news&views Autumn 2020 | Page 39

When Clouds Got in the Way Edith Smith VanKleek | Courtesy of Diane Grainger The First World War In 1914, the First World War was suddenly upon us. Recruiting officers came and held meetings, and all the able-bodied men in the community enlisted. Social life boomed, as every man who left for the army must have a send-off dance. A winter sleigh trail was cut down beside the railroad track, and the trail crossed the West Prairie River on the ice. This made it only three miles from the homestead to town. We all attended the dances, as everyone came to visit. Ladies brought the lunch, and a collection was taken up to pay for the wash boiler of coffee that was always consumed at every dance. Cups were tobacco cans. Babies and small children were laid to sleep on benches that circled the room or on the floor in the corner. The first dances were held in the dining room of the McLeod Hotel and later in the IODE (Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire) Hall (after they got it). My brother played the violin for free for these dances, and a local lady chorded on the organ. The train left for Edmonton at five o’clock a.m., and we would dance ’til then. The train stopped right behind the restaurant, and parting had to be quick when the train came. To see a mother embrace her son and say goodbye, perhaps forever, made you realize what High Prairie was giving for the defence of the country. An IODE was organized to send parcels to the High Prairie boys overseas. There were nineteen men who enlisted from the small community, so there were nineteen parcels to send every time. They sent fruitcake, cookies, chocolate bars, socks, soap, writing paper, pencils, toilet paper, shaving needs — whatever would be needed by the men in the trenches. (One man must have run out of writing paper, because he sent a letter home written on toilet paper!) The baking was done in the homes of the settlers, and the IODE put on different events to make money to pay for postage and things to put in the boxes. These boxes were sewn around with cloth, and cost $1.00 each to mail to England. From there, they were sent somewhere in France to wherever the boys were. Armistice and the 1918 Flu On November 12, 1918, we heard that the First World War had ended. (Everyone knows that it was November 11, but something was wrong with the telegraph that accompanied the railroad to High Prairie, and we didn’t get the news ’til the papers came on the train the next day.) There was no great celebration. People just cried for joy. Of the nineteen who had enlisted, only one was left. During the fall of 1918, the soldier boys returned to Canada, and they brought something with them — the germs of the 1918 flu. It wasn’t long ’til all public places were closed — schools, churches — and public gatherings were forbidden. Adapted with permission from Edith’s memoirs, Our Trail North, by her granddaughter, Diane Grainger, a teacher retired from Edmonton Public and Sturgeon school divisions. news&views AUTUMN 2020 | 39