EAGMExhibitsOur GalleryPermanent CollectionProgramsMuseumNew WavesContact

 

*Museum open from late spring until the end of September.

NWMP Wood End Post Historical Site

The NWMP Wood End Post serves to collect, preserve, research, exhibit and interpret objects that best illustrate the arrival of the North West Mounted Police to the Estevan area in the summer of 1874 on the Trek West, to 1892. Priority is given to objects associated with the North West Mounted Police, important events, periods, episodes and personalities in Estevan and surrounding area.

The name Wood End was very suiting - seeing as though the post was basically the end of their natural supply of wood, due to prairie fires. Wood End was a common resting ground where supplies could be refurbished and wood could be gathered for the rest of the journey. The post was located where the Boundary Dam is now.
Originally, Wood End was a shelter to supply wood, hay, and repairing equipment for the British North American Boundary Commission, which had been sent out in the year 1872 to survey Canadian land.
The NWMP's first association with Wood End was during the March West in 1874.
In 1886 Inspector J.A. McGibbon of Regina set up his summer patrol headquarters at Alameda, and had a detachment camp of 10 men and 16 horses at Wood End.
In 1887 Inspector McGibbon's men put up two sod houses at the Wood End camp. The larger of the two was used as a post room, and the smaller for the officer's headquarters.
In 1888 and 1889 summer detachments were based at Wood End where regular patrols were carried out from May until November.
In 1891 it was recommended that Wood End Post be removed from its position in the valley and rebuilt on higher ground. In 1892 it was recorded that Wood End post consisted of a number of poorly constructed log buildings with mud roofs, covered temporarily with rough lumber.
During the summer of 1892 there had been 1 Staff Sergeant, 2 Corporals, 15 constables and 2 scouts stationed at Wood End.
In 1893 a one story frame building, 18' x 30', was built for the NWMP. In the same year, a 90 day quarantine on the import of US livestock was placed and quarantine duty was performed by the NWMP. During this time a 1 ½ story building, 24' x 30' was built.
The detachment at Wood End remained open during the winter of 1893/1894 because of the quarantine section.
In 1895 a large log stable was built at Wood End, but in October of 1896 the stables, corrals, and hay were destroyed by a prairie fire.
In early 1897, the detachment was abandoned and the police officers moved into a newly built structure in Estevan. The quarantine regulations were no longer in effect. Estevan area NWMP were still responsible for border patrol, controlling horses and cattle rustlers. The NWMP adopted the prefix of Royal in 1904, becoming the Royal North West Mounted Police. The new title was granted by King Edward VII in recognition of force's services. They later became the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in 1920.
The ownership of the building after 1897 is unknown - however, the Andrist family purchased it in 1916, and was used as a farm house. It was Senior Robert Andrist and his family who first made their home in the post building. Later Robert's son, Blake and his wife, Sophie raised their family in the house. It was only when Sask Power purchased the homestead in 1957 that the family had to move from their home and out of the valley where the NWMP Post was situated.
The Lions Club of Estevan bought the building from the SPC, as it was moved onto the top of the valley edge and then abandoned by SPC. It was then juggled between the Lions Club, Woodlawn Regional Park, and the Estevan Historical Society.
In 1985 the City of Estevan relocated the building to the EAGM lot. From 1986-1989 the building was used to clean & store archaeological artefacts.
In 1990, changes to both the interior and exterior of the building are undertaken, and a display of local interest artefacts is developed.
In 1994 it was recommended that exhibits in the building tell the history of the NWMP as it relates to the Estevan area. RCMP artefacts are donated in 1996 by John Pott & Dawn Fehr.
More recent, the museum includes history from the Métis and First Nations’ communities as they also were part of the reason for the NWMP to come West. Also some of these people were used for interpreters and guides.

 

The EAGM’s artefacts collection

The EAGM’s artefacts collection consists of artefacts that are related to the North West Mounted Police and the 1874 March West from Roche Percee to Estevan. This collection includes the historic Detachment Post (oldest known detachment post in Saskatchewan). Artefacts housed in the NWMP Museum consist of; buttons from the NWMP tunic’s, nails found in the building and on-site, RCMP uniforms, rifles, arrowheads, riding gear, photographs and other paraphernalia related to law & order on the prairies in the 1870's and on. Although the Detachment Post are only open during the summer season, (the EAGM is responsible for maintaining and housing the artefacts year round), this exchange of heritage materials fulfills the EAGM’s mandate to increase access to our heritage, and to display artefacts and offer interpretive text and panel’s depicting the trek of the NWMP of 1874. The NWMP Detachment Post houses and displays artefacts for public appreciation and knowledge. As part of the EAGM’s mandate as a gallery/museum, the collections are actively used for the advancement of life-long learning in arts, culture and heritage. Exhibiting NWMP Museum artefacts demonstrates the EAGM’s commitment to fostering knowledge of our local and regional history, mapping out Saskatchewan’s historic contribution in Canadian history.

 

North West Mounted Police - A Brief History of Events

In the 1870's, traders from outposts of the American North-West crossed the border into what is now Alberta, bringing whiskey with them. They traded rifles, ammunition and whiskey with the Indians in exchange for fur. Life became cheap - murder and robbery went unpunished.
Reports were sent to Ottawa about the conditions on the plains, and on May 3rd, 1873, Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald introduced a bill respecting the administration of justice, which recommended the establishment of a police force in the North West Territories.
On May 23rd, 1873, the bill was passed on Royal assent and on August 30, 1873 the NWMP came to be. They would be leaders in establishing friendly relations with the Indians and maintain peace among settlers.
The Force's first permanent Commissioner was George A. French. He recruited men from Eastern Canada, and trained them during the winter of 1873-1874. The following summer, about 300 men rode west to the plains between the Manitoba border and the Rocky Mountains - and great March West began.

 

The Estevan Art Gallery & Museum
118 4th Street
Estevan, SK, Canada S4A 0T4
[p] 306.634.7644
[f] 306.634.2940
[e] eagm@sasktel.net