By Tegla Clozza
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Dad and Mother (Mr. and Mrs. S. Stocco), honeymooning from
Italy, came to Canada in 1913, settling in Calgary. Then they
moved to
Drumheller, finishing off part of a building that was a
boarding house and grocery store combined, the "Roma Grocery",
which was later sold to De Bernardo. This building in later
years was the Frozen Food Locker on Railway Avenue, now
demolished. In 1921, they moved to a camp, "Sunshine" two miles
north of Wayne. A group, of shareholders taking over a mine,
having its own power house, kept this running for twelve years.
(The following is a reminiscence of the general life of people
in the camp.)
Home Life Having no electricity, coal oil lamps were used,
pails were hung by ropes into a well serving as refrigeration;
in the winter the weather took care of this. We had coal stoves
and out-door privies. The homes inside were roughly finished.
There were wide boards nailed throughout. Winter time, we Judged
the cold by the higher frozen nail, whereas with summer rains,
containers were placed here and there to catch the dribbles of
water seeping in. Mouse traps were in most corners of the homes.
The summers were great for continual swimming in the creek.
Apart from this, there were only sponge baths or our yearly trip
into Calgary, and the glory of getting into a real bath tub. All
laundry was done by hand, in tubs, using wash-boards.
Food was one thing that was never lacking. There was always a
coop full of chickens, eggs daily, cows therefore plenty of
milk, butter and cheese, pigs and geese. I would see Mom
cramming sopped bread down their throats to fatten and rush
their growth. There were also rabbits and pigeons, and fishing
right after the ice-break. They used a man-made net, placed
across the width of the river, this was made from tree twigs,
with an interlocking one in front; the fish swam in, and there
was no way out. This was set down at night, hauled in in the
morning. A few days of this and there were plenty of fish for
all at the camp, the "Ling" being everyone's favorite. Every
family had their own beautiful garden of vegetation. Yes, one
thing there was always a scarcity of "Dandelions" for salads.
Early mornings, when the line-up of box cars were brought to
the mine, these were also used to haul wheat; therefore, there
was always a surplus of wheat left in corners, behind boards, on
the floor, to be swept up. It was a mad scramble helping the
mothers that were jumping in and out of box-cars with pails and
brooms, salvaging a delicacy for their chickens.
We walked along the double tracks two miles to school in
Wayne, packing our lunch buckets, and back in the evening. Even
after the rough gravel road went through, we still kept to the
tracks, as it was shorter. In the winter very often we walked
along the river bed. this being quite a shelter from the sharp
north winds. There were many mornings that we were thankful, and
will never forget the trainmen, Mr. Jack Pitts, Mr. Bill
Patterson, Mr. Joe Hughes, (the train on the run) helping us up
into the caboose.
One morning clear in my mind, one of the boys said, "here
comes a train", another one screamed, "here comes another one".
I would call that "fate" that we all joined hands and jumped
down the embankment. If caught between two trains, we were told
not to panic, but lie flat down on the ground. There were
thirteen children in all walking the tracks. In twelve years of
school there was one fatality.
The article titled "Recollections of Life in the Sunshine
Camp" is reprinted from The Hills of Home: Drumheller Valley
(Drumheller, Alberta: Drumheller Valley History Association,
1973). The Heritage Community Foundation and the Year of the
Coal Miner Consortium (of which the Atlas Coal Mine is a member)
express their thanks to the author's family and the Drumheller
Valley History Association for this material.
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