August 1966 VOL. 47, No. 8 From the Lakes
to the Mountains
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Canada's Prairie Provinces cover one-third
of the area of the country, excluding the Territories; they
have a sixth of the country's population; they return eighteen
per cent of the federal members of parliament, they account
for 62 per cent of Canada's total net income from farm operations,
and in 1965 for 7.8 per cent of the estimated value of shipments
in all Canada's manufacturing industries.
Yet the history of Canada west of the Great Lakes is so recent
that it seems to be contemporary.
Up until a few years ago the west was properly regarded
as being primarily agricultural, net income from farming far
exceeding that from all other sources combined. Processing
was based on the products of the land, and the little other
manufacturing was limited to the immediate needs of the small
urban aggregations.
Today's changing skyline bears testimony to the industrial
revolution which has swept the prairies. Manufacturing plants
busy turning out chemicals, fertilizers, steel, cement and
consumer goods; the many-storied office and apartment buildings;
the head-frames of mining ventures; the hundreds of drilling
rigs: all these are evidence of new-found progress and prosperity.
Settlement
The rich and free wheat-lands of the prairies brought a
wave of settlement at the beginning of this century, with
its peak period in 1897 to 1920. In 1961 Manitoba had 4.35
persons per square mile, Saskatchewan 4.20 and Alberta 5.35.
Canada, excluding the Territories, had 8.66.
Early settlers found the going not only rough but dangerous.
Typical of their experiences was that of the colonists brought
from Scotland to Red River by way of Hudson Bay in 1811 by
Thomas Douglas, Earl of Selkirk. They settled in the only
district in western Canada where an annual precipitation of
over twenty inches is combined with a July temperature of
over 65 degrees. But they were harassed by the Nor'Westers,
a down-east fur company in competition with the Hudson's Bay
Company. In 1816 twenty-one of the settlers were killed near
the settlement by an armed band in employ of the Nor'Westers.
Early frost and a plague of grasshoppers threw the colony
into desperate straits. To provide seed for the next year,
the settlers and their wives and children had to handpick
the heads of wheat and barley cut off by the grasshoppers.
In 1825 there was an invasion by mice; in 1826 the Red River
rose as much as fifteen feet, and seed wheat was saved only
by putting it in the church spire.
In spite of these hardships the colony grew steadily, so
that in 1849 it numbered over 5,000 persons, with nearly 6,500
acres of land under cultivation.
After 1830 many travellers from the outside world got as
far west as Alberta, and small settlements sprang up. By 1883
the Canadian Pacific Railway was built across southern Alberta,
and ranchers spread across the country. From 1900 to 1910
the growth was spectacular, the population reaching 375,000.
In 1906 there were 650,000 acres under cultivation and the
wheat crop was nearly four million bushels.
Shortly after Confederation the Canadian government extinguished
the aboriginal title to the vast areas of the prairies by
giving the Indians reserved land, gifts in cash, and promises
of assistance in agriculture and education. There were, in
1961, 72,000 Indians on 314 reserves totalling 3,300,000 acres.
Transition to industry
Now, at the end of Canada's first century of confederation,
the families on small farms are a group of citizens caught
in one of the pressure spots of a rapidly changing society.
The small farm is on the way out, a victim of modern technological
forces.
The 1961 Census showed the following percentages of total
population living on farms: Manitoba 18.6; Saskatchewan 33;
Alberta 21.4. The years since then have witnessed further
reductions in farm population.
Transportation has played its part in the change. It is
less than ninety years since Winnipeg saw its first railway
engine, brought in by barge from Minnesota. The first through
train to the Pacific coast left Montreal on June 28, 1886.
Starting in the early 1920's airplanes have been used to
transport men, machinery, supplies and equipment throughout
the western provinces and to otherwise inaccessible places
beyond the Arctic Circle, and regular airline service connects
the Canadian west with all the world. A $2½ million air cargo
terminal is being built at Winnipeg.
Since 1950 two of the world's longest oil and gas pipelines,
nearly 2,000 miles in length, have been built to link the
western oil fields to major cities as far east as Montreal.
In addition, three major pipelines, several hundred miles
in length, cross the Rocky Mountains to supply the lower mainland
of British Columbia and the coastal United States.
Manitoba leads in total installed hydro-electric power,
and has started the first stage of a $1,000 million development
of the Nelson river which will serve the province's power
needs for at least the remainder of the twentieth century.
Saskatchewan depends upon thermal stations to produce most
of its electrical capacity, but there has been a rapid increase
in recent years in the tempo of hydro development. The generating
capacity is expected to climb to one million kilowatts by
1969 and treble by 1988.
The plenitude of vast fuel resources has placed thermal
electrical development in the forefront in Alberta, but provincial
potential in water power is estimated at two million kilowatts.
Since 1955 the power generating capacity rose from 477,000
kilowatts to 1,326,000 kilowatts in 1965.
Wheat and livestock
In 1876 a small shipment of seed wheat was sent from Fort
Garry to Toronto, the first wheat to leave the west. In 1880
12,000 bushels of wheat were reaped from a thousand acres
in Alberta. In 1965 the production of spring wheat in the
prairie provinces was estimated at 661 million bushels.
Fort Macleod, in Alberta, was the cow-boy centre of Canada
in the early days of the range. Grant MacEwan tells in Between
the Red and the Rockies about the biggest round-up in
the history of the Canadian west, which took place at Macleod
in 1885. A hundred cow-boys, sixteen chuckwagons and 500 saddle
horses were used to collect more than 60,000 head of cattle.
Three million head of cattle now roam expansive ranches
and farms in Alberta, and 1,163,200 head of cattle were shipped
to packing plants and stockyards in 1965. Manitoba marketed
363,240 head, and Saskatchewan 704,750 head.
The first big band of range sheep was trailed from Montana
to Alberta in 1884, and the first wool shipment was sent out
that same year. Almost 200,000 sheep and lambs are now marketed
annually.
Forests, furs and fish
One does not associate the prairie provinces with forests,
but they have more than 400,000 square miles of forested land,
of which 219,000 square miles are productive.
All three provinces are anticipating development of the
pulp and paper industry. Manitoba is busy on a $100 million
forest complex centred around The Pas but spreading the full
length of the Hudson Bay railway to the port of Churchill.
Saskatchewan, which has some 43,000 square miles of commercial
forest made up mainly of spruce, jack pine and aspen, is looking
toward a $65 million bleached Kraft pulp mill, and at Hudson
Bay, near the Manitoba border, a $2½ million sawmill will
produce 50 million board feet of kiln-dried construction studs
annually. Alberta, which according to Canada Year Book,
"has 52,569,000,000 cubic feet of accessible standing timber,
almost equal to that of Quebec," gives employment to nearly
ten thousand workers in the woods, in sawmills, in pulp and
paper and plywood operations.
The fur brigades, each made up of four to six 34-foot-long
York boats, have disappeared from the Red River, but pelts
to the value of $11 million a year are produced.
The lakes of the prairie provinces yield fish of high quality:
whitefish, pickerel, trout, and the renowned "goldeye". Commercial
fishing is a main source of income for residents of the north,
and it provides a profitable side-line for farmers near the
large lakes. In one year, Manitoba produced fish valued at
$6½ million; Saskatchewan's catch was worth $3.1 million in
1964/65; and Alberta's $1½ million.
Manitoba
This is the mid-continent province, its International Peace
Garden on the United States border being almost the geographical
centre of North America. Its population in 1870, the year
it became a province, was 11,963; at the Census in 1961 it
had 922,000 people, and today it has almost 40,000 more.
Just across the river from Winnipeg, the capital city, lies
the picturesque city of St. Boniface, the only large French-Canadian
city outside the province of Quebec. The French-Canadian population
of Manitoba in 1961 was 83,936.
Manitoba's greatest natural resource has been its rich soil
and favourable climate. It set the world standard for wheat
with its famous Number One Northern. Consolidation of farms
continues, with the latest count giving it 41,000 farms covering
more than eighteen million acres.
Cash income the money farmers receive from sales
reached $8,085 per farm in 1965. The average farm investment
is about $27,000.
Industrial development is progressing steadily, with about
1,500 firms producing goods to the gross value of $970 million,
equal to 46 per cent of Manitoba's gross product. Manufacturing
employed almost 48,000 people last year. Average weekly earnings
are $82.10 compared with $58.30 ten years ago.
The province's economic growth is paced by such basic projects
as the $30 million fertilizer and $800,000 estrogen plants
at Brandon, a $16 million cement plant and an $8 million steel
plant modernization. A $3 million aluminum extrusion plant
was built largely because of the Nelson River power project.
The variety of Manitoba's industrial activity is indicated
by a few examples: the largest Canadian-owned garment manufacturing
plant is here; the body of every Greyhound bus operating in
North America originates here; Manitoba's whale skins are
used by a large international manufacturer of men's belts,
and the agriculture of the province supports the largest secondary
industry, food and beverages, by supplying grain, livestock,
poultry, vegetables, sugar beets and other specialized farm
products.
It is estimated that in 1965 there were 5,300 persons directly
employed in the mining industry, and the value of mineral
production reached an all-time high of $182 million, a three-fold
increase since 1960. The western world's only integrated nickel
operation is at Thompson, where nickel is mined, ground, smelted
and refined.
Several noteworthy developments in the past year indicate
that significant expansion may be forthcoming. There were
25 mining companies active, and expenditures on exploration
in the Precambrian area alone amounted to some $5 million.
Oil developments, too, are encouraging, with 898 wells capable
of production and a total value of crude oil in 1965 of $12
million.
Manitoba is the only prairie province with an ocean port.
Churchill, on Hudson Bay at 58 degrees north, was used in
the seventeenth century by the Hudson's Bay Company to import
cargoes from Europe, and in 1689 the first shipment left Churchill
outward bound 38 casks of whale oil. Today the port
has a grain elevator with a capacity of five million bushels.
Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan contains more than 37 per cent of all the occupied
agricultural land in Canada. At the turn of the century there
were only 90,000 people spread over its 252,000 square miles.
In 1965 there were 951,000 people.
Since the mid-1950's the province has been surprising the
world with its accelerated resource development, a succession
of multi-million dollar mining projects, and a flourishing
economy that is thriving upon industrial diversification.
While it must be remembered that crop conditions vary from
year to year, in 1964, non-agriculture activities formed 62
per cent of the productive economy, compared with agriculture's
38 per cent, and in the following year investment for new
construction and new machinery amounted to $786 million, double
what it was ten years earlier. The same period saw average
weekly earnings rise from $58.02 to $85.12. Personal income
in 1965 totalled $1,865 million, and per capita personal income
was $1,961.
Saskatchewan's mineral industry is making giant strides.
The production value in 1965 was $335 million, compared with
$86½ million in 1955 and $22¼ million in 1945.
It is in oil and gas that Saskatchewan's underground wealth
is showing itself. In 1944, 38 years and 229 holes after the
first oil well had been drilled, a good producer was brought
in. By 1964 the total petroleum output reached 500 million
barrels and investment passed the $1,000 million mark. The
first commercial gas came on tap in 1934, and today a network
of pipelines carries gas to homes and industry within the
province and oil to the Eastern Canadian and the United States
markets.
From a mere curiosity valued at $2,500 a cubic foot to a
valuable commodity produced for less than one cent per cubic
foot that is the record of helium in Saskatchewan.
Apart from government-controlled wells in the United States,
the Saskatchewan plant is the only source of helium in the
free world. By 1967 it will have an output of 36 million cubic
feet per year.
Promising to outrank oil in economic importance to the province
is potash. Actual and committed investment in the industry
is $500 million, and by 1970 the capacity of plants will be
ten million tons muriate a year. Saskatchewan's reserves are
estimated at 20,000 million tons, about half the world's known
reserves, enough to supply fertilizer for all the arable land
on earth for five centuries.
Large areas of land in a strip sixty miles wide are underlain
by coal with reserves totalling 36,000 million tons. The only
known commercial deposits of sodium sulphate in Canada are
in Saskatchewan. Annual production is at the rate of 350,000
tons, and reserves are estimated at 70 million tons.
Manufacturing has added a further fillip to Saskatchewan's
revenue as the trend moves to the finished product where once
the economy was based on extraction alone. The net production
figure for non-agricultural industries is set for 1965 at
$777 million. The labour force rose by 55,000 between 1951
and 1965, while workers in agriculture declined by 11,000.
But, after all, Saskatchewan is a wheat-growing province.
About 46 per cent of her land area is in farms, with 44 million
acres cultivated.
The investment in commercial farms land, buildings,
machinery, livestock and poultry is more than $3,260
million, an average of about $40,000 per farm, and the average
net farm income over the past ten years has been about $4,000
per farm.
Irrigation is being invoked to further stabilize agriculture.
The vast South Saskatchewan River project will contain more
than 200,000 acres of irrigated land, the first 35,000 acres
to be served by 1970.
Alberta
Claiming the title "Sunny Alberta", this province has a
statistical record of more hours of sunshine, summer and winter,
than any other province, with an average of 2,000 to more
than 2,200 hours annually.
Important changes have taken place in the pattern of Alberta's
productive industries. In a few short years what was essentially
a rural province with a small population has changed into
a predominantly urban and urban-orientated province with a
rapidly expanding population, one and a half million people
today, expected to reach 2¼ million by 1981.
The greatest increase has been in the contribution of the
mineral industry, from $55 million in 1947 to $800 million
in 1965. Construction industry growth has been from $74 million
to $982 million, and manufacturing from $89 million to $1,269
million. The provincial budget for 1966/67 totalled $682 million,
an increase of 38 per cent over the preceding year. Public
and private investment in 1966 is estimated at $1,770 million,
or $1,204 per capita.
This all started on a solid base of agriculture, and farming
remains important. There are 47 million acres of occupied
farm lands. The farm cash income from major sources in 1965
was $597 million. Major irrigation projects in the south have
opened up almost a million acres of productive land, and the
province has embarked on a vast water development and conservation
programme.
Mineral development started in 1869, when a gold prospector
came upon a seam of coal near Fort Whoop-up and turned it
into a profitable industry.
Although the coal industry has declined in the wake of oil
and gas development, it appears that the low point has been
reached and that now the industry is moving toward recovery.
Output in 1965 was 3½ million tons, and the low cost of power
generated by strip-mined coal is attracting the attention
of thermal powered electric stations.
Petroleum is the most important of Alberta's mineral resources,
with estimated reserves of 6,080 million barrels and 12,000
producing oil wells.
This industry has come a long way since 1886, when John
"Kootenai" Brown collected oil seepage in the Waterton Lakes
area and sold it as machinery grease at $1 a gallon. In 1914
the Turner Valley oil field was opened up, and people lined
the streets of Calgary in queues to buy stocks in Alberta's
first oil boom. Leduc was discovered in 1947, and its development
literally transformed the economy of the province. Redwater,
Golden Spike, Woodbend, Swan Hills and others followed, and
for twenty years Alberta has made Canada the leading oil producer
in the Commonwealth. In 1965 its production totalled 184.1
million barrels.
The production of natural gas in 1965 was 1,290 million
cubic feet, and there were 85 gas processing plants in operation.
Exports reached 314,000 million cubic feet. Proven gas reserves
amount to an impressive figure: 37,600,000,000,000 cubic feet.
The gross value of sales of petroleum, natural gas and gas
products amounted to $704 million in 1965.
In addition to the reserves of liquid oil, Alberta has oil
sands covering eight million acres containing more than 700,000
million barrels of oil. A mining, extraction and upgrading
plant costing $200 million is being readied for production
by 1967.
Upon the base of agriculture and minerals, Alberta has erected
an impressive manufacturing complex, growing at the rate of
$50 million a year. Some 3,000 plants are turning out a wide
range of products valued at $1,000 million a year. Personal
income has tripled in twenty years and almost doubled in ten
years, while average weekly earnings rose in ten years from
$62.30 to $91.10.
The prairie story
Such is the story of Canada's mid-west as the prairie provinces
enter the second century of Canada's Confederation. The greatest
epoch in the history of the plains is just emerging.
The long-run agricultural outlook is optimistic. With increases
in the human population and the rising of living standards,
the level of meat consumption is expected to double by 1980.
To satisfy this need, the demand for feed grain will also
double. Manufacturing is making manful strides across the
prairies. Underground wealth is being brought to the surface
and processed for use or export. Education is being upgraded
so as to prepare young people to make the most of the opportunities
held out by future years: Saskatchewan's current budget for
education is $78 million, Alberta's is $154.8 million, and
Manitoba's is $83 million.
It must not be forgotten what the west owes to the determination,
justice and cold courage of the Mounted Police who staged
their great march across the plains in 1874 to "impose the
Queen's law on a fretful realm".
Parliament passed an Act establishing the Northwest Mounted
Police in 1873, and in the following year 274 men set out
from Red River to patrol 750,000 square miles. They established
their headquarters fort at Macleod, and set about their task
of ousting lawless traders and building friendship with the
Indians.
As an observer remarked: "There were no regiments of soldiery,
no merciless cavalry, no prodigious munitions of war, no armed
suppression just tact, courage, understanding and diplomacy"
directed toward making life and property secure by establishing
law and order.
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