Sunday, 21 June 2026

Jeffrey LeBar interview 2006

 

NIPIGON HISTORICAL MUSEUM               January 20, 2006

Jefferey LeBar

Born: Nipigon Hospital 1955

Parents: Audrey Nona (Atkinson) LeBar, Wesley LeBar

Grand Parents: Vivienne (Van Tassel) Atkinson, Carl Atkinson

                              Elizabeth, Oliver LeBar (Coldwell)

Siblings: Cheryl, Ronnie, Shawn, Allan

 

The LeBar’s moved from Manitoulin to Coldwell.  Wesley LeBar

then moved from Coldwell to Nipigon to marry Audrey.  They were married on June 18, 1951 at the Nipigon Anglican Church.  They had five children all born in Nipigon Hospital.  Wesley LeBar was a war vet and a member of the Nipigon Legion.  He went to the second world war and he was under age, was taken prisoner for a while by the German’s and entered into a prisoner of war camp.  When they were being moved to another camp in railway box cars; they had the job of emptying the latrine pails when the train stopped, so he and his partner found a steel bar that they hid in their clothes and then they were back on the train and pryed the wooden boards off the box car and then jumped out while the train was still going and landed on barbed wire on the side of the tracks.  Thy stayed still for quite a few hours until daylight and then when they knew it was safe they found a house and were taken in by some people.  He was later injured from a gunshot to the leg. 

          Wesley worked as an Engineer for Domtar for 35 years, Audrey worked at the Plywood Mill in the 1960's and also for the Hudson’s Bay Company as a receiver.  Audrey’s father Carl Atkinson owned a beach combing business in Nipigon for many years with his son Rowley Atkinson.

          Coldwell was a commercial fishing town situated on Lake Superior 15 miles west of Marathon, which had a big railway station and railway houses.  There was a school house and small church and approximately 20 houses.  Elizabeth and Oliver LeBar ran a restaurant from their house.  They had five children; Wesley, Elizabeth, Penny, Ernie, and Budd.

 

          When I was a kid my grandparents had a camp at Honeymoon Cove and we went there in Grandpa’s boat and had picnics there.  Then they moved their camp over to Still water and we used to walk down the tracks at the mouth of the Stillwater Creek which came out on Lake Superior.  After they had that camp, they moved one to the Little Mill area and that was the last place they had it because someone shot up their old camp.  I used to Beach Comb with C. Dampier and J. Dampier and Henry Dampier to St.  Ignace Island and there were roads and camps there.  Back then they had dams and they let the water out, the logs would come down the Nipigon river and the men would stand by the sides of the river and push the logs down and then the big booms would catch them. 

          Everetteville was up on the highway and my Auntie Eileen lived there, it was up where the Petro is now.  The houses started at the Petro and went to where the Jehovah’s Witness place is now(2006), Mrs.  Black lived up there too.  The Voyageur was up there and the Shell to when I was a kid we used to walk or ride our bikes to Loftquist Lake and there used to be a road to Loftquist from the Cop Shop road but then they closed it off.  I started beach combing when I was about 12 or 13 with the Dampier’s along with Ricky Dampier and we used to sleep on their boat for weeks at a time.  My Grandpa did Beach combing on  the Nipigon Bay and the Dampier’s ran from the mill to St.  Ignace Island and to Jack Pine.  We’d stay at St.  Ignace Island with Alfred and Cookie Dampier at their camp.  Somewhere towards Thunder Bay there was a Light house and there were two old couples who lived out there and kept an eye on the Light house.  There was one on Lamb’s Island too.  I went to the Nipigon Public School and my teachers were; Mr.  Frankham, Mrs Taylor, Mr Sukomoto, Mr Peele, and Mrs Nyman.  Our family lived across from Hebert’s on Front Street.

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