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Fort Steele – Apprenticeship Program

Home preserves

One of the great things about spending 4 days / 3 nights at Fort Steele as a grade 7 student at the Calgary Science School is the opportunity to immerse yourself in some of the prevalent jobs / trades of the 1890s. K thought this was the best thing about going to Fort Steele and had a great time trying his hand at being a tinsmith, a blacksmith, a leather worker, a homemaker, a railway worker, a surveyor, a gold panner and a cook. I hope these photos provide a sense of his experience…

Tinsmith shop
Tinsmith tools and a few strands of handmade tinsel
Mr. McBain instructs K on the fine points of working with tin
K tries his hand at making a hand-forged nail in the blacksmith’s shop
The master leather maker at Fort Steele made harnesses, saddles and more
A vast array of punches, awls and other tools hung on the wall in the harness and leather shop
K punches some designs onto a leather bookmark while his home room teacher, Mr. C, works on a custom pouch for his trusty Swiss Army knife
K prepares an apple to be dried in the wood stove, a simple pioneer technique for preserving some foods for later consumption
The apple peels and cores don’t go to waste and K enjoyed feeding the parings to the Barred Plymouth Rock chickens
K and classmate A measured, mixed, baked and served the bannock that accompanied the beef stew for supper one evening
Although the equipment and sanitation measures were thoroughly modern, the students got a taste of some old-fashioned work when they had to wash, dry and put away dishes from a meal for 65 people
K thoroughly enjoyed fur trader Jack-o’s tales of life as a fur trader in the 1890s
After helping to lay a section of railway track, K enjoyed a short break while waiting for his turn to pump the hand-car along the Fort Steele railway
At the end of a long day’s work, the students enjoyed a sing-a-long around a candle “campfire” in one of the NWMP sleeping barracks – some well-deserved relaxation after their apprenticeship program
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