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A Visitor's Guide to the Red Lake/Ear Falls District

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Medical History

In June 1926, there were over 1,000 men and ten women in Red Lake.  They lived in wall-to-wall tents along the shoreline of what became known as Howey Bay.  To serve the camp, the Red Cross Society opened a medical outpost.

Joe Cromarty (far right), Nataway Keesic (second from left), and six other Native men from Lac Seul, guided the group to Red Lake, manning the five freighter canoes, which were loaded with 7,000 lbs of equipment, including beds.  They arrived six days later and erected a tent, establishing Red Lake's first hospital.


The first medical party en route to Red Lake, 1926.


The Red Lake Margaret Cochenour Memorial Hospital

Devastating Fire
In June 1945, the Red Lake Hotel, a four storey wooden structure, burned to the ground in the middle of the night.  Eleven guests were killed and 20 were injured. The closest hospital at the time was on McKenzie Island.

Determined never to have to go through such an ordeal again, the day after the tragedy Red Lake residents started planning for their own hospital.  The Howey Mine donated a bunkhouse, and the community raised $50,000 through bingos, bake sales, penny drives, and contributions from the mines.  "We four nurses donned shirts and slacks and cleaned and scrubbed  and painted and varnished for days," said Nurse Edith Chapman, Nursing Supervisor.


The Red Lake Margaret Cochenour Memorial Hospital is a 28-bed acute care hospital with a full staff of seven physicians.  Emergency services are provided, as well as Obstetrics, Emergency and Selected Day Surgery, a comprehensive range of diagnostic services appropriate for the size and scope of the Hospital.

The inter-connection with the provincial Telehealth Network has enabled our doctors to arrange on-site consultations for patients, involving specialists in Winnipeg, Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton and London.  A sophisticated Medical Transport System enables the efficient transfer of victims of major accidents and major medical conditions.

Visiting medical specialists and professionals in training contribute to a highly professional atmosphere in which the quality of service is constantly improving.

Aboriginal Medicine
The Ojibway people used many plants found in their environment as remedies.  Much of the healing and preventative medical knowledge was tied to spiritual beliefs.  Medicines that came from the earth were considered a gift from the creator, and were therefore sacred.  In the Ojibway culture women were considered life-givers and healers; men were the "medicine people", who doctored the sick with medicines and spiritual ceremonies.


Taken by Dr. A. Irving Hallowell at 
Poplar Hill, 1932, of brothers (left to right),
John Owen, James Owen, and Joseph
Owen Moose with Fairwind's drum.

Fairwind or Naamiwan was one of the most powerful medicine men in the Berens River area north of Red Lake.  His ability to perform everyday miracles was legendary and people would travel for hundreds of miles to be healed by him.  While grieving over the death of his favourite grandson, Fairwind was told in a vision to build a dream dance drum, which would guide the dead to the next life.

Fairwind and his descendants used the drum in the Poplar Hill and Paungassi area until the mid 70s.  Over the years, traditions such as the drumming ceremony declined and the drum was no longer used.

Fairwind's Drum, the biggest drum in the region, was passed on to the Red Lake Museum in the early 90s.  Today, Aboriginal people who are going back to traditional ways, come to the Museum to pay their respects to this drum.  Considered by some to still have a life of its own, the drum is the Museum's most prized artifact.


Romance Buds Quickly: Hospital Can’t Keep Nurses
 
With five mines in full production, by 1950 Red Lake was booming.  Recruiting and keeping professionals was an ongoing challenge, as this excerpt from the Toronto Daily Star indicates.

 

Red Lake, July 5, 1952 - With bachelors at eight to one for every unattached female in the gold mining town of Red Lake, the Red Cross hospital outpost is fighting a losing battle to keep its nurses single and working.  Since February, the entire staff has married, with the exception of the nurse in charge.


Today, the ratio of men to women is about even.  Many young teachers, nurses and pilots who come here "for a year or two", meet lifelong partners, and never return to the city.

In Red Lake a nurse with matrimony on her mind can afford to be choosey.  It's one of the few remaining female paradises where the gamut of available males runs from a mine manager to engineers, pilots and cooks.  It's a hunting ground with every prospect earning over $250 a month and many owning cars.  Every girl's a doll and romance buds and blossoms quickly.



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The Red Lake Regional Heritage Centre  is a charitable organization, funded by the Municipality of Red Lake and the Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Recreation.   Reg # 87315 2714 RR001