The History Of Andrew, AB and Area

The History Of Andrew, AB and Area Andrew, AB is a rural village set North East of Edmonton. It is home to the World's Largest Mallard Duck and home to over 380 people.

Thank you to Bruce for sharing this photograph of the Andrew Orchestra back in 1935.The names of each person are listed....
04/05/2024

Thank you to Bruce for sharing this photograph of the Andrew Orchestra back in 1935.
The names of each person are listed. Is there anyone you know!??

05/09/2023

Best school I ever went to!

Andrew, AB license plates. Thank you to Marsh for sharing these 🙂
03/28/2021

Andrew, AB license plates. Thank you to Marsh for sharing these 🙂

06/30/2020
Andrew is a village located in east-central Alberta, approximately 70 km northeast of Edmonton and 45 km NNW of Vegrevil...
06/30/2020

Andrew is a village located in east-central Alberta, approximately 70 km northeast of Edmonton and 45 km NNW of Vegreville. The community is named for prominent, early resident Andrew Whitford, who was a member of the large Métis, Whitford family that resided in the vicinity of Victoria Settlement. The nearby Whitford Lake, Whitford Creek and the hamlet of Whitford are all named for the family.

Andrew Whitford was born about 1830. It appears that he worked as a freighter and travelled extensively throughout the North West Territories. In 1885, he served as a scout during the North-West Rebellion, for which he, along with other scouts and militia members, received two adjacent quarter sections of land. Whitford selected the SE and SW quarters of Section 32, Township 56, Range 16, West of the 4thMeridian. He was widely acknowledged as a leader in the community; issues of the Edmonton Bulletin note many instances of his support for local charitable causes and his frequent support for orphaned children and destitute families in the Star/Whitford/Andrew region through the late 1890s. He also served as a founding trustee and later treasurer of the local school district, which was established in 1895 and called, fittingly enough, the Whitford School District No. 393. In the spring of 1901, a small pox epidemic broke out in east-central Alberta. Andrew Whitford contracted the disease and passed away on April 26. A short obituary appeared in the May 3, 1901 issue of the Edmonton Bulletin:

Died, at Whitford on April 26th, 1901, Andrew Whitford, aged about 70 years of small pox and complications. The demise of Mr. Whitford removes from our midst a man of universal respect and an old land mark of the west who could tell many reminiscences of early life between old Fort Gary and Vancouver. He was a trusted and worthy scout of ’85, and saw much of the stirring rebellion. At his death he was treasurer of Whitford P.S.D., April 26, 1901.

John Borwick, a long-time guide and early settler in the same region, operated a stopping house at NW28-56-16-W4, near the junction of the Winnipeg Trail and the Calgary-Pakan Trail. Following Whitford’s death, Borwick named the stopping house the Andrew Hotel, in honour of his friend and long-time compatriot. Alongside the Andrew Hotel was a store owned by Ed Carey. On March 1, 1902, a post office was established and given the name Andrew. Eliza Borwick, John’s wife, was the first postmaster. A small, but thriving rural community began developing around these three facilities.

In 1928, after much lobbying by area residents, the Canadian Pacific Railway built a line through the region and surveyed a town site at SE32-56-16-W4 on the north side of the tracks. The rural community of Andrew was located mostly on the neighbouring quarter section to the southeast. The Andrew Hotel, the post office, the store and most of the rest of the community moved to the new surveyed town site. Fittingly, the new town site of Andrew was located on one of Andrew Whitford’s original quarter sections. Two years later, on June 24, 1930, Andrew was erected as a village. According to 2011 Census of Canada, the Village of Andrew has a population of 379, down from 465 in 2006.

Written by: Ron Kelland, Historic Places Research Officer and Geographical Place Names Coordinator

Location

National Topographic System Map Sheet: 83 H/16 – Willingdon

Latitude/Longitude:

53° 52’ 42” N & 112° 20’ 07” W

Alberta Township System:

Sec 32 Twp 56 Rge 16 W4

Description:

Approximately 70 km northeast of Edmonton and 45 km NNW of Vegreville.

More information about the Village of Andrew can be found in:

Andrew Historical Society, Dreams and Destinies: Andrew and District, (Andrew: Andrew Historical Society, 1980).

Cathy Chorniawy, Commerce in the Country: A Land Use and Structural History of the Luzan Grocery Store, (Edmonton: Alberta Culture, Government of Alberta, 1989).

Taken from: https://albertashistoricplaces.com/2012/12/18/andrew/amp/

05/23/2020

1940 Alberta Map

Pinterest

05/23/2020

Andrew, Alberta (Wanda and or Garry Bryks)

First class of Andrew School!? Saw this posted on the Andrew School Instagram page this evening.  Does anybody know anyt...
05/23/2020

First class of Andrew School!?
Saw this posted on the Andrew School Instagram page this evening.
Does anybody know anything about it or know anyone pictured?

11/20/2018

Do you have some old pictures or tales to tell about Andrew or somewhere else in Lamont County? Please feel free to share or PM us and we can make a post about it!

Congratulations to the Andrew School Graduates :D We all wish you the very best in your future endeavors!
05/31/2016

Congratulations to the Andrew School Graduates :D We all wish you the very best in your future endeavors!

02/25/2016

Shack at lspas. N of Two Hills. built ca. 1899

Address

Main Street
Andrew, AB
T0B0C0

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