Nipigon Historical Museum 1990 before the fire of Feb 11 1990 Views of the Main Room
Saturday, 17 December 2022
Tuesday, 22 November 2022
LIMESTONE LAKE AREA MULTI USE
Limestone
Lake Area – Multiple Uses
By: G.T.
Marek, Management Forester
Weekly
Report March 4th, 1970
District of
Geraldton, Ontario Department of Lands and Forests
Many people
from the Nipigon-Red Rock area are familiar with Limestone Lake. This small spring fed lake is in the centre
of an unique 45 square mile territory located a few miles north east of
Nipigon, between Jackfish River and Highway 11.
Large grassy meadows on lower land alternate with brushy rolling hills
in generally open country. Cedar Mountain – highest point in this 30,000 acres
of “God’s Country” – presents an excellent and picturesque view of the Orient
Bay rocky cliffs to the north and Kama Bay on Lake Superior to the south.
While the
rest of our bush country remained relatively unchanged many changes occurred at
Limestone Lake in the past forty years.
Some old timers still remember logging for large white spruce which took
place there for many years before the Second World War. It was started by these
people that timber cut at the time was the best and biggest in Thunder Bay
District. One old lumber jack put it this way, “I was given a strip to cut and
I stayed in it and kept cutting for a whole year”. Then fire swept through the cut-over in the
very dry year of 1940, and the area was burned again in 1948. After these fires the grassy and bushy land
lay barren.
In the fall
of 1960 the first steps to reforest these very productive sites were undertaken
by the Department of Lands and Forests, and a plantation of 600,000 trees was
established. The only access to the area
was the old Limestone Lake Road over Cedar Mountain which presented some
difficulties but was pressed into use.
After two years of observing the first planting, a second plantation was
established in the fall of 1962, and it became obvious at that time that a new
man-made forest of white and black spruce could be established without
difficulty. After 11 miles of
all-weather road were built during 1963-64 large scale reforestation was
undertaken, a permanent camp established, and at this time over 12 million
trees have been planted in an area of approximately twenty square miles. This represents a investment of more than
half a million dollars. The planting,
which is still incomplete, was successful and some exceptional growth of spruce
can be seen.
Through
intensive management of the total area of 15,000 acres, we hope to grow
approximately one million cords of wood in the next 50 to 60 years for our
industry. (ed. It is now 2018 at this printing…so that time is come.) Of course
the establishment and growth of these trees is not our only
responsibility. Consideration must be
given to fish, wildlife, recreation, etcetera, and all aspects of multiple use
must be made compatible and must be of benefit to all of us.
While
composing this, the writer asked his seven year old daughter to write down what
she likes to do at Limestone Lake.
Based on the
experience of family outings there, I quote: - “What I like to do at Limestone
Lake. I like to see the beaver house and
dam. I like to see the moose run. I like to pick berries and eat them
all. I like to see the geese fly. I like to have picnics at the lake. I like to see the rabbits run too. I like to see the butterflys fly. I like to see the deer eat. I like to see the birds fly over our head. I would like to go swimming at Limestone
Lake”.
Further
elaboration on the subject is not needed after a statement of this kind.
One aspect
which must be mentioned in conclusion is the still ever present danger of
fire. Fire in the dry grass in Spring is
always a danger to the very young plantations.
Therefore, until they grow, choke out and eliminate the grass, special
attention must be afforded the area by the Department and extra care must be
taken by the public.
D.E. Gage,
District Forester.
Tuesday, 15 November 2022
DAM THE NEPIGON 1900 PROPOSAL
The Citizen,
Ottawa, Canada April 14, 1900
OBJECTED TO
Dam on Lake
Nipigon Vigorously Opposed
A Pulp Mill
Scheme
Which Would
Destroy the Beauty of a Sportsman’s Paradise
A gentleman
interested in the Ontario Colonization and Repatriation Accommodation was in
the city yesterday, and his conversation stated that there is a growing
opposition to the request of the North Shore Timber Company to the Ontario
Legislature for a charter to go into the pulp business on Nepigon River and to
construct a dam about 20 yards above the C.P.R. Bridge at Nepigon of sufficient
dimension to raise the water twelve to fourteen feet the contention being that
the dam would raise Lake Helen up to the first fall at Camp Alexander.
The
objections are based on that Nepigon is the finest Trout stream in the world
and should be preserved for all times to come as a resource for sportsmen from
Canada and foreign parts.
To do that
properly the Nepigon River and lands for an average width of five miles on each
side of the river should be set aside as The Nepigon National Park and no timber cut thereon.
The building
of a dam would prevent the fish ascending and descending the stream. It is said that C.P.R. is strongly opposed to
the proposal on the grounds that it would be detrimental to the tourists of all
Canada now assuming such large and profitable proportions and which is so
beneficial to all Canadians, and Canada Commerce generally to destroy one of
the chief points of interest in Canada which unfortunately would be done if the
Nepigon were utilized for manufacturing purposes. Particularly when there are so many other water
powers in that vast country available.
In reply to
Mr. J.P. ….before the Ontario Legislature rose on Thursday the attorney general
said that a new agreement in connection with the Lake Nipigon concession had
been a subject of regulation recently
and it was more than possible that would be submitted for ratification this
session.
Wednesday, 9 November 2022
NIPIGON HISTORICAL MUSEUM ROOM BY ROOM
Leading up to our 50th Anniversary year 2023 I will be posting memories of the museum Room by Room.
NIPIGON HISTORICAL
MUSEUM
ROOM BY ROOM MEMORIES
THE SITTING ROOM
THE ROUND TABLE
The Round Table came from the Polly Lake Girl Guide Camp.
From 1972 to the mid 80’s most Board meetings were held
around the Round Table in the Sitting Room.
In the early years it was the Museum Board members, the
Secretary and Roland and Elvie representing the Nipigon Historical Museum
Society (membership of 149) who “looked after” the museum for the first two
years until we proved that we could operate
(be open to the Public) for xxx amount of hours in a “season” 1973 and 1974. Then the Museum was given a 5000 dollar start
up fund from the Province.
Later the meetings were held upstairs in the large Workroom.
Once acquired, E.C. Everett’s Wallpaper Album was its
centerpiece until the fire.
The Firemen were able to chop a hole in the roof and get a
shower of water into the front rooms, thus saving most items in various
conditions.
The rescued album went to the arena ( remember the arena
roof had been condemned at that time) so the rink was cold and empty …just
right for frozen storage until the conservers could thaw them out in the entrance halls of the arena.
In 2005 our summer students
took the photographs off the album pages
using Goo Gone to release the tape and glue, then number each photo by
the page it was on, scan each photo and then place it in large display albums
using photo corners and spacing . So when on facebook you see ECE 15. 2
designated for a photo that means it was the second photo on page 15 of the
Wallpaper Album. They were going to
stick the photos altogether on a page just like ECE had done. I nixed that
idea.
You can see the Wallpaper Album in the ECE Display
case. The “New” display albums are
usually on a table for viewing.
Sometimes the Round Table was just a table.
Like when Jack Stokes brought one of the Directors of the
Henry Ford Museum of Dearborne Michigan for a visit. Roland and Elvie cooked up a super doper
dinner: white bean soup, homemade bread and Blueberry pie for desert.
When the Director saw our pottery sherds in the Archaeology
Room 1, he offered to have his staff make us a pot to show what it would have
looked like. We never did take up that offer.
So now the Round
Table can be seen in some of our Nipigon Narrations, Their Voice in History
video Interviews.
Sometimes it has been used for Board Meetings.
Dan Gapen did his book signing at the Round Table.
Currently covered with a cotton crocheted table cloth from
the 1930’s.
It is central to our small creation of The Sitting Room with
the Black Piano, Jackfish Organ and the Wooden Bowl.
Friday, 21 October 2022
If You Come By Cruise Ship in the Summer of 2023
Friday, 14 October 2022
Facebook page Nipigon History
Facebook has changed how I can work with this page re Sharing and stuff. Not sure how it will be for viewers. You may have to look down through the posts to find some videos that don't show up in the video list.
We are going to try and get a YouTube channel to put the longer videos and interviews on in the future.
Next year is our 50th Anniversary so may be putting more stuff onto the Facebook page than the Blog but we will see how that goes.
Hope to have a variety of events throughout the Summer/year so that more people have a chance to get to Nipigon throughout the season.
Next year we hope to be back to normal open hours 11- 8pm seven days a week July and August.
Hope you all are staying well and that the price of gas will go down.
Friday, 19 August 2022
Lighthouses
A young fellow is doing research into the Lighthouses in this area of Superior...any suggestions for where to look or who he should talk to??
Monday, 6 June 2022
Gas Price in Nipigon
Who would have thought Gas Price would be Historic?
In Nipigon, Ontario, June 6, 2022 the price of Regular gas is $10.03 per gallon.
It works out to that when it is $2.22.9 per Liter
Saturday, 2 April 2022
Dr. J. Harvey 2006 Interview
NIPIGON HISTORICAL MUSEUM May
31, 2006
Interview
Dr. Harvey
Now Resides in Thunder Bay
We
arrived in Nipigon in 1961 actually I was working at the Port Arthur clinic at
the time and the public health nurse came into the office and wondered if I
knew someone who was interested in coming to Nipigon because the local doctor
Dr. Jefferey had just died. He wasn=t that old only in his forties he
was an alcoholic I remember some people telling me that they=d go into his office and he=d asked them if they=d like a drink. If you said no he would say Awell I do@ and he=d pull the drawer open and
pour himself a drink. Sibby Natchuk was
his office nurse for a long time and her job first thing in the morning was to
try and get him sobered up. Anyway, he
was a good doctor and a lot of the patients told me that they=d rather have Dr. Jefferey drunk than any other doctor
sober. So I went down to Nipigon and
looked over the books because Mrs.
Jefferey was selling the practice and figured out what I=d make and I came back to
the Port Arthur clinic and told them that if they=d pay me what I could make in
Nipigon then I=d
stay and they said Ago
to Nipigon@. So I can remember the day I arrived it was
November and it had just snowed and was sort of miserable and wet and slushy
and so on. Outside there was apartment
building on the corner of Bell and First street which was where the practice
office was. Originally it had been a
home and then it became the RCMP office and then I=d bought it from Dr. Jefferey who had used it as an office and
then I had bought it and did a few renovations.
Now I think John Fould=s
owns it as an apartment building. So
that was where I practiced and then there was Dr. Somerleigh and Dr. Sittlinger and Dr. Somerleigh had just a year before I had
gotten there a woman who was angry at him because her baby had died which had
absolutely nothing to do with him but she threw acid in his face. You have to give the guy credit because in
spite of being so badly disfigured he came back and practiced in Nipigon it was
something for the community too because he had a lot of patients. Then there was Dr. Sittlinger over in Red Rock and Dr. Sittlinger comes out in the summer time to
Stewart Lake and so basically there was the three of us at that time. At that time too it was the old Red Cross
Hospital, it was a beautiful stone front building which was where the hospital
was and that was the original building which would have made a wonderful place
for the Nipigon Museum but of course, it got torn down. Then they added on to the hospital and the
Red Cross Hall was where Harbinson=s
live and the Red Cross in those days was kind of like a club which was a social
club that everybody kind of belonged to help in the community.
So
there are lots of interesting stories from those days because there was no
ambulance in those days so I had a station wagon and so if they needed an
ambulance I=d
use my station wagon. I can remember one
time actually this person still lives in Nipigon but his name shall go
unmentioned, but he was a really bad alcoholic and he knew that he shouldn=t drink and drive so he was
driving down towards Terrace Bay and when he came to a side road he crossed
over the railroad tracks down to the lake and have a drink and he became progressively
more drunk as he went along until he was totally smashed. So he was driving back up and it was getting
dark by this time and he came to this side road and he turned left and the
highway was just really rough and then all of a sudden this idiot came along
right down the middle of the highway with only one light and what had happened
was he turned on to the CPR tracks instead of the highway! This was the Canadian in those days you know
the passenger train that was coming down so I guess he=d pulled over as much as he could
but he still scraped the Canadian right from one end to another he did hundreds
of thousands of dollars worth of damage to the whole train which was made out
of that really shiny aluminum. Anyways,
we got the call that somebody had been in a car accident with a CPR train and
he was stuck his foot and he was passed out or unconscious or drunk or whatever
but his foot was stuck under the brake pedal so we had to get a crow bar and
pry the pedal up. It was actually near
Gravel River where it happened so we unfortunately I couldn=t get the back door of my
station wagon open to get the stretcher out but I could get it out through the
passenger door but I couldn=t
get a person on it. So we decided the
only thing to do was to carry this guy and he was about 6'3" and weighed
about 250 pounds and he was totally unconscious so two OPP officers carried
this guy about maybe a quarter of a mile up to the highway. Just as we got to Harry Timcoe=s place in Gravel River,
this guy sat up on the stretcher and started running down the highway. Well you could see two very disgruntled
policemen who had just carried this guy all that way and then all of a sudden
he get=s up and
starts running down the highway and I must admit they weren=t very careful when they put
him in the police cruiser. The only
injuries he had was a dislocated shoulder and a sprained ankle but other than
that the next morning he couldn=t
remember a thing that had happened!. The
moral of that story is that he is now an active member of AA and he=s sober now and a good
member of the community.
I
remember another time when I was using the car as an ambulance I got a call
down to the Plaza Theater because this little old lady was sick she had passed
out. So I came down with my station
wagon to pick her up and I put her in the back and I had just only had the
station wagon for two weeks and the lady threw up blood all over the back seat
because she had a bleeding ulcer. So I
took her to the hospital and spent the next three quarters of an hour hosing
out the back of my car.
There
was a funeral director in Nipigon in those days by the name of Frank Lawrence
which was before the Elliot=s
took over which was in the same building.
Frank and I had gotten to know each other and we were good friends and
Frank was quite a character. One time he had this old Hearst which was about a
twenty year old Cadillac and one day he called me and told me he had to go away
to this convention in Toronto and his wife Nancy was there. If somebody died when he was away then what
they would do is take the body up to Thunder Bay and the funeral director there
would look after it. But he said that
the only thing was that the guy next door to his place who ran the grocery
store was one of his helpers and anyway the other guy who was his helper was
off sick so he wanted me to give him a hand if somebody died which was not too
likely that somebody died in Nipigon every week. So I said Ano problem@ and he left and in the middle of
the night I got a call and what had happened was there was a woman in our town
who delivered parcels for the post office she had a little wagon that she
pulled around she was a single woman and that=s how she made a living for herself
was to deliver the parcels for the Post Office. Anyway, her mother and sister had come up from
the States to visit her and unfortunately her mother had passed away during the
night so I got this call at 4 o=clock
at night saying her mother wasn=t
breathing and they figured she passed away.
So I went to the house and the mother was dead so I pronounced her dead
and I was the coroner for Nipigon so I said well in order to take her back to
the States they needed to have a special certificate in order to transfer her
across the border. So I told them that I
was the coroner and I could fill the certificate out for them and then I said
you=ll probably
want to use the local funeral home and I said Aoh that=s right Frank=s away@! So they said Aoh, that=d be nice if your local funeral
home could make the arrangements@
so I went down and what Frank hadn=t
told me before he left was that the muffler had fallen off his funeral coach so
I started this thing up with the guy next door in the middle of the night just
roaring and this woman lived on eighth street up the hill and her house was up
above the road so you had to go up this driveway. So we turned the funeral coach around and I
was trying to back it up this driveway and it was making all this noise and it
kept stalling and I was trying to get it up the driveway. So anyways, I step out of the funeral coach
and well you should have seen the look on the relatives faces! The doctor, the coroner, and now the funeral
director!! They must have figured I had the town completely tied up and I=m sure they must have had
some storied about Nipigon when they got back home where this guy does
everything! When Frank came back I said AFrank that=s the last time I=m ever going to help you in
your funeral business!@.
One
time my wife Maureen and I were having supper at Frank=s place and we got a call from the
Hospital emergency room because there had been a very serious accident. The one person was dead on arrival and there
was a couple of other injured people so I said AFrank I=m going to have to go up to the
hospital because there=s
been a serious accident and there=s
somebody dead@. So I get up to the emergency room and the
other two people hadn=t
been badly hurt at all but there was the person who had passed away and the
body was in the emergency room so I said Awell there=s a local funeral director here in
town if you=d
like I could give him a call and he could come and help with the arrangements@. They said Ayeah, that would be nice if you
could do that for us@
so I opened the door out of the emergency room and there was Frank standing
there he decided that he knew he was going to get called anyways so he followed
me up to the hospital! I said AFrank, get back in your
funeral coach and drive around the block a few times! We don=t want them to know that you=re following me around that
doesn=t say too
much for my practice when the funeral director is three feet behind me!!!.
One
time I was walking along the Cliffside Cemetery in Nipigon and I could see this
head bouncing up and down in a grave!, so I stopped and here it was Frank and
you could just see his head come up and then back down and I said AFrank what in the world are
you doing?@
and all his equipment had been old that he used and you know they have the
straps that lower the casket down into grave, well one of the straps had broken
and the casket had fallen into the bottom of the grave and it twisted and the
top snap came loose and the top of the casket popped open. So he was trying to get this thing jumping on
the lid to try and get it to stick and I guess he finally had gotten Mr. Schwartz who had dug the holes and so on and
he was just shaking his head at Frank.
I
remember one time I got this call up to MacDiarmid which is now Rock Bay as a
coroner and I was told there was a woman there who had gotten run over by a
train. So I drove up and it was a sort
of a dull day and there was all the Hardy=s were up on one side and all of
the McGuire=s
were on the other side of this kind of a grassy cut just outside of MacDiarmid
and sure enough there was this poor soul in two pieces. And so there was all the relatives right
there and I just covered her up and they took her away and then I phoned the
pathologist at the Port Arthur General who would do her autopsy and had said Ayou know this woman=s been obviously run over by
a train and could you do the post modem@ he said Afine@.
About three hours later I get a call back from him and he said Ayes, she had been run over
by a train but you also forgot to mention the 42 stab wounds she had in her
body@. Well I didn=t want to examine her right there
and apparently she had been stabbed on the way home from a party late that
night or early in the morning and then the guy threw her on the tracks thinking
that he would cover up his crime by doing that.
So they took the guy into the police station and they took his clothes
for forensic evidence you know for blood stains and so on and then he had
signed a confession saying that he had stabbed her and that on the way home he
had met her and they had an altercation and then he got angry and stabbed her
and threw his knife off into the doc in MacDiarmid. He got off because they never could find the
knife it was so dark and murky the water that we couldn=t find it so the only evidence they
had was his confession and his lawyer was able to show that he had been
intimidated into making a confession because they had stripped him of all his
close and that=s
what forced him to give a confession so he got off. It was about six weeks later when the guy who
committed the murder was stabbed to death outside of a bar here in Thunder
Bay.
We
did a lot of interesting things Nipigon was a very progressive hospital at that
time one of the things that Nipigon instituted was rooming in like a lot of
this stuff we just take for granted now like a mother being able to have a baby
in her room. In those days doing
obstetrics they didn=t
do that in Thunder Bay then and we got a leading authority in internal and baby
care from Montreal come up and gave some talks at the Nipigon Hospital and the
Hospital eventually approved it and it was quite the battle actually because
people were worried about things like infection and so on. It seems hard to believe that they would take
the baby after and put it in the nursery and the mother wouldn=t even hardly get to hold
the baby. So rooming in was instituted
quite early and then the next step was having fathers in the delivery room and
that was again a really big fight with the board until a couple of board
members wives got pregnant and were having babies and they wanted to be in the
delivery room! Gladys (Gladdy) Gordon
was pretty progressive too and she could have just dug in and said no but she
agreed with a lot of things. The other
thing we did was I don=t
know if you=ve
ever heard of the Nipigon Coronary Care Research Project but in 1972 we got a
grant from the PSI Foundation which was before OHIP and the doctor=s had their own insurance
plan for patients. Companies like the
Red Rock Mill could purchase it and it was a kind of like health insurance and
mostly it was through employers that they had it. So anyway, when OHIP came in they had all
this money in the kiddie like millions and millions of dollars and you couldn=t give it back to the people
in a sense. So they used it for research
so I applied for a research grant and the project was to see whether it was
possible to do coronary care in a small community because in those days
coronary care was started in 1970 and this was only like two or three years
later. The thing was that because I was
the coroner I had access to all the statistics on people who had died of heart
attacks such as their death rates and so on.
So we tied it in with Mc Masters University because we were tied in with
them training medical students. The
other thing was that at that time the CPR was a new thing and in fact a lot of
the ambulance drivers in Ontario weren=t
allowed to do CPR because of the risk of being sued. So what we decided with this project was that
we were going to train everybody in Nipigon and Red Rock how to do CPR so if
somebody dropped from a heart attack there would be somebody right there to do
CPR on them. We trained about a thousand
people in the community which included all the plywood mill employees and all
the Red Rock mill employees and all the High School students. We had a resuscitation manakin that they
could practice on and at the Fall Fishing festival we set up a booth where
people could come in and learn how to do CPR.
So we trained and trained and that was one aspect of it and the other
aspect of it was in the hospital where we actually had a room designated for
Coronary Care which at that time was at the new hospital that was being built
but of course there=s
only one nurse on at night so how could she keep an eye on the patients so we
got closed circuit television which again was something really new. So we had this project that we were going to
do with closed circuit television and we also had a self learning whole
educational multi-media module for the nurses so that at night when they had
nothing to do they could train themselves all about how to diagnose cardiac
eurhythmia=s
and what drugs to give and all that kind of stuff. Then we would with the resusciany manakin if
the nurses weren=t
busy I would walk in and call a code 99 which in those days was what we called
it and the nurses would have to go through all the procedures and they just
hated it when I walked in. The
interesting thing was that we had to get approval from the board and the
hospital board said Awe
can=t do this
in Nipigon because it=s
too small and there are too many risks, this is very sophisticated equipment@ I=m not quite sure what all of their
problems were with it. So they just said
no and in today=s
dollars it would be equivalent to a million dollars worth of research and the
plan was to hire a couple medical students from Mc Masters University to come
up and do all the data collection and statistics and so on. So the board said no and about a month later
it was time for the annual meeting and George Sittlinger over in Red Rock told
one of his patients that Ait=s terrible you know the
board won=t
let Harvey go on with this research project@ so this woman got on the phone and
you could buy a membership in the Thunder Bay District Hospital organization
for a buck. So about a hundred and fifty
people all took out their dollar membership and attended the annual meeting
which usually at that meeting you=d
be lucky to have a dozen people attending so these people all showed up and
they wanted to know why the board turned down this research project and so on
and what all their excuses were. The
board explained that it was very difficult equipment to use and so Lillian
Wolters was a kindergarten teacher at that time and she said Awe have a video camera in
our kindergarten class and the kids don=t seem to have any trouble using
it!@. It was
really bad but another woman got up with tears in her eyes and said Amy husband Joe just passed
away a few months ago and if there=d
been this program in the hospital he=d
probably still be with us@. So the board resigned, the whole board quit
and then there was no hospital board and they had to call the Ontario Hospital
Association because this Dr. Harvey
character was causing all this conflict and trouble and so on! Then they kind of poured oil on the waters
and everybody decided to get along again and so we put that program into effect
and I think even until this day they have Cardiac Care in Nipigon. It=s
funny though we=d
forgotten a part of the project to put any money in for installing the cable
for the closed circuit television so this medical student that was working
along side me one night we drilled a hole in the floor by the nurses station
and there was like a crawl space under the old hospital. So there we were in the middle of the night
with flashlights pulling this cable underneath the hospital and then we drilled
a hole in the floor in a room that was going to be the intensive care unit!
Mr.
Chaboyer was on the ambulance and he really was the back bone of that training
program and it=s
funny how in a situation like that there=s somebody in the community who
will catch the vision and if it wasn=t
for people like him. He was a very quite
un assuming sort of person but he was very faithful and he worked very hard at
it. We did surgery in those days and
actually all of us did surgeries in particular Dr. Sittlinger and myself we did appendectomies
and hernia=s
and tubal ligations and I notice in the papers I kept from the hospital here
there used to be consent forms for sterilization in those days and you had to
sign that you realized they were irreversible and in those days the wife had to
sign it too or if the wife was the one getting it done the husband had to sign
for her. I remember one woman who was
Catholic and she was said she was so tired of going to the confessional every
month and having to confess she was taking birth control pills so the husband
agreed to have a vasectomy so then he just had to confess it once and it was
over! So I did the vasectomy on him but
unfortunately about a year later she came to me pregnant and so I said AI=m not going to take the blame for
this your husband=s
vasectomy worked you=ll
have to face the music yourself!@. She wanted me to say that it didn=t work!. You see a lot of life and a lot of sadness in
the medical field especially as a coroner I think the saddest things were the
suicides for me. One young couple had
been in their early 30's and they didn=t
have any children and the husband was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis and he
just didn=t
want to burden his wife with it so he went and rented a room in Terrace Bay and
killed himself by overdosing on pills.
His wife was so heartbroken over what had happened. Another man who had been sort of depressed
off and on and he went to the Nipigon Hospital and an old friend of his had
been there and he had just messed the bed and this guy stood there and looked
at his friend and said to the attending nurse Aif that=s the way life ends then I=m going to do something
about it!@.
So he got in his car and his daughter
was called by the nurse so she got in her car and tried to follow him because
at that time they lived in Thunder Bay.
Just as she pulled in the driveway she heard the gun go off and he had
shot himself. She said Ait was so awful my father=s brains were all over the
walls and ceiling@
and she said AI
just couldn=t
let strangers clean the room I had to clean it up myself@. So you can imagine the trauma involved what
most people don=t
realize with suicide is that it=s
such a terrible thing to do to your relatives. Talking about brains, my wife
and I had been coming back from Thunder Bay late at night because we had been
up to the community auditorium and we were driving home at around 11:30 at
night just by Hurkett and the police lights were going and here was this car
that had been in a head on collision. So
we stopped since I was the coroner and the guy who had been driving the car was
going so fast that when they hit the other vehicle which was a truck or
whatever and the people in that vehicle weren=t injured. Anyway, they were going so fast that when his
head had hit the steering wheel it sheered the top of his head off and his
brains were actually sitting on the top of the dashboard!. If you can imagine how you would do that
without you know just how they were sitting there. So I told the police that I
think we can be pretty certain that this person is dead. He had a chum with him and he was dead too.
One
time I got called up Black Sturgeon and an older man had been cutting wood and
had a heart attack and died. So there
was this stack of wood that he had piled up it was all nicely cut and I think
it was on crown land so I went up and pronounced him dead and made sure it wasn=t a murder being covered up
or anything. So I asked the police
officer I said Awho
does this wood belong to?@. The police officer said AI don=t know@ because we had a wood
fireplace at home, so the old station wagon I had I ended up loading it right
up with all of the nicely cut wood and it was just about dragging on the
road!. When the winter time came I told
the kids Alets
burn some dead wood!@. The crazy things that you do!
I
remember this particular station wagon we had was a 1962 pontiac and it had
what you called positraction and it was just a new thing then and in those days
you could have a studded tires. I got a
call about a plane crash on Black Bay actually what had happened the guy it was
late at night and they got a knock on the door at Nuttal=s they had a cabin there and
it was the guy from the crash and he had crawled about 2 miles across the lake
in the snow. It wasn=t terribly cold it was maybe
minus 10 degrees outside then and he said Amy buddy is still trapped in the
plane and I couldn=t
get him out!@. So we went out and sure enough we couldn=t get the guy out because
the dash board was stuck and they were afraid to move him and so on but he was
conscious. He called me and so like an
idiot I thought that with this new positraction I could drive out on Black Bay
and actually a guy went ahead of me on a snow machine which was good because
there was spots that were slushy and there were some holes in the ice. So I followed him out and we had crowbars and
stuff and the guy was saying Ano
don=t pry on
anything@
because there was like one hundred thousand dollars worth of navigational
equipment and he didn=t
want it broken and here we were hacking away at it with axes. He had two broken ankles but other than that
he was okay, what had happened was that they were flying around in this snow
storm and there was a whiteout and he couldn=t even tell which way was up so
they ended up crashing. So they thought
it was pretty good that the ambulance came right out onto the lake.
I
remember another time it had been hunting season and there were some pretty
tragic events of hunting accidents in Nipigon but this one had happened during
the first day of hunting season and there was a moose walking up the road. So this guy had pulled his truck over and was
waiting for the moose to walk off the road before he shot it actually it was an
American Tourist had pulled off the road and this guy from Nipigon pulled off
to the side because he spotted the moose in the middle of the road. So the American hunter was standing on the
road watching the moose and this guy from Nipigon jumps out of his truck and
fires and shoots the American tourist right through the chest!. So they bring him into the Nipigon hospital
and he=s bleeding
like crazy and we started to give him a blood transfusion and packed the wound
and so on and shipped him off to Thunder Bay.
The guy was conscious while I was working on him and he was from Florida
anyway, we got up to Nipigon with him and he went unconscious and he was
unconscious for about two days due to a lack of blood and the shock and
everything. Dr. John Gooding was the surgeon up in Thunder
Bay and he spent six hours operating on this guy putting him together. The guy woke up and recovered and all he
could remember was this doctor from Nipigon that had saved his life. So every year for about ten years I got this
box of oranges from Florida you know, and John Gooding got diddly squat! So I
used to tell John Aoh,
I got my box of oranges for saving that guys life!@ and he would say Aoh, yeah right@.
So
we did surgery in Nipigon we did hernia=s and those sorts of things and
then we had surgeons come down from Thunder Bay. A surgeon by the name of Randy McComb would
come down with an anaesthetist and they would do the more major surgeries like
gull bladders and then we would do the post operative care in Nipigon. So that was kind of nice because the patients
could have the surgery done right in Nipigon without having to leave town. We had quite an active operating room and
then Dr. McComb moved away and then as time
went on it was felt that you had to be a properly trained surgeon. We were what you called in those days
Physicians/Surgeons. In my training I
had done surgery in the Detroit receiving hospital which is sort of like ER and
it was the second busiest emergency room in the United States. So I got a lot of experience from there but
as time went on of course you felt it wasn=t safe to do surgery in Nipigon
which was probably true to some extent.
With the highway improvements and the air ambulance and so on the whole
dynamic changed but those were sort of the old glory days of Nipigon. There were people like Sylvia Naetchuk and
Gladdy Gordon and Verla Smart who was the RNA, Phyllis Spirka was the head
nurse after Sibbey Naetchuk left. When I
look back now they were pretty good sports to put up with me! Dr.
Sittlinger I remember just to be funny would take a few wiffs of the end
of the anaesthetic agent and get high! He would have to sit down and lean up
against the wall because he was so dizzy!
There was an x-ray machine there when I arrived and there was a woman
who ran it and she was an RNA and she=d
learned how to run the x-ray machine she used to live across from the hospital
and I believe she was of Finnish descent and she=d come over after the second world
war. Then as time went on we got a more
sophisticated machine and in those days we did what we call forescopic
procedures like we would take barium enemas which was for examining the
intestinal track by putting the barium up from below or they could swallow it
and we could do x-ray=s
of the stomach. We did a lot of things
in the x-ray department and then again we felt that to really do a good job we
had a radiologist come down once a month and we=d line up everybody that needed an
examination of their stomach or intestines and he=d spend the whole day doing all the
x-ray=s. Again that meant that people didn=t have to travel and they
could have it done right there.
I
became interested in acupuncture back in the 70's when a bunch of doctor=s from Canada went over to
China and saw it and were totally amazed.
So I had taken a course in acupuncture and I have lots of stories about
that. In my office I because with acupuncture
you had to let the person sit there with the electro stimulating machine hooked
up to the needles for about twenty minutes and I didn=t want to tie up an office up in my
regular office so I fixed up a room in the basement. Actually I built the entrance way to my
office with the stairs going up to where my office was and stairs going down to
the basement so that some time in the future I could have an apartment
there. So I fixed up the one room just
as you were going to the bottom of the stairs there was a room there and that
was where I did the acupuncture and there was a lady who had been suffering
from migraine headaches and with that you would put the needles in the forehead
and a couple of other places. Anyways,
there were these wires hooked up to the needles I placed on her forehead so she
was downstairs having her acupuncture treatment when a patient that had never
been to the office before had just moved into town and came to the office and
she wasn=t
quite sure where to go and so unfortunately I forgot to lock the door to the
basement so she walked downstairs and opened the door and saw the patient
sitting there with these needles coming out of her head hooked up to this
machine! So the woman comes upstairs and
says to the receptionist Ais
this a doctor=s
office?@ and the
woman was pale white. Another time there
was an old Finnish guy who lived across from the office and he originally was
in the hospital hooked up to an ECG machine and when I treated him with
acupuncture the next day I saw him he said Aoh, that treatment you gave me
really helped! Could I have another one today?@.
So I tried to explain to him that it was just diagnosis you know but he
wouldn=t have it
so I thought well okay we=ll
do the acupuncture on him since it makes him feel so good. So he would come over about once a week for
his acupuncture treatment downstairs in the basement room and one day I was
sitting in my office upstairs with a patient sitting across from me and she
said Ado I hear
something?@. And I listened and you could hear this sound
coming up from the cold air register Ahelp!@ and I thought Aoh, shoot!@ because I had forgot my
patient who had gone downstairs for his acupuncture treatment about two hours
earlier!. So I could hear this noise Ahelp!@ and I went down and saw the
poor guy and I said Athat
treatment you got today was a really good treatment and I=m not going to charge you
extra for the extra time!@. Surprisingly that was his last treatment with
me!. I remember another time because we
did urinalysis and blood work from the office which was actually not allowed
when I first came to Nipigon. So we did
the lab work in our office and this guy had come in for a life insurance
physical he was a young muscular strapping guy and so Gladys said to him that
for that physical we needed a sample.
She gave him a jar and said Acan
you give us a sample?@ So he goes into the washroom and he was in
there for quite a while and about fifteen minutes later he comes out and all
that was in there was this white stuff.
So Gladys looks at the jar and says Aoh no no no that=s not right you have to do
it again!@. So the guy says Ano, not again!@. So I said Ahey Gladys, make sure he knows it=s a urine test before you
send him back in there!@. That guy must have thought we were a bunch of
perverts!. There=s some interesting characters in Nipigon
there was this old bachelor named Alec McMund and he used to live in a little
shack down the road where the Matchett=s
lived by the Sunnyside cabins and Alec had this one room little shack up
there. Everybody knew him and he was
blind in one day and his vision was failing him in the other eye and he was
very old and he had worked in the bush all of his life. People said he should be in the old folks= home up in Thunder Bay
because there wasn=t
one in Nipigon in those days. The town
every fall would bring him a pile of chopped wood the guys from the maintenance
department and he would cook a little bit for himself and so every once in a
while we=d
bring him a good meal. About once every
three months he=d
take the taxi into the hospital to be checked over and people thought it was
just awful that this old man was all alone but he wanted his independence. Sure enough we got a call from one of his
neighbors didn=t
see any smoke coming out of his chimney so he had died and was frozen solid but
he died happy and with his independence which I think is more humane than
watching somebody like that being in an old folks= home. We had another guy who was mentally
challenged who must have been about 40 and he had an 80 year old father and he
was sort of like Haus Cartwright from Bonanza he was a great big guy like kind
of a gentle giant. His father passed
away and his mother had passed away before that but he could do some things to
look after himself and I think it was Clarence Saunders who would take him out
grocery shopping but he never bathed. So
whenever he came in to the office which I had that used to be a house at one
time equipped with a three piece bathroom and so this guy when he came into the
office to see me Gladys took him into the bathroom and put him in the bathtub
and took all of his clothes and ran down to the Laundromat and washed his
clothes for him and then brought them back for him! Talk about you want to see a bath tub ring
after all of the poplar smoke being in his house it was really something but
Gladys was a really good sport about it to run down to the Laundromat. This guy came into the hospital one time I
think he had pneumonia and the nurses couldn=t get him out of the bathtub
because he just wanted to sit in the bathtub!.
Eventually I think he had to go to a home here in Thunder Bay but where
he lived I noticed the house stood for a long time on the highway but I see now
it must have burnt down.
There=s lots of stories talking
about bodies freezing we one time got a call along with the OPP up to Black
Sturgeon Road and there was a couple of guys who had been out hunting. So I guess their car had run out of gas and
or else they had sat in the car to keep warm with hopes that somebody would
come along and they got carbon monoxide poisoning and had died. So anyways, when the police came along the
two of them sitting in the car were totally frozen solid and the OPP didn=t know what to do with them
because of course they were frozen in the sitting position. So the OPP thought well there=s no point in calling for an
ambulance or anything so we just put the one guy in the one corner of the
backseat of the cruiser and we put the other guy in the other corner. They were driving along with these two frozen
guys in the backseat and as they were coming down the Black Sturgeon Road there
was a guy hitchhiking because his car had broken down I guess it was really
cold, so they picked him up. Well the
only place for him to sit was between the two guys in the back seat and so the
guy says Aboy,
these guys sure don=t
talk much do they!@. And then because the heater was on in the
cruiser, the one guy thawed out and slumped over this guys lap and then the
other guy slumped on him. Apparently the
guy just said Astop!
I=m getting
out of here!@
and jumped out of the cruiser because he was totally freaked out of his
mind.
This
story I was told to by an RCMP officer from the Nipigon detachment that way up
north an old bushmen living by himself had died and was absolutely frozen
solid. So he called it in on his radio
and asked Awhat
should I do with him?@
and they said Awell,
bury him get a big axe and make just a shallow grave@.
The officer had the brains to think well, I=m going to have to dig a hole six
feet long here because the guy was tall.
So the RCMP officer put him on a saw horse and he figured, I=ll saw him in half and then
I only have to make a three foot hole.
So that was what he did, he started sawing this guy in half and just
then one of the old bushmen=s
fellow trappers came around the corner and saw this OPP officer sawing his
buddy in half! He came tearing into town talking about this crazy Mountie who
had murdered his friend!.
Another
call I got up the Black Sturgeon was during hunting season and a guy had come
out to the highway and flagged down a car and said Athere were four of us out hunting
and my brother-in-law just shot two of the men in this cabin and poured gas
from the Coleman stove on the place and burnt it down!@.
So the police had thought this story is pretty wild, anyways, they went
out and had to go by boat up this river which I think was probably Wolf River
so up went the coroner and the police and finally here=s this cabin which was burnt to the
ground and you could see the shapes of what had been two bodies there. Well, the brother-in-law turned up in town in
Thunder Bay and the police went to him and he said Ayeah, I just wanted to get out of
there because my brother-in-law shot those two guys and I didn=t want to get blamed for it!@. So there were these two guys both accusing
the other of having shot them and what the police should have done was to
charge them both with together with the murder but instead they charged the guy
with the bad criminal records. The jury
said Awell, we=ve got two guys who are both
liars how do we know who it was@
so they didn=t
convict them and there was no point charging the other guy because it would
have been the same story so they both got off.
I remember in that inquest the defense lawyer tried to convince the jury
that the lead in their brains was from the roof melting and dripping on to
their heads. Unfortunately the roof was
made out of galvanized steel and not lead!.
We
had three kids when we came to Nipigon and then we adopted five more after
that. So we had a family of eight which
was multi racial, we had one Colored child and one part Chinese, two Native
children. One of our daughters we
adopted had congenital amputations of her fingers and toes so they were all
special needs kids that we adopted. Our
son Jerry had been born with diabetes which was very unusual and he=s 43 years old now and has
no complications at all. When he was a
teenager he lived on Coke and Chocolate Bars so it=s amazing because sometimes you
think there=s
no justice and he=s
doing fine other than the fact that he had rotten teeth. We lived up on McKirdy street and I believe
it=s the Greek
restaurant owners who bought it off of us the Stavropolous=s. I built all of the rock walls at the place
and it took me several years to do them all it was just a sort of a hobby for
me. The one summer I was there in my
shorts covered in mortar and had the cement mixer running. My wife had said that the hospital had phoned
and that there was a couple of people in the emergency room with insect bites or
something and so my wife said Amy
husband=s busy
working outside right now@. So the hospital said Awell we=ll send them up for him to have a
look at them@. They came up to the house and stopped and
asked me Ais
this where the doctor lives@
and I said Ayeah@ so they walked up all the
way up to the house and Maureen yells out Adear, there=s somebody here to see you!@. So the look on their faces was priceless
because here=s
the doctor building a stone wall.
Talking
about stone walls, the town council one time got the bright idea to hire a dog
catcher from Beardmore because they couldn=t get anybody from Nipigon to do
the job because they=d
be lynched! I was building the rock wall
and our dog which was a Golden Lab was sitting there watching me and all of a
sudden I looked up and he was gone and the kids said Aoh, some men took the dog@. What they did was they had a bitch in heat in
the back seat of their car and they opened the door so of course the male dogs
would just run to the car and they had a whole back seat full of dogs! I was really ticked off so I jumped in the
car and they kept them on the other side of the railway tracks down by the
Plywood Mill was where the dog pound was.
Anyway, I was really moving in my car and I hit the railway tracks and
tore the muffler right off my car. Just
as they were opening the door to get the dog out there was a scuffle in suit in
which the dog catcher got his fingers slammed in the car door! So I got my dog and put him in my car and
took him back home and about half an hour later Constable Jones of the OPP
arrives at the door and said Awe
got an incident report here@
and I said AI
thought the guy had stolen my dog how would I have know he was the dog catcher
he never had any identification, I was just retrieving my stolen property!@. The officer said Adid you have to slam the door on
him though?@. So by the time I got the muffler fixed I
might as well have just paid the fine and been done with it.
Nipigon=s probably the same way
everybody knows everybody else and so people can be reasonable and understand
things but it also means that people gossip a lot more but you gotta take the
good with the bad. We enjoyed the
sixteen years we spent there and it was a wonderful place to bring your kids up
partly because the parents all squealed on each others kids. Our daughter Liz, because we lived up on a
hill we=d get a
pair of binoculars and could watch her.
She used to catch the bus down on Front Street and we=d see her by the bus and
then the bus would leave and she was still standing there because she was
playing hooky so we=d
ask her when she=d
come home how school was and we=d
get this big long story. So we=d say well that=s interesting you know
because we saw you standing by the bus this morning and then the bus left and
you were still standing there!@. Another time somebody phoned and said Awe saw Liz across from
Saunders Foodland and she was standing there having a cigarette@. The poor kid never had a chance at all but in
a sense that was good that parents watched each others kids and took
responsibility for them. Then there was
the day there was a woman by the name of Mrs.
Martin who was a widow and she lived in this old house on around fifth
street but Mrs. Martin was a pack rat
and she kept everything. Her house was
full of everything like newspapers and a lot of preserves because she made
preserves but she never ate them her whole basement was full of them. She had two children and she was a highly
intelligent and well educated woman she was a school teacher and I think she
brought her children up very well one of them went into the military and her
daughter became a lieutenant colonel or something like that. Anyway, Mrs. Martin had this old house and it
caught fire so unfortunately the Nipigon fire department put the fire out when
the house was about half burnt so now she had these ruins just sitting on the
foundation. Just at that time the
community of Cameron Falls was becoming automated so it was being controlled
from Pine Portage now it=s
controlled by I think Thunder Bay but the whole community out there was just
amazing of houses and they were all being sold for I think like a thousand
dollars and you could get a nice three bedroom bungalow. All you had to do was to pay to have it moved
into town. So Mrs. Martin came to me and she said AI=ve managed to save up a thousand
dollars to buy it and I=ve
made arrangements with the movers and they=ll move it for me but the problem
is what am I going to do with the old house?@.
There was still four walls standing even though the roof was gone and
this was back in around 1965 so I had the bright idea that what we=d do was we=d get the school kids from
the George O=neill
school. So we put up a poster and said
that any kids that were interested in destroying a house to come to Mrs. Martin=s on Saturday morning and to bring
sledgehammers. I had a big maxi van and
so the kids we put them upstairs and they=d pound away and smash the house
and then with the maxi van I tied a rope around and blew a whistle and then the
kids were all to clean out of the house when the whistle blew. Then with the rope I would go down the hill
and we=d pull a
section of the house down that way. Ava
Larson had a son who had died of a brain tumor and he had an old truck and so
he out of the goodness of his heart said that he would haul stuff to the dump
for us. So on Saturday we knocked
Mrs. Martin=s house down and hauled it all away
to the dump and the kids had a wonderful time!
You think about it now though with all the liabilities and lawsuits and
danger and everybody worried but nobody got hurt. I remember I had a chainsaw and I would cut a
section and then the kids would knock it out with the sledgehammer and then we=d pull it out where the
truck was. Then they brought the new house in and Mrs. Martin came back to see me because they put
the house on the foundation the wrong way.
Well it would only fit one way but the problem was the foundation was
long and narrow and the house was long and narrow too but the front of the
house was in the middle of the long part so these guys put the house on the
foundation and when she went out her front door she was looking at the wall of
the next door neighbors house! She was
quite ticked off that they put the house on the foundation the wrong way. I guess that house is still there I know
there are several houses that came from Cameron Falls but that was the most
famous.
There
were nurses in Cameron Falls who would just travel back and forth to the
hospital I think they may have had a nurses station there but the medical
treatment was done in Nipigon. Sometimes
in those days we would make house calls too.
I remember the one time the Legion had a dance and unfortunately I think
it was the salad that got salmonella and there was about 600 people at this
dance and all of them were just sick as dogs.
So we were all running around giving people shots of gravol to all these
people on Sunday morning who were vomiting and it wasn=t because they were hung over they
were really sick. I remember I got a
query from OHIP because I had made something like 60 house calls within a 24
hour period and they wanted an explanation of this abnormality in my billing
schedule. George Sittlinger was busy
over in Red Rock doing the same thing talk about being popular!. It was a good place to bring kids up.