Agricultural Equipment Collection - Stirling, AB
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 49° 30.425 W 112° 31.915
12U E 389096 N 5484956
Near the northwest corner of Stirling is the Andreas Michelsen Farmstead, an Alberta Provincial Historic Resource, recognized by the province on November 15, 2001.
Waymark Code: WMXC3X
Location: Alberta, Canada
Date Posted: 12/24/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
Views: 1

Behind the farmstead's house and east of the barn is a collection of farm implements, the majority of the inventory of equipment required to successfully operate a farm a century and more ago. In the collection are a horse drawn press drill, a cultivator, a disc, a sulky plough, two walk behind ploughs, a sickle mower and a dump rake. Missing are a binder, either horses or a tractor, a threshing machine, a hay wagon (a grain wagon can be seen in the equipment shed on the other side of the barn) and maybe a set of harrows. Though we have no real reason for doing so, we will assume that the collection contains only implements used on this farm.<

In 1900, Andreas and Kirsten Michelsen and family, originally from Denmark, immigrated from Monroe, Utah to what was then known as Pothole Coulee in southwestern Alberta, taking work on the railroad and the canal project which was underway. The family soon moved to the newly incorporated village of Stirling, he and his elder sons filing for homesteads there. In 1902 he began construction of the house on the Michelsen Farmstead, enlarging it in 1912 as the family grew. The large barn on the property, as well as other outbuildings, soon followed, the farmstead eventually becoming what we see today. In all, eight buildings survive, together comprising one of the most complete turn of the century farmsteads to be found in Alberta. In fact, the village of Stirling has been designated a National Historic Site, being the best surviving example of a Mormon agricultural village in Canada.

In the early twentieth century travel was both slow and difficult, resulting in small town residents having to create their own entertainment. This consisted largely of gatherings in resident's houses to play games, play cards, sing or dance. Given that both the Michelsen home and the family were larger than the norm, the Michelsen home became a popular gathering place. In the summer, when gatherings became too large for the house, the hayloft of the large Michelsen barn became a favorite site for barn dances. In fact, it hosted barn dances for 75 years or more.

Now an Alberta Provincial Historic Resource, the farmstead is managed and maintained as a museum by the Stirling Historical Society. The house and outbuildings are furnished with artefacts depicting typical living conditions in Southern Alberta from the 1900s through the 1930s. As well, several appliances and pieces of farm machinery complete the image of a homestead. Buildings on the site include the 1912 house, which incorporates the original 1902 house in the rear, the large barn, blacksmith shop, coal shed/summer kitchen and a two story granary which doubled as a summer bedroom for the boys, as well as some smaller storage buildings. The museum is open Tuesday — Saturday from 10 am-12 noon and 1 pm-5 pm from late June to early September and by appointment during other times of the year. The homestead is a fine place for an afternoon picnic, too, with several picnic tables arrayed under the mature trees beside the Michelsen house.
Use or Purpose of Equipment: Implements used in operating a dryland grain farm

Approximate age: 100 plus

Still in Use?: No

Location:
Behind the farmstead's house and east of the barn


Fee for Access: yes

Manufacturer and model: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
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