Sunday, June 09, 2019

Old Hillside Cemetery



I've taken photos of Old Hillside Cemetery on numerous occasions but these are still my favourites.

A foggy day is rare in these parts so it's a real treat to see everything dissolve into the mist...it somehow "sets the scene" for viewing an historical cemetery as well.


Old Hillside Cemetery was established on six acres of land along Seven Persons Creek in 1884 by Saint Barnabas Anglican Church.




Five years later a section of this parcel of land became the Roman Catholic Cemetery.  Burials here continued until 1919 (Catholic) and 1923 (Anglican) and was officially closed in 1934 at which time The City of Medicine Hat took charge of the cemetery.







This is a good spot for geese to nest as the creek is at the bottom of the hill.  In spring it's a common sight to see the parents leading their little ones down the hill for their first swim.  This goose was looking for "just the right spot."

Thanks to the Saint Barnabas Anglican Church Archives.

Photographed on April 22, 2017.

Friday, June 07, 2019

The Garden Next Door


On the same day I photographed "Spring Garden" (posted about a week ago) I also photographed the garden next door where I also take care of a few things.  The entire area is wedge shaped and only about twenty-five feet long by ten feet at the wide end.  This small and intimate space hosts a variety of dwarf  and miniature shrubs and a variety of perennials.  I suppose one could see it as a westernized Zen Garden.

Above:  Miniature lilacs...only about two feet high but they have the same heart-shaped leaves and enchanting fragrance as the old common lilacs that everyone has enjoyed.


Day lilies, a Nanking Cherry, ferns and a huge hosta unfurling in the foreground.


A close-up of an early-flowering clematis vine.  Every spring I think this plant is dead but it has proved me wrong for several years in a row now.  Even when the flowers are spent the leaves are lush until a hard frost in the fall.


Two small cast-concrete mushrooms with a branch of pink-flowered bleeding heart in the upper right with a surround of hosta, fern and ladies mantle. The narrow walkway covered in grey crushed-stone is only about fifteen inches in width.


A patch of periwinkle with some spearmint.


More hosta, ladies mantle, ferns and day lilies with a bronze-leaved rodgersia.


One more shot of a miniature lilac.


A close-up of a flowering Dwarf Korean Lilac near the front door.  These bloom just after the common lilacs and the intoxicating fragrance emanates at least a few hundred feet from the plant.  Definitely a spring favourite...can't have too many lilacs. 
 
Photographed on May 31, 2019.

Wednesday, June 05, 2019

Land Titles Building



The elegant Land Titles building in Arcola, Saskatchewan.




It's a beauty!

Photographed on December 17, 2018.

Monday, June 03, 2019

North Landing S.D. No. 3198



A well preserved one room school house I came across quite by accident on a road trip last fall.


I've never seen an enamelled school sign like this one before.


It sits on the open prairie near Kyle, Saskatchewan.



The blackboard has been signed by visitors from as far away as Saint Stephan, New Brunswick and Vancouver, British Columbia...and many others in between.


Jet!  I love catching vapour trails in my photos.

Photographed on October 23, 2018.

Saturday, June 01, 2019

Spring Garden



A short tour through one of the many gardens where I "lend a hand."  A beautiful garden always makes my day.

Above: creeping thyme blooming profusely.


The resident bunny.  Almost everyone here has a resident bunny or two, sometimes a raccoon, a family of deer and one place even has a female moose that visits from time to time.



A fernleaf peony (and close-up of the delicate five-petal flowers).



Hostas and coleas.


I think these are calendulas.


A section of the back yard.


Brightly coloured euphorbia polychroma (also known as cushion spurge).


A close-up of the creeping thyme flowers.


A section of the front yard.


The grass is always shorter in front of a hungry bunny.

Photographed on May 31, 2019.

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Swedish Zion Lutheran Church and Cemetery


This lovely old stone church is less than a mile south of the Canada/U.S.A border in north-central North Dakota.  It's a landmark in the community and is known to the locals simply as the "Little Stone Church."


The flying buttresses help to keep the walls straight and secure.

Posted just inside the double swinging doors was a comprehensive history of the church.  A well deserved "thank you" to the person or persons responsible for sharing the history of their congregation.  Here is a brief summary:   

The Swedish Lutheran Congregation was formed in 1896 and held Sunday services in member's houses for the first few years.  In 1902 a tithing plan was implemented to raise money for the construction of a church where each member donated one cent per bushel of wheat he harvested that year.

An appointed and generous secretary donated the land for the church and cemetery.  A mason from Chicago, along with his two apprentices, were hired to construct the church and together with volunteers from the congregation began construction of the church in the spring of 1903.  The church was opened for services later that same year.


The view from the cemetery.



A main "family" marker with individual headstones for each family member.


The church looks really quite inviting.


The original door and latch as seen from inside the church.  Lots of hands have opened this door over the past one hundred and sixteen years.


The interior of the church was renovated in 1953 for the fiftieth anniversary and the wallpaper was added at that time.


Most all of the historical Lutheran churches in the surrounding area still have these "old-fashioned" kneeling altars.


The walls are two feet thick of solid cut stone.  Lots of kids have sat in this window well.


Building this church must have been hard, back-breaking work...horses, ropes and man-power were the modern conveniences of the day.  While the church was being built members of the congregation would have been busy with their day-to-day lives...planting and harvesting their crops, getting the kids off to the one-room-school, tending the farm animals ...these were tough and determined people.

It was good so see that the church and cemetery were still maintained after all these years.  If you ever have a chance to visit this historical place, please make a donation to preserve it.  There is a little donation box at the back of the church...every little bit goes a long way to help preserve the past.

Almost forgot...the mason and his two helpers were paid $400.00 for the construction of the church.  Money well spent.

I hope you enjoyed the "Little Stone Church."

Photographed on December 15, 2018.