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Reproduced
with permission from The Beacon Supplement July 31, 1991.
Contributed by Carol (Mercer) Walsh - Class 1954
WINTER OF ’38 - LOTS OF SNOW;
NO WOMEN
During the winter of 1938 the female
population of Gander was one. She was Mrs. Brant, the wife of Flight
Lieutenant Brant of the original Signals Unit. She found life a bit
rugged but apparently, interesting. At that time, roads were non-existent
and the Signals staff either skied to work or went in a contraption known
as the “Prairie Schooner” which was a small wooden structure fitted with
skis and towed by a tractor. This original “mobile home” was fitted with
a coal burning stove and a supply of food.
During blizzards pocket compasses had
to be carried, otherwise, there was a very good chance of losing the way
and becoming a casualty. Mrs. Brant and her husband had to ski to the
railway station, another mere shack, for food supplies, and, at one time,
were marooned for four days by a ranging blizzard. This taught them the
necessity of keeping sufficient food and supplies on hand. The Brants
lived in a shack with no furniture. They cooked on a pump-primus oil
stove, used cable drums for tables and apple barrels for chairs. Mrs.
Brant was asked to make up the first food to be requisitioned by the
engineers to supply families that would arrive later.
The Brants first home in Newfoundland
was at the marine base in Botwood where they lived throughout the winter
in a house without heat, except for the kitchen stove. But, this was the
way of life in most Newfoundland outports before the advent of such modern
amenities as electricity.
Hearing of their plight, an aunt back
in England decided to help out and sent some long flannel night shirts.
Using those, and the early “newfie” heating pad (heated birch junks
wrapped in old blanket pieces and tucked between the bed clothes), they
managed to survive the harsh winter climate. The lowest temperature F/O
Brant remembered was 34 degrees below zero Fahrenheit but this was
uncommon.
By February, 1939, there was the
nucleus of a small town at Gander……there were six women and 1500 men.
They had parties in the dining building; they skied, skated, fished and
formed a club call the Newfoundland Airport Club for which the local
government granted them a liquor permit. All service personnel, members
of the engineers and officers were eligible.
They bought a movie projector and piano
and with films from St. Johns gave shows for which they charged 25 cents
admission. A makeshift cinema was set up in the dining room of the
administration building. Many Newfoundlanders saw their first movie
there. Dances were sometimes held after the show and the gentry turned
out in style.
By the end of 1939, the female
population had grown to 20 and the first native Ganderite was born. He
was Donald Myrick, whose father was a Newfoundland on the radio staff of
the RAF. There was no hospital or clinic facilities at Gander at that
time so the health of all the workers fell to Dr. Knapp from Lewisporte
who made frequent trips to pull teeth, deliver babies and attend to
various bouts of the common cold, fevers and other minor maladies. He
dispensed medicines from a small shack and with his little black bag rode
the rails on a small speeder to “help the folks who were building the big
airport.” The doctor and the folks were lucky, health was fair for the
most part and there were no epidemics.
The first dance Flight Lieutenant Brant
attended with his wife at the land base was a memorable one. It was
occasioned by a visit from the Grand Falls Badminton team. There was
heavy snow and they set out for the dance by bulldozer, five of which got
bogged down before they finally got through in the sixth one.
Another famous dance was held to
celebrate the completion of the Beaver Centre, named for Lord
Beaverbrook. There were so few girls that 70 were imported by train from
Grand Falls. Unfortunately, the army got wind of this, boarded the train
when it arrived and had to be ejected by main force.
All in all, with the excitement of
living at the site of the world’s largest airport at that time, life for
Gander’s first family wasn’t too bad.
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