he is going to “cut and serve early in the New Year”. The melon, which came out of Mr. Lenzo’s garden Sept. 10, and has been covered in the cellar ever since was 12 inches long, had a circumference of 20 inches and weighed an estimated 15 pounds.
Happy days are here again for post office employees in Midland, as elsewhere, as they try to cope with the annual Christmas flood of postcards and parcels. Albert Thiffault (left) and Ed Marchand are seen with a small portion of the outgoing mail last Friday.
By now, these parcels will be under Christmas trees in Midland and out on the rural routes. They represent only a fraction of the number handled by Midland post office in recent days. Left to right are George Thompson, Jim Brechin and Postmaster William Bourrie.
Putting incoming mail into the correct boxes are, left to right, Armand Marion, “Chuck” Stelter and Howard Smyth.
Getting ready for the Christmas concert presented by Midland’s Sacred Heart School, Mary Lou Montgrain gets help with her hair from three of her schoolmates. Left to right, standing, they are Dianne Berrube, Peggy Hamelin and Shirley Proulx.
“Just hold still a minute”, says Mrs. Veronica Lindale, as she helps make up Linda Roach for her part in the Christmas concert presented by pupils of Sacred Heart School, Midland, last Wednesday night. Climaxing the concert was the play “No Room in the Inn”. The concert was held in the auditorium of St. Theresa’s High School.
Helping to decorate one of the trees used in the Christmas concert staged by pupils of Sacred Heart School last week gave these four girls something to do while waiting their turn on stage. Left to right are Sally Latour, Doreen Caston, Romelda Belanger and Valerie Cosey.
Sightless persons in North Simcoe displayed their handiwork of leathercraft artificial flowers, sewing and knitting at Midland YMCA last week. Purpose of the display, sponsored by the district advisory committee to the CNIB, was to encourage the blind folk to sell their crafts. Here home teacher Miss Emily Philpott, Mrs. D. R. Campbell and Mrs. George Smallwood examine some of the work.
Five of the largest ships on the Great Lakes, carrying more than three million bushels of grain in their holds, are berthed alongside the CPR elevator in Port McNicoll for the winter. Three of them, the Sir James Dunn; John O. McKellar and the T. R. McLagan, are seen above. Hidden from view are the Scott Misener and the Thunder Bay. The stern of CPR’s Keewatin is seen across the slip, under the Dunn’s nose.
Except for the winter clothes on the people in the foreground and no leaves on the trees, this might be Midland’s King Street on Civic Holiday weekend, with traffic jammed bumper to bumper. Instead, it was the scene Saturday, Dec. 19, as town and district residents went about another day of hectic Christmas shopping. Taken from the marquee of the Roxy Theatre, the picture looks north on King Street to the bay.
County Herald headline of December 18, 1959; Report Japanese Imports Hit Local Shoe Factories. Increasing competition from low-wage imports from the Orient and from manufacturers in depressed areas of Canada is dimming the 1960 prospects for footwear factories in Midland and Penetang. “While both Midland Footwear and Fern Shoe, which between them employ nearly 375 persons in the Penetang-Midland district, have remained relatively busy throughout 1959, orders so far booked for the coming year are somewhat lower, Jerry Zabransky explains.
Free Press Herald headline of December 21, 1959; Flee Smoke-Filled Home Lads Escape Suffocation. Two young Penetang lads had a close scrape with death by suffocation early Saturday morning when the house in which they were sleeping became filled with smoke from a smouldering fire. Joe Charlebois, 14, and his cousin, Paul Charlebois, 11, were asleep in the home of Joe’s father, Andrew Charlebois. About 1.15 the younger lad awoke, choking from the smoke and, after rousing the other boy, the pair attempted to quell the fire they could see around a hot air register. When smoke forced them out, the one escaped in his underwear and trousers, while the other only his shirt.
County Herald headline of December 23, 1959;
Free Press Herald headline of December 30th, 1959; Worst Storm in 20 Years Coats Area in Ice Armour. A severe ice storm said to be the worst to envelop the central and southern part of this province in the last 20 years, left a trail of disrupted telephone and telegraph services, toppled TV aerials and broke limbs and trees in North Simcoe over the weekend. The freezing rain, which commenced Christmas Day and continued Saturday and Sunday turned roads into skating rinks and left trees and power and communication wires thickly coated in an armour of ice.