Wetaskiwin District Heritage Museum Centre & City of Wetaskiwin Archives

an inclusive gathering place for the local community to engage in the history, heritage and culture of Wetaskiwin City, County, and the Maskwacis Cree Four Nations

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Tag: wetaskiwin

  • Discover the Autoclave: A Key Medical Innovation at the Museum

    Discover the Autoclave: A Key Medical Innovation at the Museum

    The Heritage Museum has reopened for visitors to indulge in the history of Wetaskiwin and area! Artifacts such as this autoclave, an instrument sterilizer, are on display for viewing. This electric unit could be plugged in to sterilize doctor’s instruments with heat and steam. The elevated temperature and pressure targets microorganisms, spores, and viruses, ensuring…

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  • Understanding the Luopan: The Feng Shui Compass

    Understanding the Luopan: The Feng Shui Compass

    The luopan, also known as a geomantic or Feng Shui compass, is a Chinese magnetic compass used by a Feng Shui specialist to distinguish the precise direction of an object, structure, or item. The oldest known precursors to the luopan are said to have been dated from sometime between between 278 BCE and 209 BCE,…

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  • The History and Use of Umbrella Swifts in Yarn Crafting

    The History and Use of Umbrella Swifts in Yarn Crafting

    If you’re someone who likes to knit or crochet maybe you’ve heard of the umbrella swift or swift yarn winder! This wooden tool was used in the 1960s and functions by holding your skeins, loosely coiled thread or yarn, as you wind your yarn into neat, easy-to-use balls. This model clamps to your table and…

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  • The History of the Electric Telegraph: Innovations by Samuel Morse

    The History of the Electric Telegraph: Innovations by Samuel Morse

    Look at this telegraph. The electric telegraph was invented in 1832 by Samuel F.B. Morse, he became interested in the possibility of electric telegraphy and made sketches of ideas for such a system. Morse later devised a system of dots and dashes to represent letters and numbers (Morse Code). The telegraph equipment in our collection…

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  • The Heritage of a Vintage Barber Chair

    The Heritage of a Vintage Barber Chair

    Blain Fuller inherited this chair from his best friend’s father, Cam Bratt. Cam bought it used in the early 1970’s and used it in his barber shop in Camrose. Blain has had the chair for 5-6 years. His children used to bounce on it, which may account for the poor condition of the seat. This…

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  • Preserving Legacy: The Story of the Brightview School Organ

    Preserving Legacy: The Story of the Brightview School Organ

    In the early 1900’s the one room schools were few and far between with children driving horse and buggys four or more miles.  The Lone Ridge School was filled up and couldn’t take any more.  The Goodhands, my grandparents, who had started the Brightview Post Office, store and stopping place helped organize a new school…

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  • Balancing Light and Artifact Preservation in Museums

    Balancing Light and Artifact Preservation in Museums

    We need light in order to see the collection, but light can damage some objects. The most vulnerable to damage is textiles. Ultra-Violet light causes the most damage, to the point where it can cause colour to fade, and the object to become brittle and break apart. This is where it is difficult for museums,…

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  • Space Transformation: Moving Artifacts in Our Museum

    Space Transformation: Moving Artifacts in Our Museum

    If any of you have been following our Facebook page or Instagram, you may have seen that we have removed our wall in front of the washrooms and moved the big crank organ. A big thank you to KelKenny Contracting for removing the wall while keeping our donation tree intact and replanting it in our…

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  • Fritz Kirstein’s Legacy: Wetaskiwin’s Iconic Meat Shop

    Fritz Kirstein’s Legacy: Wetaskiwin’s Iconic Meat Shop

    In August 1921, Fritz Kirstein opened the City Meat Market between 49 Street and 49 Avenue in Wetaskiwin. They sold everything from homemade wieners, fish, to cheese cut from wide rounds. Sawdust was used in the back for cleanliness and blocks of ice preserved the freshness of the meat until the sanitary coolers were installed…

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  • The Legacy of Gus Elgert: Alberta’s Award-Winning Farmer

    The Legacy of Gus Elgert: Alberta’s Award-Winning Farmer

    This week we got a donation in from Deborah Kirstein which included a ton of items from the 1930s to the 1970s. One of the items she included was a picture and magazine article about their grandfather Gus Elgert who was a farmer that owned land one and a half miles east of Wetaskiwin. His…

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