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Written by John McCullagh
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Wednesday, 16 August 2006 |
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When
we arrived in Canada way back in the early Twenties, our house in St Bride’s
had not yet been built and we were assigned a house on a farm in Sunnyside –
about fourteen miles north-east of Edmonton.

Barney
Quinn’s family were in the same predicament. Like us they spent their first six months out of Ireland in
Sunnyside. Our nearest neighbour was the
Jeffreys family about half a mile away. Our house was built on their land and both our parents worked part-time
for them.
Two
‘unapproved’ and rarely-travelled roads intersected here in a hollow. Within that and set back about one hundred
feet from the road our house was located. In front there was a potato garden and we were surrounded on the other
three sides – to within three feet of the walls of the house – by wheat
fields. There was not a shrub or tree
growing anywhere near and from a distance the house looked like a tiny island
in a restless sea of wheat!
The
first few months were a stressful time. In addition the two younger children contracted whooping cough and had
to be hospitalized in the Royal Alexander Hospital
in Edmonton. Felix, the baby, was seriously ill and every
time he got an attack we thought that he would die.
The
house had no well so water for drinking had to be carried from the Jeffrey’s,
and water for washing from a little river half a mile down the road.
Often
in pleasant weather my mother would bundle the laundry together and the entire
family – with the exception of our father, who was working – would trudge off
to the river! We would take a picnic
with us: a few peanut butter sandwiches
and a can of tea creamed and sugared, and make a pleasant outing from what
would otherwise have been drudgery!
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