Despite the best intentions, not all beekeepers keep
detailed records of their colonies so it can hardly be expected that they would
think to archive their association records. A recent investigation into the
history of the Calgary and District Beekeepers Association suggests that the
bee club is much older than originally thought.
Are we, in truth, losing our virtue? If so, we may be nearer the dustbin of history than we realize. ~RR
Showing posts with label beekeeping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beekeeping. Show all posts
Monday, April 23, 2018
Friday, February 2, 2018
W. G. LeMaistre, Provincial Apiarist of Alberta, 1939-1956

Labels:
agriculture,
alberta,
beekeeping,
bees,
honeybees,
Second World War,
Western Canada
Friday, January 12, 2018
Sylvan Oswald Hillerud: First Provincial Apiarist of Alberta

Born in Millsboro, North Dakota, to Norwegian Methodist parents on 19 December 1897, his family immigrated to Canada in 1904. In 1918, he listed Claresholm, Alberta, as home when he enlisted for the war. Arriving in England in July, he then served in France as a sapper with the 3 Canadian Engineers Reserve Battalion. Sadly, his service files have few details on his deployment. In 1919, he worked for the Khaki College, a soldier-run school where he temporarily gained the rank of sergeant. The acting rank suggests he may have done some agricultural teaching there for demobilizing soldiers. He took the War Service Gratuity in 1919, and possibly used it to pay for schooling back in Canada's Prairie West.
After his graduation with a B.S.A. from the University of Alberta in 1920 [or 1921], he studied and mentored under prominent Ontario beekeepers J.L. Byers, F.W. Krouse, and G.L. Jarvis. In the interwar years, he also worked with bees in Montana and California. It was in 1928 that he was made the first provincial apiarist in Alberta. For a couple years he served as provincial inspector in the province and unfortunately as a part of his duties had to burn some diseased hives from time to time. In 1932, he continued his education, traveling to Cornell University to study.
Unfortunately, Hillerud's career in bees was cut short. In 1939, as another world war loomed, he developed an allergy which was said to have been aggravated by his previous gas poisoning during the First World War. He was succeeded as provincial apiarist by W.G. leMaistre. In 1958, Hillerud's memory helped to fill a historical tribute to beekeeping history in Alberta.
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Photo: Bear Hugs |
Sources:
Ancestry.ca documents
Alberta Beekeepers Association Anniversary Pamphlet
Military Service Files
Labels:
alberta,
beekeeping,
bees,
honeybees,
khaki college,
Western Canada
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