THE THEATRE, THE TREE & SANTA
Seasonal exhibit now on display in the Cut Knife Library, 113 Broad Street.
โSanta Claus Day in Cut Knife brought a huge amount of excitement for we children. After viewing a show at the theatre, Santa usually arrived at the huge Christmas tree set in the center of Main Street. After speaking to Santa and receiving our candy bags, we children were then taken to Margotโs Store where we proceeded to do our Christmas shopping.โ ~ Cheryl Rowswell, page 32
โThe Christmas tree stood in the center of town and was cut from the old Dunn farm. Trees escaping the annual choosing remain standing west of Veikleโs.โ ~ Lorna Sayers, page 35
โWe seem to recall it being at the south end of Main Street in front of the train station in early years, but in the middle of Main Street later.โ ~ Amy Singh, page 39
โFor many years, Bob McInnis played a major role in Cut Knifeโs annual Santa Claus Dayโฆ I remember an event that took place a few days after Santaโs visit. Our daughter, Marj was about five years old. She was with me shopping in Bruce Douglasโ bake shop. Bob McInnis came into the shop and picked up Marj and said โHow are you today, young lady?โ Marj just looked at him and said โYou sound just like Santa Clausโ.โ ~ Joyce Levere, page 15
โIn the early 1950’s, one did all their Christmas shopping in Cut Knife. The general stores, Dion’s and Margot’s provided all kinds of gift ideas for the season. The hardware stores, Finley’s and The Brackenbury Brothers, did as well.โ ~ Lorna Sayers, page 35
โThere wasnโt the variety, quality or quantity in local village general stores to meet all shoppersโ requirements. Shopping for a day in our closest cities, the Battlefords, proved expensive for a car and cafe meals put a strain on the family purse, so the only alternative was mail order shopping from catalogues put out only by the T. Eaton and Robert Simpson Companies. In most cases they gave satisfactory service.โ ~ Ruby Sleath, page 55
โChristmas was an exciting time at our house. Mom shopped by mail through Eatonsโ or Simpsonsโ catalogue and parcels from Margotโs and Dionโs came home wrapped in brown paper tied with red or green string.โ ~ Bonnie Ramsay, page 25
โTrips to North Battleford were rare, but there would always be one before Christmas. All dressed up, we would crowd into the car, excitedly counting our pennies and planning how to spend them to get the gifts we needed. With five kids to ride herd on when we arrived, Momโs threat, as Kathi recalls, was โIf you arenโt good, you canโt come next year!โ This was a dire threat indeed, as Woolworthโs, Kresgeโs and the Metropolitan stores with their dazzling array of inexpensive goods was too wondrous an experience to jeopardize, so we would all be on our best behaviour.โ ~ Amy Singh, page 37
Previously: School Concert to Christmas Concert |ย The School Concert, Part 2ย |ย The School Concert, Part 1ย |ย Intro to Prairie Christmas.
If you have any memories of early Christmases in the Cut Knife area that youโd like to share with our readership, please email or add to the comments below. Weโll put them all together in a final blog post in early January.
All excerpts in this Prairie Christmas blog series will have been taken from Prairie Christmas: A Collection of Stories and Recollections published as A Clayton McLain Memorial Museum Project, Cut Knife, Saskatchewan 2006 โ 2007. Remaining copies are available for purchase for $10. See the websiteโs Gift Shop page here.
~ Debbie M.




