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Massey Drive had its beginning as a Bowaters' woods road
known as Ski Cabin Road. It was called this because Bowaters
built a ski club in Massey Drive in 1936. It was the
first ski club in Western Newfoundland and some believe it was
the first one in Newfoundland. Residents of Corner Brook
would ski in to the club and back again.
The
Stratton's family had a cabin in Massey Drive; they would come
here after school closed in June and didn't go back to their
home in Corner Brook until after Bonfire night. There
were very few vehicles at the time so the children mostly
walked out to Corner Brook to go to school.
Mrs.
Ester Dawe moved in to Ski Cabin Road in November 1937 and
changed the name from Ski Cabin Road to Massey Drive after
Vincent Massey, Governor General of Canada. Mrs. Dawe
had the first Polling Station in Massey Drive in her home in
1949 and every election through until 1965 when she moved out
of Massey Drive. Mrs. Dawe carried her groceries from
Corner Brook to Massey Drive on her back during the early
years that she was in Massey Drive.
There wasn't much
of anything in Massey Drive in the early years; electricity,
water and sewerage, school or telephone. When Massey Drive got
the telephone, people had a Party Line; sometimes up to four
people on the one telephone line.
Residents had
wells for their water and used outhouses. In the later
years they put in septic tanks and indoor plumbing.
Kerosene lamps were used for lights until the late 40's when
the men in the community dug holes and cut the poles for the
wires.
There was a Mink Farm in Massey Drive for
about 18 to 20 years. It employed some of the local
teenagers. In the early years there were three stores in
Massey Drive; owned by Mr. Jack Gosse, Mrs. Mary Chaulk and
Mr. Harold Rose. Mr. Gerry Myrden owned Bonnex Farm
where you could ride horses or go on sleigh rides; there were
also rabbits on the farm.
There was a need for a school
with so many young children living in the community. St.
Lukes, a one-room school, was built in 1950 for children of
all religious denominations in the area. The school was
also used as a Church; Rev. Laing would bring in a small organ
from St. John the Evangelist Church on Main Street, Corner
Brook, to have Sunday Services. In 1954 another
room was added to the building to make it a two-room
school. At first a wood stove and outhouses were
used. When the extra room was built on an oil furnace
was installed, washrooms and cloak rooms were also put in the
school.
The School Board was in the process of having
meetings to discuss the possibility of sending the children to
school in Corner Brook. It was thought that the children
would have more advantages in a bigger school, but some of the
parents were against it. In 1969 the inside of St.
Luke's School burned, mostly smoke damage, so there wasn't any
choice but to send the children out "town" to school.
The children soon fitted in well in the schools in Corner
Brook and there wasn't anymore school in Massey Drive.
This time the children were bussed to school in Corner Brook,
no more walking. The school was later turned into a
Community Hall.
In 1969 Massey Drive was under the
jurisdiction of the City of Corner Brook without the city
benefits. Some residents were concerned about the poor
state of the roads, garbage collection, etc. They went
from door to door trying to get residents interested in their
community. A committee was formed to approach the City
Council to see if they would put street lights, water and
sewerage and have garbage collection in Massey Drive.
The council said "no".
The Massey Drive Council got
right to work; the first order of business was to have garbage
collection in Massey Drive. The first regular garbage
collection started on Monday, November 15, 1971. Corner
Brook had a garbage dump in Wild Cove; it was used for the
garbage from Massey Drive at a cost of $1.00 per household per
year. We also got street lights the same year. It
made quite a difference to the area.
In the early years
it was very difficult driving up the hill in the winter.
There would be a line up of cars on the bottom of the road
waiting their turn to make a run for the hill. Chains on
the tires were quite common then. The Provincial
Department of Highways looked after our roads at that
time. In the summer the roads was a mass of dust, even
in the homes everything was covered with dust, you couldn't
leave a window open facing the road. The Highways
Department put calcium on the road to keep the dust down, but
it didn't help much, so some residents would get barrels of
oil from a service station, put it in the back of their truck,
then go up and down the road sprinkling the oil on the road to
keep the dust down. Then we got pavement and the council
did their own snow clearing and things really changed.
There isn't any trouble getting up the hill now in the
winter.
Mr. William Earle had a store in Massey
Drive for approximately twenty years. He also did some
vegetable farming. In the summer most of the children
and some adults, sometimes as many as fifteen to eighteen
people, would work in the fields and others in Mr. Earle's
shed packing greens. It was a lot of work, but also a
lot of fun and joking around. My Aunt Kathy was called
"Beet" because her cheeks would turn very red when she was
being tormented while packing greens. My mother and
grandmother also worked for Mr. Earle packing greens and
pulling turnip out of the ground.
Pavement was put in
the town in 1974 and was recapped again in 1988 and water and
sewerage was installed in 1976 to 1978. The hill part of
the road in Massey Drive was washed out on Boxing Day,
December 26, 1977.
There was a need for a new Community
Hall as the one being used, the former St. Lukes School,
didn't meet the needs of the growing Community. A new
Community Hall was built in 1977. It was officially opened on
Saturday, August 13, 1977.
In the old Community Hall
and then in the present Town Hall many activities took place
besides darts and dances. There were Guides and
Brownies, TOPS, Senior Citizens Club, knitting classes, puppet
shows, movies, Neighborhood Watch Program, 4-H Club (for
approximately 12 years), talent shows, etc. Practically
everyone in the community took part in something.
In
1982 a Fire Hall was built. The Fire Hall was officially
opened on Saturday, December 4, 1982. A resident's
garage was formerly used as a place to park the fire truck for
a rental fee of $100.00 a year.
In the fall of
1972 the first Recreation Committee was formed. The
first election was held in January 1973 with Mr. Edgar
Stratton elected as Chairman, a position he held for ten
years. The Women's Community Organization donated $50.00
to the Recreation Committee to get them started. The
committee operated a small canteen from one of the cloakrooms
in the Community Hall (former St. Lukes School).
The
Recreation Committee obtained a ten year lease from the
Anglican Church for the land which is now the Mama Dawe
Recreation Park. A small building was obtained to be
used as a canteen.
In March 1974 the first annual
Winter Sports Weekend was held, the committee purchased four
or five pairs of children's snowshoes to be used in the
races. Ribbons or medals were given to the winners in
all the different events. The first weekend was a
success and is still held each year. Snowshoes, snowball
soccer and ice fishing were quite popular.
The Mama
Dawe Recreation Park was officially opened on August 14,
1976. The park consisted of a softball diamond, soccer
field and a playground. A contest was held to get a name
for the park. It was named in honour of Mrs. Ester Dawe,
a longtime resident of Massey Drive. Ball teams from
other areas were invited in, children's races took place and
booths of chance were set up on the field; therefore, the
annual Summer Sports and Fun Festival began and was held for
about ten years.
In the 70's and 80's Massey Drive was
a community buzzing with activity. The Recreation
Committee started Junior Darts, the first league in the Bay of
Islands. There were also Mens, Ladies and Mixed Darts;
Mens, Ladies, Junior and Pee Wee Softball; and Junior and Pee
Wee Soccer. In 1978 and 1979 the committee entered the
kids in the Regional Summer Games in Pasadena. The
committee's events were mostly sports events and their teams
didn't win much, but the community gained. They learned
leadership, friendship, and the true meaning of
sportsmanship.
On June 6, 1978, after a year of
negotiating by Kitty and Edgar Stratton, a deed for 18½ acres
of land was received from Bowaters Ltd. for the Twin
Lakes Park. In 2004 the present council put a walking
trail with benches and garbage containers around Twin
Lakes.
On October 20, 1981, the Town Council formed the
Massey Drive Ladies Auxiliary, which consisted of two ladies
from each of the Town Hall committees; Recreation Committee,
Fire Department, Senior Citizens Club and Council along with
ladies from the community. The Auxiliary did the
catering to weddings, banquets, etc., along with holding other
fund raising events. They presented the Recreation
Committee with a merry-go-round for the playground and a set
of 2-way radios to the Fire Department. The Auxiliary
was a great asset to help purchase things for the Town Hall
and Fire Department.
Anglican Church Services were held
in the Town Hall during Lent. The World Wide Church of
God rented the hall for many years for their services.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bilisoly held Sunday School in the Town Hall
for about six years. The Bilisoly's also bought the land
which the first Rod and Gun Club (burned on January 25, 1974)
was on, then built a Sunday School camp in Massey Drive.
The Sunday School Camp operated for twenty-eight years until
Mr. Bilisoly passed away three years ago. The camp was
sold in 2005.
The Humber Log carried the Massey Drive
notes for many years, first written by Mrs. Sarah Howe for a
few months, and then written by my grandmother, Kitty
Stratton, for fifteen years. All the news of who won at
darts, what resident had a birthday or anniversary, who was
visiting the town, who won in the different sports weekend
events, etc. was sure to be found in the Massey Drive
notes. The town also had its own monthly
newsletter for many years, also written by my
grandmother. The newsletter let the residents know of
upcoming events, such as council meetings, dances, fundraising
events and so on.
In 1984 the council was looking for a
town crest and in April the design drawn by Mr. Rodney
Stratton Sr. was chosen as the official town crest. The
crest was then put on the town and fire department
equipment. The Ladies Auxiliary put the town crest on
souvenir spoons and pins.
There are three businesses in
Massey Drive now. The only convenience store in Massey
Drive now is owned and operated by Mrs. Barbara Chubbs; Mrs.
Cindy Taylor operates a beauty salon from her house; and TNT
Garage owned by Mr. Jerry Trask started in the community in
1997.
The first Bay of Islands Rod and Gun Club was the
former Ski Club which burned on January 25, 1974, and then a
new one was built at the end of Massey Drive which was opened
in 1976 and remained in use until the winter of 2005.
The building was sold recently to house a family restaurant
called "Higher Ground" and the land will be put to use with
tourism in mind.
Massey Drive is continuously growing
from 400 residents in 1976 to 736 residents in 1996 and while
the population in other Newfoundland communities was
decreasing, Massey Drive increased to 1,424 residents in
2005. Massey Drive is a wonderful place to live, where
else can you leave on snowmobile form the back of your home to
wherever you want to go; Gallants, Stephenville, Deer Lake,
Howley, Bonne Bay, etc. Hunting has been prohibited
within the boundaries of Massey Drive since 1978; therefore,
there are many ducks that can be seen in the ponds in the
community. You can fish here in the community.
There are plenty of places for sliding, snowshoeing and
snowboarding. In the summer the kids favorite pass time
is swimming in Twin Lakes or bike
riding.
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___________________________________ Questions,
comments, suggestions? Contact: info@masseydrive.com Copyright
) Town of Massey Drive
2008
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