Winnifred is an unincorporated community in Alberta, Canada within the County of Forty Mile No. 8. It is located approximately 50 km (31 mi) southwest of the City of Medicine Hat and 14 km (8.7 mi) east of the Town of Bow Island.

Winnifred, originally a whistle stop at Mile 31 on the Dunmore Junction also known as the Turkey Track, was upgraded to a siding in 1885 named after a daughter of J.R. Whitlaw, one of the charter members of the Turkey Track.

In 1903 the only buildings were the section house where William Savage lived; a dugout for the section hands; and a small two room building that housed the telegraph office. No more than ten people lived in the surroundings.

Four years later in 1907 the Alberta Government opened up district between Grassy Lake and Winnifred for homesteading.
Settlers from Eastern Canada and the Mid-western States flooded the area taking up almost every quarter section of land for miles, unaware of the drought-ridden nature of the area. With lack of water and wood, settlers relied on wells for water and small coal deposits in the area for heating.

The first few businesses in Winnifred came in 1908 and the spring of 1909. P.J. Demarce opened a store on the south side of the tracks; William Hickmore imported lumber from Lethbridge for a Hotel and eating house; while J.S Fisher, of Whitefish, Montana, opened the Fisher Mercantile.

In 1913, most the businesses expanded and moved across the tracks, where they joined F.W. Brown’s Hardware; Quong Chon’s combination laundry and café. The Fritz Sick brewery of Lethbridge built an up-to-date hotel. The site of the Union Bank was diagonally across from the Fisher Mercantile building.

The boom years for Winnifred were 1915-1916, when heavy rains produced bumper crops. It was too good to be true. In 1918 the Fisher Mercantile went bankrupt and the first of many homesteaders started moving away. The hotel went the same year and was moved to Brooks. The newspaper The Winnifred Record, which started out so bravely to chronicle the development of the community, folded shortly after.

The 1920’s were harsh years for the remaining settlers, with drought, clouds of grasshoppers and finally hordes of rabbits who ate everything that looked like grain. More settlers packed up and left and with the help of the government moved to homesteads in central and Northern Alberta.

By the mid 1930s, dust storms completed the task and farm after farm was abandoned. It took thirty years for the determined homesteaders to appreciate that without irrigation the land was best suited for ranching.

Courtesy of Medicine Hat and District Genealogical Society (MHDGS)

Deaths

Longevity

Address

Just south of Gate Avenue between Albert St and Park St
Nearest Populated Centre: Winnifred,
Province: Alberta

Map Location

Latitude, Longitude
49.90878, -111.20045

Map Location

Search for:
RESET
Surname Given Name Born Died Age Photo(s) Cemetery Obituary Narrative R Code

The 25 most common surnames found in this cemetery.

loader

The 25 most common given names found in this cemetery.

loader

Other Cemeteries

Westcott Cemetery (Mountain View County)

Westcott Rd & Range Rd 32 , Westcott , Alberta

Little Knoll Finnish Lutheran Cemetery (Forty Mile County)

Range Road 55 south of Township Road 62 , Manyberries , Alberta

Gilby Cemetery (Lacombe County)

Range Road 33A S of Highway 12 , Gilby , Alberta

Arrowwood Cemetery (Vulcan County)

Range Rd 233 just south of Twp Rd 205 , Arrowwood , Alberta

Burnbrae Cemetery (Ponoka County)

Township Road 444 east of Highway 771 , Homeglen , Alberta

Albion Ridge Cemetery (Lethbridge County)

Range Rd 22-2 & Twp Rd 12-0 , Barons , Alberta

Franciscan Friars Cemetery (Rocky View County)

41160 Retreat Road , Cochrane , Alberta

Brant Cemetery (Vulcan County)

Hwy 804 south of Twp Rd Twp Rd 182 , Brant , Alberta

Bowville Cemetery (Vulcan County)

Range Road 220 and Township Road 132 , Bowville , Alberta

Hussar Cemetery (Wheatland County)

Highway 561 (east of Hussar) , Hussar , Alberta

Discover Alberta Ancestors