Journal Pioneer

The way we were back in 1873

- CONTRIBUTE­D JOURNAL PIONEER Written by Marlene Campbell and researched and edited by Jean MacKay of Culture Summerside.

This year marks the 150th anniversar­y of Prince Edward Island entering Canadian Confederat­ion. Although Charlottet­own is the birthplace of Canada, the Island, for reasons of its own, did not rush into the union. During Canadian Heritage Week, Feb. 20 to 27, this story below looks back at 1873 Summerside.

There are many ways to mark heritage week including visiting a historic site, taking in a historic cultural performanc­e, learning the story behind a family heirloom, making a meal from a long-time family recipe or reading stories such as this.

1873 SUMMERSIDE

This July 1 marks the 150th anniversar­y of P.E.I. entering Canadian Confederat­ion. Many 1873 Islanders saw the entry as a defeat – forced on them by the railway debacle that quickly strained the Colonial Government coffers.

The decades prior to Confederat­ion were tumultuous years of debate on P.E.I. Even though Britain was finding the Island a financial burden and pushing the colony to join Canada, many Islanders saw little reason to give up their independen­ce and identity that stemmed from isolation.

Various parts of the colony were enjoying rapid growth, and some Islanders knew prosperity. Summerside, an unplanned village, was a perfect example.

The Queen’s Wharf, built in 1842, and the shipbuildi­ng that

later followed, instigated the growth of the settlement on the shoreline marsh of the property of United Empire Loyalist, Daniel Green and his sons. The building of Water Street in 1851 made Summerside accessible by land from Read’s Corner in the east and the county seat of St. Eleanors in the west.

Rapid growth continued around “the wharf” and by 1873, the settlement, now known as Summerside, was thought to have the possibilit­y of outstrippi­ng Charlottet­own in a few short years.

The industrial centre was expanding to the east with such establishm­ents as Hall’s Manufactur­ing, the forge of George Bishop, the George Doull furniture

factory, and numerous warehouses.

Shipyards were busy turning out sailing ships, and the harbour saw extensive traffic as ships loaded the harvest of land and sea. Farmers had learned to rebuild depleted sandy soil with manure and mussel mud, resulting in surplus produce.

Oats, hay, barley, straw, potatoes, cattle, horses, and oysters were some of the commoditie­s Summerside shippers were selling to the Eastern Seaboard, the West Indies, and England.

Many farmers entered produce and livestock in the annual Prince County Exhibition held in the fall on the Drill Shed grounds.

In 1873, James Ludlow Holman opened the 150-room Island Park Hotel on Indian Island in the harbour, which was the start of true Island tourism. The commercial centre on Water Street with its independen­t shopkeeper­s was impressive, and Summerside had the distinctio­n of being a militia town.

There were now two schools, a number of mainstream churches and two newspapers. Summerside was home to around 2000 people, some in fine homes built to the north but many others in shanties.

A big 1873 issue for Summerside was no local government to oversee services and maintain order. While fearful of unlawfulne­ss, the community had a way to deal with it. A vigilance committee, establishe­d in the 1860s, kept an outlook at night for fire and wrongdoing.

It handed out its own form of justice as the thief who stole five pounds learned.

A rope was tied around his middle by which he was lowered over the Queen’s Wharf and doused five times in the cold October water. He left Summerside immediatel­y and didn’t return. Residents were happy to learn in 1873 that Summerside was named the County town and a new courthouse and jail would be built.

Summerside was a happening place in 1873.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? A bird’s-eye view of Summerside in 1878 was drawn by American panoramic artist, Albert Ruger. It clearly shows the loop of the railroad track (now Confederat­ion Trail) through the town, which was granted its charter in 1877.
CONTRIBUTE­D A bird’s-eye view of Summerside in 1878 was drawn by American panoramic artist, Albert Ruger. It clearly shows the loop of the railroad track (now Confederat­ion Trail) through the town, which was granted its charter in 1877.

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