Medicine Hat News

Down the drain

- Heritage in the Hat Malcolm Sissons is a past member of the Heritage Resources Committee of the City of Medicine Hat

“Out of sight, out of mind.” Few think about the network of undergroun­d pipes when they flush but a functionin­g sewer system is an essential service in a civilized society. Tossing the contents of your chamber pot (a.k.a. “honey pot”) into the street and shouting “Gardyloo!” doesn’t cut it anymore.

Initially, every home had an outhouse. This evolved into septic fields where a connection to a sewer main was not possible. The last septic field within the city was dismantled in 2023! An 1893 News article refers to a sewer from the hospital (old site, now police station) to the river.

Wire-wrapped wooden staves were once used for water supply in the city. Wood pipes were only durable if kept saturated which worked with pressurize­d water supply but not drains. In 1907, a bylaw prohibited brick or wood drains within buildings from connecting to city mains; only cast iron or saltglazed vitrified pipe was allowed.

In 1903, the Town received quotes from a U.S. supplier of vitrified sewer pipe and there is reference in 1910 to buying pipe from the Ontario Sewer Pipe Co. but that was soon to change to local supply.

The new (1910) Alberta Clay Products plant initially produced brick and hollow tile using red-burning clay from Dunmore in its beehive kilns. Located between the CPR tracks and Bridge Street, the plant was a wonder, the biggest in Canada and second biggest in North America. Upon discoverin­g a source of higher quality stoneware clay at Eastend, salt-glazed sewer pipe was added to the product line.

The salt-glazing process involved adding salt to the kiln at high temperatur­e, which then combined with silica in the clay to create an impermeabl­e coating of sodium silicate. One end was formed into a bell shape, with the other end (spigot) fitting inside the bell. Mortar was used to seal the joint. The stacks of pipe inventory were shipped by rail across Western Canada.

A huge employer, the plant was a dominant local industry, controlled by the Yuill family and managed by Joseph Harlan “Hop” Yuill from 1921 until the business was sold to Marwell Constructi­on in 1955, then to Evans Coleman Evans (both Vancouver companies). Fire destroyed the iconic plant in 1961.

New technology emerged when the Medicine Hat Brick and Tile, operated by Gordon, Tom and Jack Sissons, constructe­d a brand-new sewer pipe manufactur­ing plant in 1955, adjacent to its brick plant. It featured the latest in forming and handling equipment and more importantl­y, an efficient continuous tunnel kiln. The firing technique also ensured such consistent vitrificat­ion that no glazing was required, a significan­t efficiency.

The joint was usually the weak point in the system as the mortar would disintegra­te over time. New jointing systems were developed based on asphalt (“slip-seal”), flexible rubber o-rings, nylon and fibreglass collars. By the late 1970s, the boom in Western Canada meant that the renamed I-XL Industries Ltd. had three tunnel kilns (one in Regina) producing sewer pipe with 12-month delivery schedules.

The economic crash in the West in the early 1980s coincided with the widespread adoption of plastic (ABS and PVC) pipe. The era of the vitrified clay sewer pipe ended suddenly and by 1990 production had ceased. The Medicine Hat advantage of cheap gas and access to good clay resources no longer mattered and plastic pipe manufactur­ing occurred elsewhere. However, the clay sewer pipe manufactur­ed in the city continues to function decades after installati­on.

So, next time you flush, think of the undergroun­d world of sewer pipe and how Medicine Hat once dominated that world!

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY ESPLANADE ARCHIVES ?? Vitrified clay sewer pipe being manufactur­ed at the I-XL plant.
PHOTO COURTESY ESPLANADE ARCHIVES Vitrified clay sewer pipe being manufactur­ed at the I-XL plant.
 ?? PHOTO COURTESY ESPLANADE ARCHIVES ?? Alberta Clay Products pipe inventory waiting to be shipped.
PHOTO COURTESY ESPLANADE ARCHIVES Alberta Clay Products pipe inventory waiting to be shipped.
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