Community Profile
Overview
The Town of Gilbert Plains was incorporated in 1906. Service
to agriculture is the main component of the local economy in this
town of 757 people and rural municipality of 1,071. The area around
Gilbert Plains enjoys some of the most fertile farmland in the
province of Manitoba.
Gilbert Plains is located in the heart of the province's Parkland
Region between the Riding Mountains to the south and the Duck
Mountains to the north. It is situated 360 km northwest of Winnipeg
on Provincial Highway #5.
The area consists of 1,009 square kilometres of improved acreage
of which not only the standard cereal crops are produced but also
forages, specialty crops, honey, cattle, hogs, poultry and other
agricultural based products.
A complementary blend of younger and older residents has resulted
in services for everyone. Recreational facilities and activities
include the beautiful Gilbert Plains golf course and campground.
History
(Excerpted from Settlers of the Plains, O.E.A.
Brown, 1953)
In 1884, Glenlyon Campbell, son of a Scottish Hudson Bay trader,
rode his pony over the Riding Mountains and viewed for the first
time the area that is now named Gilbert Plains. He found one person
and his wife living in a small log house. This was Gilbert Ross,
a Metis after whom the constituency was named.
Campbell traded Ross his pony for the house, and he and his wife
moved in. They cleared some land and planted a small acreage.
Other settlers took up residence in the area, and there was soon
a general store, school, and the Glenlyon Post Office.
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View of Gilbert Plains, approximately
1910.
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By 1900, the CNR Railway was completed through the area, and in
1906, the Village of Gilbert Plains was incorporated. Early industry
took the form of a brick manufacturer, a lumber yard, and of course,
farming which included wheat, livestock, poultry, a creamery and
a flour mill.
The local telephone system was completed in 1906 and the first
automobile came to town in 1908 (a single cylinder Reo). Power
lines were erected in town in 1930, but it was not until 1949
that the rural municipality was electrified.
Of
particular interest today is the Negrych Pioneer Homestead,
a provincially and federally designated Heritage Site, which is
believed to be the most complete and best preserved Ukrainian
farmstead in Canada. Among its 10 buildings are unique or extremely
rare features, including the only Canadian example of a long-shingle
Carpathian roof and in the bunkhouse, a rare, fully-preserved
working peech - the massive, log-and-clay cookstove
that was once the heart of every Ukrainian home.
(For more information on the Negrych Pioneer Homestead,
contact the Gilbert Plains Historical Society, Box 662, Gilbert
Plains, MB R0L 0X0.)
Tax Structure
| Town |
|
|
|
| |
Municipal |
School |
Total |
| Residential |
48.44 |
27.33 |
75.77 |
| Industrial/Commercial |
48.44 |
41.41 |
89.85 |
| RM |
|
|
|
| |
Municipal |
School |
Total |
| Residential |
26.25 |
35.70 |
61.95 |
| Industrial/Commercial |
26.85 |
35.70 |
62.55 |
Town Council
- Lyle Smith, Mayor - Mayor's Welcome
- Winston Smith
- Walter Hyrchuck
- James Dzuba
- Curt Gullett
RM Council
- Reeve - Larry Malowski
- Ward 1 - Dennis Rehirchuk
- Ward 2 - Bryan Bassett
- Ward 3 - Glen Bates
- Ward 4 - Ron Basaraba
- Ward 5 - Lawrence Safronetz
- Ward 6 - James Michaluk
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