Homestead, Alberta

The locality of Homestead, located approximately 48 km north-west of Grande Prairie, formed around the Homestead Post Office, established November 1, 1930.[1] The post office was in the home of Christian & Caroline Nordhagen, who also operated a small store.[2] The land in that area had been opened for homesteading (hence the name) in 1929. A forest fire had ravaged the area, leaving a fine white ash over the land, so when the school district was established in 1930, it was named Ashdown.[3] A log school was built on the NW quarter of section 20, township 75, range 9, west of the 6th meridian. This was the community centre for club meetings, concerts, dances and church services until 1949, when the Northern Lights Hall was built.[4] The school closed in 1956[3] and the post office in 1962.[2] The vacant school was used as a United Church until it was sold in 1959, but in 2006, the Ashdown Historic Society was formed to preserve the site and the building.[4]

References

  1. Aubrey, Merrily (1996). Place Names of Alberta- Volume 4. Calgary, Alberta: University of Calgary Press. p. 99. ISBN 1-895176-59-X.
  2. 1 2 "Post Offices and Postmasters". Postage Heritage and Philately. Library and Archives Canada.
  3. 1 2 Nutting, Mary (2010). A Grande Education: One Hundred Schools in the County of Grande Prairie, 1910-1960. Grande Prairie: South Peace Regional Archives. pp. 7–8. ISBN 978-0-9735665-0-5.
  4. 1 2 Pioneer Roundup Volume 2. South Peace Regional Archives: Pioneer History Society of Hythe and Area. 1972. pp. 544–553. ISBN 0-919212-22-0.
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