Lethbridge Herald

Exhibition grounds fire hall

- By Bobbie Fox

If you went to the fair at the Lethbridge Exhibition grounds between the 1940s and the 1970s, you may have noticed a little white building with double barn-like doors with a painted sign above them that read Fire Hall. During the week of Lethbridge’s local fair, that little building located behind the grandstand became a substation for the fire department. The Lethbridge Fire Department had two firefighte­rs stationed at the fairground­s. They worked in shifts to provide 24-hour-perday service for the four days of the fair.

The Exhibition grounds’ fire hall was large enough to house an ambulance and a pumper truck. The water for the pumper truck came from a nearby irrigation canal. The firefighte­rs were responsibl­e for providing basic first aid in the fire hall and doing patrols of the fairground­s. They maintained contact with the main fire hall via two-way radio and telephone. Brightly painted fireboxes and an alarm system alerted firefighte­rs on duty of any emergency on site. The Lethbridge Fire Department occupied the tiny wooden fire hall from the set up for the fair until vendors vacated the fairground­s.

In October 1973, city council decided to use the

Exhibition fire hall as a temporary home for the animal shelter. It is thought that the old fire hall building was removed from the Exhibition grounds and found a new home in Carmangay in early 1974.

The Galt Museum & Archives has multiple documents and objects in its care related to the Lethbridge Fire Department. You can browse those in our database at

collection­s.galtmuseum.com.

Your old photos, documents, and artifacts might have historical value. Please contact Galt Museum & Archives for advice before destroying them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada