Lake of the Woods Milling Company
The Lake of the Woods Milling Company Limited was started May 21, 1887, to take advantage of the new railway and western grain production.
Formed by a team from the board of Canadian Pacific Railway, including George Stephen, 1st Baron Mount Stephen, William Cornelius Van Horne and James Ross, the headquarters were in Montreal, while the milling operations were based in Keewatin, Ontario. The location provided transportation via the CPR, access to raw product, and water-power from the Winnipeg River.
The first mill was completed in 1888 with vice-president John Mather overseeing construction and funded by an initial corporate capitalization of $300,000.[1] Its peak production turned a daily 62,000 bushels of wheat into 10,000 barrels of flour. The flour was marketed under the name Five Roses, which became a world-famous brand. In 1913, Lake of the Woods released the first edition of the Five Roses Cook Book, which is still in production to this day.
The mill operated in Keewatin for 79 years, closing in 1967. At the height of its production, it was possibly the largest flour mill in the British Commonwealth.
See also
- Esterhazy Flour Mill - 1904 wood-frame construction flour mill in Saskatchewan
- Flour Mill
- Krause Milling Co. - 1929 grain elevator and flour mill site in Radway, Alberta.
- Ritchie Mill - oldest surviving flour mill in the province of Alberta.
- Watson's Mill - is a historic gristmill in Manotick, Ontario, Canada.
References
- ↑ Klassen, Henry Cornelius (1977). The Canadian West : social change and economic development. Calgary: University of Calgary Press. p. 154.
Bibliography
- The Toronto World - Oct 9, 1920
- Manitoba Historical Society - The Lake of the Woods: Its History, Geology, Mining and Manufacturing
- Lake of the Woods Museum
- Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online - John Mather