Jump to content

Sifton, Manitoba: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Adding geodata: {{coord missing|Canada}}
SmackBot (talk | contribs)
m Date maintenance tags and general fixes
Line 1: Line 1:
''For the Rural Municipality of Sifton found in the Virden, Manitoba area, visit [[Sifton (Oak Lake), Manitoba]].''
''For the Rural Municipality of Sifton found in the Virden, Manitoba area, visit [[Sifton (Oak Lake), Manitoba]].''
{{Expert|date=February 2009}}
{{expert}}
'''Sifton''' is a small town located in the [[Canada|Canadian]] [[Provinces and territories of Canada|province]] of [[Manitoba]] approximately 20km north of Dauphin in the Parkland area. Large influxes of [[Ukrainians]] settled this region in
'''Sifton''' is a small town located in the [[Canada|Canadian]] [[Provinces and territories of Canada|province]] of [[Manitoba]] approximately 20 km north of Dauphin in the Parkland area. Large influxes of [[Ukrainians]] settled this region in
the mid 1890s, part of a mass immigration undertaken
the mid 1890s, part of a mass immigration undertaken
by the federal government. Sifton is named after
by the federal government. Sifton is named after
Line 67: Line 67:


==Geography==
==Geography==
*'''Area:''' 768.27 km² (296.65 mi²)
*'''Area:''' 768.27 km² (296.65 mi²)
*'''Location:''' [[Ordinal directions|Southwest]] [[Manitoba]]
*'''Location:''' [[Ordinal directions|Southwest]] [[Manitoba]]
*'''Area Code''': +1-[[Area code 204|204]]
*'''Area Code''': +1-[[Area code 204|204]]
Line 75: Line 75:
*[http://www12.statcan.ca/english/profil01/CP01/Details/Page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo1=CSD&Code1=4606015&Geo2=PR&Code2=46&Data=Count&SearchText=Deleau&SearchType=Begins&SearchPR=01&B1=All&Custom= RM of Sifton Community Profile]
*[http://www12.statcan.ca/english/profil01/CP01/Details/Page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo1=CSD&Code1=4606015&Geo2=PR&Code2=46&Data=Count&SearchText=Deleau&SearchType=Begins&SearchPR=01&B1=All&Custom= RM of Sifton Community Profile]


:;
:;{{Manitoba-geo-stub}}
{{Manitoba}}
{{Manitoba}}


{{coord missing|Canada}}
{{coord missing|Canada}}


{{Manitoba-geo-stub}}

Revision as of 10:03, 19 February 2009

For the Rural Municipality of Sifton found in the Virden, Manitoba area, visit Sifton (Oak Lake), Manitoba.

Sifton is a small town located in the Canadian province of Manitoba approximately 20 km north of Dauphin in the Parkland area. Large influxes of Ukrainians settled this region in the mid 1890s, part of a mass immigration undertaken by the federal government. Sifton is named after Minister of the Interior Clifford Sifton who viewed farmers from Eastern Europe as ideal for settling and opening the Canadian West. About 250 families both in town and in the surrounding countryside today call Sifton, Manitoba their home.

History

A spinning wheel mounted on a cairn in town is the only visible reminder today that Sifton is also the birthplace of Canada’s iconic fashion item of the ’50s, the Mary Maxim sweater.

Sifton was once a hub of woolen milling in Manitoba. Local residents still speak of the village blacksmith in the early 1930s, going broke trying to shoe horses for a living, who started manufacturing spinning wheels instead. It was a stroke of business genius and it sparked a major industry for Sifton, even during the Depression. It lead to the construction of Spin-Well Mfg. Co. here and its eventual expansion into producing woollen products, including heavy yarn for sweaters and socks. The blacksmith, John Weselowski, eventually partnered with Willard McPhedrain, a community promoter and CN agent at the time, who had the idea of creating knitting patterns with Canadian symbols. It was McPhedrain who founded the Mary Maxim Co., bestowing on his company a name derived from the shortened version of a domestic in his household: a local girl named Mary Maximchuk.

Sifton was, during those years, also a centre of other industry, including flour milling. It had several mills, plus elevators, numerous stores, cafés, a lumberyard.

But the town’s fortunes began to reverse in the late 1950s. Mary Maxim Co. eventually left Sifton, and relocated to Paris, Ontario. One by one the town’s flour mills disappeared. A terrible fire in 1949 destroyed several businesses on Main Street. Railways were abandoned. Farms got larger and people more mobile. Children from Sifton’s large families left for education and fortune elsewhere, frequently Dauphin, which became the major economic centre of the Parklands.

Geography