News | DrumhellerMail - Page #2576
09252024Wed
Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Antique wheels to roll in centennial

    Cars are no question a part of Drumheller’s History. 
    The Drumheller Demolition Derby is one of the longest running events in the province, before that there were the river races.
    There are even legends of Sam Drumheller putting his jalopy down the Red Deer River.
    It only makes sense that part of this years Centennial Celebration will include the four-wheeled road rattlers.
    Councillor Doug Stanford is heading up the show and shine and cruise element of the celebrations coming up on May 15. He is calling all cars to come out for the Show and Shine. This is the perfect way to start the cruising season, a chance to thaw the lead sleds this spring.

Doug Stanford will be at the Badlands Community Facility on May 15 to ring in Drumheller’s Centennial in his 1970 Monte Carlo.


    He hopes there will be a good turnout for the event.
    The Show and Shine is from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the Badlands Community Facility. There will be dash plaques for the first 30 entries and prizes, donated by local merchants.
    The event is part of the Drumheller centennial celebrations and following the show and shine there will be a cruise.
    The cruise will head down 9th Street for residents of the Drumheller Health Centre to take the sights and sounds of the antique cars, then cruise by the Hillview and Sunshine Lodge.
    “This will allow all the shut ins to come out and see the cars,” said Stanford.
    They will return to the Badlands Community Facility, where there will be some draw prizes for entries as well as a People’s Choice trophy.
    For more information on the Show and Shine, contact Councillor Doug Stanford at 403-8204023 or e-mail dougstan@telusplanet.net.


Parents help daughter check off bucket list with garage sale

    The love of two parents in East Coulee is giving their daughter the ultimate gift; happiness.
    Pat and George Nelson are hosting their fifth annual garage sale on Saturday, May 4 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at their house in East Coulee,  815 1st Avenue West, to help their daughter Sandra in her long fight with cancer.
    In previous years, the proceeds have gone towards cancer research or treatment.
    This year the couple wanted to do something different. Rather than donating the money to cancer treatment, an incredibly noble act, they decided to give their daughter  the chance to see the world.
    “I’ve always felt the money should go to cancer treatment, the bigger picture,” said Pat. “But, our daughter’s time is getting really short. Her bucket list entails a lot of seeing the Earth before she leaves, so we’re taking the money and giving it to her, so she can pick where she wants to go and go.”

Pat (left) and George Nelson, holding a picture of their daughter Sandra, granddaughter, and great granddaughter, are hoping to give the gift of a lifetime. The couple are holding their annual garage sale this weekend, with all proceeds going to Sandra, who has been struggling with cancer, so that she may see the world.


    The Nelson garage sale operates a little differently than most. There are no price tags and people are free to take whatever item they want. The two simply put out a donation jar for people to donate what they can.
    “Last year, we earned enough money to buy a couple of treatment chairs,” said Pat.
    With less than a week to go, the Nelson’s have mountains of items for their garage sale. The deck, a shed, and a garage are absolutely stuffed.
    “This year, our granddaughter was given some storage units that were just full of stuff. She’s an ecological engineer and her boss had some abandoned storage units, so he gave them to her. We hauled all that stuff down here from Wainwright. We also save all year for the sale,” said Pat.
    Friends and neighbours have pitched in too, including Bonny St. Jean, a cancer survivor, and Kelly Krueger, who helped make a ribald, yet bluntly honest, t-shirt last year. The shirt simply depicts a hand “flipping the bird,” with a pink ribbon tied around the fingers.
    “Everyone joined in and helped me put on a huge sale. All the donations took up my garage, the Coyote Club, the Green Room in the (East Coulee School) Museum, and the Retro Reusables parking lot,” said Nelson.
 Later this month, they plan to visit Sandra in Colorado and hand deliver the proceeds from the sale.
      “She’s raised five kids, put them through university, and they’re all successful. She’s done such a great job, she deserves to see some of the things she wants to see,” said Pat.

May Day celebrations set scene for memorial dedication Saturday

    Years of lobbying, fundraising, research and plain hard work has led up to the dedication of the Miners’ Memorial in Drumheller this Saturday.
    “This is something we have been working towards for three or four years, from where the concept first started to take hold,” said Linda Digby, executive director of the Atlas Coal Mine National Historic Site. “These things always take longer than you think they will, but now all of the pieces are coming together for this weekend and we are so excited about that.
    “There are some families who have been waiting 87 years for this, some have been waiting 50 years for this," said Digby adding that some will be coming from great distances to be part of the dedication.
    The Miners’ Memorial was installed at the park beside the Civic Centre last November.  East Coulee artist Marcel Deschenes is working on a mural to be unveiled on Saturday along with the dedication.
    This will all culminate at the third annual modern May Day Weekend in Drumheller.
    The Miners’ March will go on Saturday from the Badlands Community Facility, three blocks up to the memorial for the dedication.
    Digby said the weekend offers “History, Mystery, Entertainment and Remembering,” and it is happening all over; from East Coulee to Carbon. All four elements are intertwined in many of the featured events.
    Some of the mystery comes in with the Village of Carbon’s centennial project. It has created an interpretive display telling the story of the murder of John Coward, a mine owner who was slain almost a century ago.
    “They put together a compelling and unique exhibit, with a very well researched story line. It lays out the mystery of how one of their own mine managers was murdered in 1921,” said Digby.
    Another part of the mystery is Lothar’s downtown ghost walk. On Saturday evening he will be leading the curious though downtown’s mysteries.
    “Not only is he a magician, but an active student of the paranormal and a history buff. So he sews all these things together for his historical walking tour downtown,” said Digby. “He is going to talk about some of the history, but also some of the unexplained mysteries of downtown.”
     The weekend has entertainment in spades.
    She says they are excited that Joe Vickers is launching the weekend at the Last Chance Saloon on Friday night.
    On Saturday and Sunday, there will be all kinds of elements to keep residents and visitors entertained.
    This ranges from cool sweet ice cream to a chance for miners and their descendents to show their meddle.
    “Clan Wallace of Red Deer has thrown down the gauntlet and is challenging Drumheller to a test of strength,” said Digby. “Clan Wallace think they are descendants of Braveheart so they think they are really tough. But who is tougher than coal miners and their descendants?”
    This is followed by a scavenger hunt throughout town.
    Sunday is also packed with all kinds of fun including a Toonie Day at the Atlas Coal Mine, and an Open House at Midland Provincial Park.
    At the East Coulee School Museum, the visual arts will be celebrated. Renowned photographer Lawrence Chrismas will be hosting a special exhibit and signing his book “Coal in the Valley.”
    There will also be a short documentary being screened by an Alberta filmmaker called Ladies of the Saturday Night.
    “This is done by a young videographer investigating some of the shady ladies of Drumheller,” said Digby.
    Dana Inkster is an Alberta-based artist and worked with the Atlas to tell the story of a time when brothels were sewn into the social fabrics of the valley.
    The weekend will end with vocalist Kjel Erickson performing at the Badlands Community Facility. This is presented by the Drumheller Music Festival Society.
    “It will be a wonderful way to wrap up the weekend,” said Digby.

    For the complete schedule of events, click here.

 

 


Subcategories

The Drumheller Mail encourages commenting on our stories but due to our harassment policy we must remove any comments that are offensive, or don’t meet the guidelines of our commenting policy.