Search This Blog

Showing posts with label western Canadian history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label western Canadian history. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 March 2011

Chinese Hotel Owners: "Friends to All"

Chinese immigrants in Canada, c. 1900. Image source

“George Brennan built the first hotel and managed it until Prohibition came. When he could no longer get a license for the bar, he sold it to some Chinamen.” This line from Pennant’s history book describes a typical scenario. When Saskatchewan’s hotels hit hard times, the province’s small Chinese community stepped in to pick up the pieces, keeping those hotels in business. Many Saskatchewan hotels were owned and operated by Chinese throughout the Prohibition years of the teens and 1920s, and into the Depression of the 1930s. In his address to the annual convention of the Hotel Association of Saskatchewan in 1952, George G. Grant stated that, back in the early1930s, “the condition of hotels was desperate, and half the hotels were operated by Orientals.” (Saskatoon StarPhoenix, May 20, 1952, p. 3)

The “Chinamen” who bought the Pennant Hotel from George Brennan in 1916 were “Yock Yee, Yee On, Yee Kong, and Young Yenchew, better known to all as George, Doo Lu, Louie and Charlie.” Like many Chinese enterprises in small-town Saskatchewan, the Pennant Hotel was not, strictly speaking, a family business. Rather, it was run by several men – relatives or friends – who worked as partners. This was necessary because, from 1885 until well into the 20th century, restrictive immigration laws prevented Chinese from bringing their wives and children to Canada. As a result, the Chinese Canadian community became a “bachelor society.” 

Chinese immigrants began arriving in what is now Saskatchewan in the late 1880s after the completion of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Fleeing from mob violence in British Columbia, they tended to disperse into the new railroad towns of the prairies. In his book, Sweet and Sour; Life in Chinese Family Restaurants (2010), John Jung explains that, upon arriving in a community, Chinese had to find or develop forms of self-employment as a means of economic survival. Other forms of work such as railway construction were denied to them. “Lacking English language skills, having little money, and little experience,” Jung writes, “one of the few opportunities was in domestic work, typically considered ‘women’s work’. Thus, they started their own small businesses such as laundries, grocery stores, and restaurants often in areas where there were few other Chinese.” Some became cooks in small-town hotels where they learned the business. 
Chow Chow on right, with Robin Chow, n.d.
                       From A Link to Our Heritage: Lacadena and District (1989)
Chow Chow came to Lacadena in 1925 and built a hotel with eight guest rooms upstairs, and a very good café on the main floor.  According to Lacadena’s local history book, Chow was a generous, good-hearted businessman. “At Christmas time he always had a gift of chocolates or Christmas cake for every family,” the book recounts. “He provided service twenty-four hours a day if food was needed.”  Other members of the hotel staff were Wing Chow and a nephew, Ernie Chow, who attended school in Lacadena for a year or two. In 1947, Chow Chow's life changed when the Canadian government repealed the Chinese Immigration Act. His wife, son and two daughters were finally able to come from China to join him. He left Lacadena and moved to Vancouver where his wife helped him in a confectionery-café until he passed away from leukemia in 1972. 

The Wong Gin family of Herbert, 1940. Image Source

Wong Gin was a lucky man.  He came to Canada from China in 1908, and by 1913, he was the owner of the Tuxedo Café in Herbert, Saskatchewan. Thirteen years later, in 1926, he was the owner of the Tuxedo Hotel and Café, advertised as “The Best Hotel in Town – Ice Cream and Confectionary – Meals at All Hours – Clean Rooms and Best of Service.”  Wong Gin was also fortunate because his wife and family were not thousands of miles away in China. In 1927, he married Mae Yea of Riverhurst, Saskatchewan, and they had six children. Wong Gin was in competition with the Herbert Hotel owned by Mrs. E.M. Stephenson – “A Home Away From Home – Home Cooking – We Employ White Help Only.”  He must have been a naturalized Canadian, because in 1935, the year the province allowed the sale of beer by the glass, he bought the Herbert Hotel from Mrs. Stephenson and he was able to obtain a license to open a beer parlour – something many Chinese hotel owners were not permitted to do. Chinese were excluded because the law required that the applicant for a liquor license had to be a person who was entitled to vote. The Chinese in Saskatchewan did not receive the provincial franchise until 1947. In 1939, N.B. Williams, chairman of the Saskatchewan Liquor Board, stated that some liquor licenses had been granted to naturalized Chinese "who had long operated hotels in communities and were respected there." It was not, however, the board's policy to grant a license to naturalized Chinese "who had bought hotels after the former white owners had failed," Mr. Williams said. (Regina Leader-Post, Aug. 22, 1939, p. 9)

The Herbert Hotel in 1908.Image source
In 1945, Wong Gin sold the Herbert Hotel. He died in January 1960. The Herbert history (1987) records the following tribute:  “Wong had more than fulfilled the requirements of any citizen. As a pioneer he took an active part in building Herbert, for the well-being of his children and his neighbour’s children. He had helped to build on every project that needed volunteer labour – the school, hospital, skating rinks, curling rinks, exhibition grounds and Bible School. … One winter he even won a trophy in a farmers’ bonspiel.” The Gin family has continued to be active and involved in the Herbert community ever since.  

Edam Cafe and Hotel, n.d Image source
Charlie Chan arrived from China in 1910.  In 1915, Chan and a partner built a hotel on Main Street in Edam that, according to the Canada’s Historic Places web site, “was considered to be one of the most elegant establishments of its kind in the region.”  Chan’s business consisted of hotel, café and ice cream parlour. He eventually bought out his partner’s share in the Edam Café, and his family operated it until 1986. The two-storey, wood frame building, designated as a Municipal Heritage Property, was moved in 2003 from Main Street to the site of the Edam museum. 

Back in Pennant, Young Yenchew (aka Charlie) and Yok Yee (aka George), owners of the Pennant Hotel for many years, were considered “friends to all,” especially the children. The hotel café was a great place to meet for a 25-cent banana split, or an orange drink called “belly wash” for five cents. Charlie loved the sport of curling, and attended many bonspiels throughout the region. “When they left Pennant,” the history book reports, “a large crowd gathered at the Memorial Hall to say thank you for all the years of service to the community.” 

Once economic conditions improved during the war years of the 1940s, the number of Chinese hotel owners in the province dropped substantially.

© Joan Champ, 2011

Sunday, 27 February 2011

Preeceville's Golden West Hotel

Preeceville, c. 1912. Source
The hotel shortly after it was built in 1912. Source

One of the most unique old hotels I have visited is the one in Preeceville. The town is located in the rolling hills of east-central Saskatchewan, approximately 100 kilometres north of Yorkton at the junction of Highways 49, 47, and 9. 

The Preeceville hotel is unique because it is the only one I know of that had porches and verandahs added rather than removed during its lifetime. In addition, while there have been several serious fires on Preeceville’s Main Street over the years, this large wooden structure has managed to escape the flames, mainly because of the wide spaces between the hotel and neighbouring buildings.



The three-storey Golden West Hotel was built in 1912 by Scott Rattray. According to Preeceville’s history book, Lines of the Past (1982), the basement excavation had to be abandoned the previous fall, “due to frost that even defied an attempt to blast with stumping powder.” Before the hotel opened, Rattray sold it to Rudy Ramsland, followed by Jack Lynch. 

In 1911, Swan Carlson and his wife Emma moved to Preeceville and bought the Temperance Hotel where they set up a soda fountain and restaurant. After their business was destroyed by fire in December 1914, the Carlsons bought the Golden West Hotel which they operated until 1917. They then built a general store in town which they operated until 1938 when they moved to San Diego, California.

Swan and Emma Carlson, n.d.  Lines of the Past (1982)
In 1929, the Mattison family bought the Golden West Hotel for $5000. Oscar and Clara Mattison, born in Norway, had come to Preeceville from Minnesota in 1913. Family members recall in the town’s history book that only one room in the hotel had linoleum flooring. “The lobby had an oiled board floor. The kitchen and dining-room floors were not painted and had to be scrubbed weekly,” the Mattisons write. Water works were not installed until the 1940s, so water was drawn from a cistern in the hotel’s kitchen. “Every day pails of water were carried upstairs to fill the large pitchers. Each bedroom was equipped with a wash basin and water pitcher. … The toilet facilities consisted of a commode. It had to be emptied two or three times daily, thoroughly rinsed and sterilized. A septic tank was installed in the backyard.” The only bathtub in the hotel was in the upstairs linen closet for family use only. The water was heated on the kitchen stove and carried upstairs.

For about a year and half, the Mattisons managed to meet the payments on the hotel. Then the Depression of the 1930s took its toll, and for many years the owners were only able to pay the interest and taxes. To help make ends meet, Mrs. Mattison made all the bread for the hotel. She also kept a couple of cows for milk until about 1938. The Mattison family continued to operate the Golden West Hotel until 1968 after 39 years of ownership.   
 
Golden West Hotel c1940 source

Sign in the bar of the hotel. Joan Champ photo
Subsequent owners of the Golden West Hotel have been Joe and Lucy Kruk (1968-1971), Peter and Monty Sharber (1971-1973), Albert and Erika Hanke (1973-1976), Marvin and Norma Abrahamson (1976-1987), Darton Holdings Ltd. (1987-1996), Reid Junek (1996-1998), and Brock Junek (1998-2001). Roger and Shannon Prestie became the owners of the Preeceville hotel in 2001.

The Golden West Hotel continues to operate on the corner of Main Street and Highway 49 in Preeceville. The hotel features six guest rooms and two light housekeeping suites. There is full food service in 150-seat bar with daily specials. The hotel was listed for sale by Shannon Prestie in 2018.

Golden West Hotel, 2013. Joan Champ photo

Preeceville hotel, 2006.  Courtesy of Ruth Bitner
© Joan Champ, 2011


View Larger Map

Saturday, 26 February 2011

Prohibition: Hotel Bars Close Their Doors


From July 1, 1915 to 1924, Saskatchewan was dry. With the closure of 406 bars, 38 liquor dealers, and 12 clubs, it was estimated that liquor consumption in the province dropped by ninety percent. The number of convictions for drunkenness dropped from 2,970 cases in 1913 to 434 in 1918. When the bars closed down, however, so did many small-town hotels. “The hotelmen knew that without beverage revenue they could hardly hope to make ends meet,” writes H. G. Bowley in his 1957 history of the Hotels Association of Saskatchewan. “One of the cornerstones of the art of hospitality was to be removed, and they knew the whole structure of their industry would inevitably totter, and perhaps crash.” Indeed, hotels values in the province plummeted. Many hotel businesses never fully recovered from the blow of 1915. It may not be a coincidence that so many hotels burned down during the Prohibition years. 

The Lafrenieres. Footsteps in Time: Meota  (1980)
The last days of June 1915 before Prohibition came into effect were hectic ones for small-town Saskatchewan hotels. Prior to the closing of the bars on the July 1st deadline, hotel owners were faced with the necessity of disposing of their stocks. There was a great rush to purchase liquor. At the Clarendon Hotel in Gull Lake, “more than one kerosene can, brought to town to be filled with coal oil, found its way home filled with liquid other than coal oil,” the town history (1989) reports. “Rye whiskey sold that afternoon of June 30th at $1.00 per gallon and some sizeable stocks were laid in against the drought.”  That same day at the King Edward Hotel in Meota, Edward and Ferris Ann Lafreniere recalled that, prior to closing, “Anxious buyers filled the bar pushing and shoving. Money was thrown and bottles snatched in return. The doors finally closed and Ed and Ferris Ann literally swept the money from the floor with broom and dust pan. The following day the law moved in and destroyed the remaining stocks.” 

Closure and arson weren’t the only coping strategies used by Saskatchewan hotel owners when Prohibition hit. Charles Hitts sold the hotel at Griffin. “When the liquor licenses were rescinded it was hard to keep the commercial travelers over the weekends in the small places,” Griffin historian Mable Charlton writes (1967). “Although the menus were as good they went on to bigger places where there was more amusement.” The owner of the Imperial Hotel at Frobisher, John Klaholz, approached the town council in 1920 requesting that the sales of soft drinks, cigars and cigarettes be confined to the hotel to help make it pay – otherwise, he said, he would have to close it. Some hotel owners applied for government grants for the maintenance of public restrooms and reading rooms in their establishments. Unable to operate profitably, the Last Mountain Hotel at Strasbourg established a movie theatre on the second floor. Ice cream parlours often took the place of hotel bars. In 1916, F. A. Wright got a license to operate five pool tables in the Commercial Hotel in Herbert. Two years later, the Commercial Hotel was destroyed by fire.

Bootleg operations flourished in small-town Saskatchewan hotels during Prohibition. The thirsty traveler staying at the Arlington Hotel at Maryfield was usually able to satisfy his wants through the good graces of John Dodds, the proprietor. Dodds was caught on at least two occasions by a provincial liquor inspector, and paid the appropriate fines for his indiscretion. 


The Wilkie local history book provides the following account of a suspected bootlegging case at the Empire Hotel. On August 17, 1915, the Royal North West Mounted raided the hotel between 10 a.m. and noon. “In room No. 6, which was occupied by the hotel proprietor [W.H. Smith] and his wife, after a vigorous search was made, 28 bottles of liquor of various descriptions were found, the contents of two of which had been partially consumed. Upon being asked how this exceptionally large ‘private’ stock came to be on the premises, the defendant, during the hearing before Mr. T. A. Dinsley, J. P., stated that she had taken this liquor from the hotel cellars prior to the date upon which intoxicants had to be removed from the premises, July 1st, and had secreted the bottles, unknown to her husband, in her trunk in which they were found. ... The room in which the liquor was found had been occupied exclusively as a private living room during the entire period that her husband had been proprietor of the house and that it had never been used as a guest chamber. … When the police commenced to search the trunk she told them that it only contained linen. When asked why she made this statement, she could give no reason. When asked why she had kept her husband in ignorance of the fact that she had a private stock she stated that had he known he would probably not have allowed her to retain it.” Verdict: Not guilty.
© Joan Champ, 2011

Tuesday, 22 February 2011

Hotel Fires

The Franklin Hotel, Assiniboia, burned down on December 16, 2008.  Photo by Landon Ullrich
Another small-town Saskatchewan hotel went up in flames this past weekend. Carol MacCallum, the owner of the Choiceland hotel and bar, vows to rebuild the hotel. “This is a great town, these are great people” MacCallum told the Saskatoon StarPhoenix. “They need a bar. The bar is a community centre.”

Many hotels that once commanded the corners of Railway and Main have burned to the ground over the years.  It didn’t take much – a live cinder drawn up the chimney by a strong wind and igniting the flat tar roof; the explosion of a coal oil stove – to set these rambling old wooden buildings ablaze.  

Queen’s Hotel fire, Macrorie, 1957.
From Jubilee Reminiscences:
A History of Macrorie (1957)

Hotel fires caused death and destruction. In 1912, the hotel in Antler, Saskatchewan, caught fire after an explosion of the gas works which provided the building’s light and heat. According to the town’s history book (1983), the guests in the front part of the hotel escaped unharmed, but it was a different story for staff members in the back of the building. “Two chambermaids were saved by the Chinese cook, who forcibly threw these two frightened girls over the hole, and they escaped unhurt. Dan Morrison, who was also in the back part, had his hair and face badly burnt. Fred Brown, a man of German descent, a carpenter and resident of the hotel, died in this event. He was found with his mattress still under him; evidently he died of smoke inhalation, never waking. They had held a birthday party for him the day before the fire.”

Aftermath of the Macoun Hotel explosion, 1914.
One of the most tragic hotel fires in Saskatchewan’s history occurred in Macoun on a windy April day in 1914. Thirteen people died and many were injured when an acetylene lighting plant in the hotel basement exploded. It was lunch time, and the hotel dining room was filled to capacity. The owner’s son smelled gas and decided to go down to the basement to investigate – with a lit cigar in his mouth. As soon as he opened the basement door, the place exploded. The entire building was thrown about thirty feet in the air, and then crashed back down. The young man with the cigar survived with only a few bruises, singed hair and eyebrows. Everyone else caught in the conflagration – save two – perished in the fire, or died later as a result of their injuries. 

Maple Leaf Hotel fire, Lumsden, 1909 Source
In the early days, few of Saskatchewan’s small towns had the means to extinguish the flames of a big fire. A disastrous hotel fire prompted many a town council to buy firefighting equipment. Other town passed bylaws mandating the construction of firewalls between adjacent buildings.  Roofs had to be made of incombustible materials. The front verandas and covered balconies that once graced most old hotels had to be removed as they added to the fire hazard. In 1933, the town of Radville passed a bylaw forcing every hotel to provide fire escapes, signs leading to theses escapes, fire extinguishers on each floor, and a rope for each guest room. The minute book of the town of Webb records Hotel Bylaw No. 19: “Every public hotel shall be provided with one cotton rope at least three-quarter inch in diameter to be firmly fastened at least two feet above the windowsill in each bedroom.”

Firefighting demonstration, Comstock Hotel, Halbrite, n.d.
Plowshares to Pumpjacks (1984)
Not everyone was sad to see the town hotel burn down.  When the women of Clavet heard that the hotel was on fire in 1915 - the year Prohibition was introduced in Saskatchewan, it is reported they said, "Hell is burning." 


Small-Town Saskatchewan Hotels Destroyed by Fire (list in progress):
  1. Aberdeen: Aberdeen Hotel, March 3, 1997 
  2. Abernethy: King Edward Hotel, May 27, 1909 
  3. Aneroid: Aneroid Hotel, June 3, 1953 
  4. Antler: Antler Hotel, December 16, 1912 [started in the hotel gas works; several injured, one killed]
  5. Ardill: Ardill Hotel, October 1965
  6. Asquith: Asquith Hotel, October 24, 1911 [explosion; four injured] 
  7. Assiniboia: Franklin Hotel, December 16, 2008 
  8. Atwater: Atwater Hotel, 1927 
  9. Avonlea: King George Hotel, 1916 
  10. Balcarres: Balcarres Hotel, November 3, 1974
  11. Balgonie: Balgonie Hotel, November 7, 1909 
  12. Beechy: Beechy Hotel, December 13, 1948 
  13. Bengough: Bengough Hotel, January 16, 1977
  14. Biggar: Eden Hotel, July 13, 1982 
  15. Broadview: Broadview Hotel, Jan. 1956 [$100,000 fire; and café] 
  16. Brownlee: City Hotel, June 30, 1929 [smaller hotel built in its place] 
  17. Buchanan: Buchanan Hotel, June 20, 1988
  18. Cabri: Cabri Hotel, March 12, 2022
  19. Cadillac: Vendome Hotel, December 27, 1923 
  20. Candle Lake: The Ship’s Lantern, November 26, 2006
  21. Cadillac: Cadillac Hotel, 1946 [rebuilt] 
  22. Carnduff: Clarendon/Queen’s Hotel, 1921 or 1924 
  23. Carrot River: Carrot River Hotel (Derniuk’s), 1933 
  24. Ceylon: Ceylon Hotel, December 25, 1911 
  25. Chamberlain: Chamberlain Hotel, June 21, 1942 
  26. Chaplin: Chaplin Hotel, September 1933
  27. Chaplin: Chaplin Hotel, October 1956 [$80,000 damage] 
  28. Choiceland: Choiceland Hotel, Feb. 19, 2011 
  29. Christopher Lake: Christopher Lake Hotel, March 2019 [arson]
  30. Clavet: French Hotel, 1915 
  31. Colonsay: Colonsay Hotel, October 2, 1920
  32. Consul: Consul Hotel, August 3, 2015
  33. Craik: Craik Hotel, January 31, 2003 
  34. Craven: Iroquois Hotel, 1908 
  35. Craven: Empress Hotel, 1961 
  36. Cudworth: Cudworth Hotel 1973 
  37. Debden: Debden Hotel, 1926 
  38. Debden: Debden Hotel, early 1930s 
  39. Debden: Debden Hotel, early 1960s
  40. Delmas: Delmas Hotel, 1912 [at least one person killed] 
  41. Denholm: Denholm Hotel, October 6, 1913
  42. Disley: Disley Hotel, July 1954 
  43. Dubuc: Bernier Street Hotel, June 11, 2013
  44. Earl Grey: Hotel Grey, 1924 
  45. Eastend: Cypress Hotel, March 1916; rebuilt 
  46. Edam: Rendezvous Hotel, June 5, 2017
  47. Edenwold: Edenwold Hotel, July 1, 1991
  48. Eldersley: White (Tice) Hotel, December 1927 
  49. Elfros:  Tequilas Hotel, October 9, 2014
  50. Elrose: Elrose Hotel, September 12, 1993 
  51. Elstow: Elstow Hotel, 1916 or 1918 [two people killed] 
  52. Estuary: Nordby Hotel, August 20, 1917 [entire business section of town destroyed]
  53. Estevan: Kelly House, 1909
  54. Estevan: Estevan Hotel, Feb. 27, 1936 [aka Clarendon or American; hospital also destroyed] 
  55. Estevan: International Hotel, March 1973
  56. Fairlight: Fairlight Hotel, 1978 
  57. Fenwood: Fenwood Hotel, January 22, 1963
  58. Fielding: Fielding Hotel, July 22, 1922 
  59. Fiske: Fiske Hotel, May 27, 1919 
  60. Flaxcombe: Silver Hotel, January 26, 1929 
  61. Fort Qu’Appelle: Fort Hotel, Feb. 1974 [$250,000 damage]
  62. Gainsborough: Queen’s Hotel, between 1900-1905 
  63. Garrick: Garrick Hotel, March 1988
  64. Glen Ewen: Glen Ewen Hotel, 2007 
  65. Golden Prairie: Golden Prairie Hotel, December 1963
  66. Goodeve: Goodeve Hotel, January 19, 1982
  67. Govan: Silver Plate Hotel, 1960 
  68. Govan: Govan Hotel damaged, February 1978 
  69. Gravelbourg: Cecil Hotel, August 12, 1926 
  70. Gravelbourg:  King's Hotel, May 1972 
  71. Grenfell:  King’s Hotel, 1927 
  72. Gull Lake: Lakeview Hotel, June 12, 1921 
  73. Gull Lake: Clarendon Hotel, October 9, 2016 [arson]
  74. Harris: Commercial Hotel, 1924 
  75. Hawarden: Hawarden Hotel, January 1949
  76. Hazel Dell: Hazel Dell Hotel, October 2, 1978 
  77. Herbert: Commercial Hotel, 1918 
  78. Herschel: Herschel Hotel, December 25, 1979 
  79. Hoey: Hoey Hotel, 2004 
  80. Hudson Bay:  Etoimamie Hotel, 1935 
  81. Hudson Bay: Red Deer Motor Hotel, February 1979 [fatality]
  82. Hughton: Hughton Hotel, September 24, 1914 [arson]
  83. Hughton: Hughton Hotel, December 3, 1949
  84. Humboldt: Humboldt Hotel, 1923 
  85. Indian Head: McIntosh Hotel, early 1890s 
  86. Indian Head: Indian Head Hotel, 1993 
  87. Ituna: Carlton Hotel, 1925
  88. Ituna: Ituna Hotel, December 11, 2020
  89. Jasmin: Jasmin Hotel, 1920 
  90. Kamsack: Woodlander Hotel, December 9, 2023
  91. Kandahar: Lakeview Hotel, 1925 or 1926 
  92. Kelliher: Grand Trunk Hotel, December 22, 1931
  93. Killaly: Killaly Hotel, November 11, 1981 
  94. Kinistino:  Kinistino Hotel, March 1950 [two killed] 
  95. Kuroki: Kuroki Hotel, April 30, 1922 [one man killed] 
  96. Kyle: Kyle Hotel, May 16, 2018
  97. Laird:  Laird Hotel, August 1915
  98. LaflecheFlying Goose Inn, May 21, 2013 [formerly Hotel Metropole, built in 1913]
  99. Lampman: Lampman Hotel, January 24, 1932 
  100. Lancer: Lancer Hotel, 1958
  101. Lanigan: Lanigan Hotel, October 25, 1958
  102. Laura: Laura Hotel, November 1, 1966 
  103. Leask: Hotel Windsor , Feb. 9, 2011 [arson suspected] 
  104. Lebret: Lebret Hotel, October 5, 1916 [and dance pavilion] 
  105. Lebret:  Lebret Hotel, September 6, 1927
  106. Lemberg: Lemberg Hotel, March 11, 2019
  107. Liberty: Liberty Hotel, September 2, 1958 
  108. Limerick: Dickenson Hotel, early 1920
  109. Lockwood: Lockwood Hotel, March 9, 1951 
  110. Loverna: Vernon Hotel, 1960s 
  111. Lumsden: Maple Leaf Hotel, February 23, 1909 (see photo above)
  112. Lumsden: Lumsden Hotel, Sept. 1977 [caused by smoking; people killed] 
  113. Lumsden: Lumsden Hotel, Nov. 21, 1998 [damages in excess of $600,000] 
  114. Macleod: Commercial Hotel, July 13, 1891 
  115. Macoun:  Macoun Hotel, April 20, 1914 [13 people killed] 
  116. MacNutt: MacNutt Hotel, 1924; rebuilt 
  117. Macrorie: Queen’s Hotel, January 31, 1958 
  118. Manitou Beach: Manitou Beach Hotel, 1943 
  119. Mankota: Paris Hotel, December 28, 1988
  120. Manor: Manor Hotel, 1910 
  121. Marchwell: Central Hotel, April 5, 1973
  122. Margo: Margo Hotel, November 5, 1954
  123. Markinch: Markinch Hotel, March 3, 1930
  124. Maryfield: Arlington Hotel, 1945; rebuilt 1946 
  125. Mawer: Queen’s Hotel, 1918
  126. Mayfair: Mayfair Hotel, March 21. 2002
  127. McGee: Van Alstyne’s Hotel, 1915 
  128. Meath Park: Meath Park Hotel, October 22, 1995 [arson?] 
  129. Mendham: Mendham Country Inn, April 1997
  130. Meota: King Edward Hotel, 192
  131. Meyronne: Meyronne Hotel, November 14, 1988 [fatality]
  132. Melville: King George Hotel, February 17, 2010 [arson]
  133. Midale: Frances Hotel, November 8, 1987
  134. Milden: Milden Hotel, 1985 
  135. Milestone: Milestone Hotel, February 6, 1927 [15-year-old boy dead]
  136. Montmartre: Montmarte Hotel, January 1993
  137. Moosomin: Queen’s Hotel, 1905 
  138. Moosomin: Moosomin Hotel, Jan. 19, 1969 [one man dead, two missing] 
  139. Neilburg: Golden Oak Inn / Pitt's Bar & Grill, April 23, 2011
  140. Neudorf: Neudorf Hotel, September 3, 2017
  141. Nipawin: Anderson Hotel, 1923 
  142. Nipawin: Nipawin Hotel, 1933 
  143. Nipawin: Park Hotel, May 17, 1979 
  144. Nokomis: Patricia Hotel, May 25, 1926
  145. Norquay: Norquay Hotel, December 24, 2006
  146. Nut Mountain: Mountain House Hotel, November 22, 2006 
  147. Ogema: Little Amego Inn, April 20, 1958 
  148. Otthon: Otthon Hotel, March 1925 [$20,000 loss] 
  149. Oxbow: Palace Hotel, August 1907 [rebuilt as Alexandra Hotel] 
  150. Parkbeg: Temperance Hotel, August 1919 
  151. Parkside: Parkside Hotel, 1961 
  152. Paynton: Paynton Hotel, 1915
  153. Paynton: Leland Hotel, 1920 
  154. Penzance: Penzance Hotel, May 18, 1941 
  155. Piapot: Piapot Hotel, January 15, 1932 
  156. Plato: Rymal’s Hotel, 1919 
  157. Plenty: Plenty Hotel, 1981 [rebuilt by same owner]
  158. Ponteix: Windsor Hotel, 1929 
  159. Ponteix: Ponteix Hotel, June 26, 1930
  160. Porcupine Plain: Porcupine Hotel, 2001
  161. Portreeve: Portreeve Hotel, February 1919 or 1920 
  162. Prelate: Prelate Hotel, August 10, 2009 
  163. Prud’homme: Flanders Hotel, 1957 [rebuilt the same year] 
  164. Punnichy: Glenrose Hotel, December 14, 1955 
  165. Qu'Appelle: Queen's Hotel, April 17, 2003
  166. Quinton: Quinton Hotel, May 10, 1983
  167. Ravenscrag: Ravenscrag Hotel, 1954 
  168. Redvers: King’s Hotel, 1951 
  169. Redvers: Western Star Inn & Suites, January 18, 2021
  170. Rhein: Rex Hotel, July 24, 1930
  171. Rhein: Rhein Hotel, May 11, 1967
  172. Riverhurst: Riverhurst Hotel, December 24, 1974
  173. Rosetown: York Hotel, July 9, 1983
  174. Rosthern: Klondike Hotel, 1906 
  175. Rosthern: Occidental/National Hotel, August  26,1928 
  176. Rosthern: Queen’s Hotel, 1961 
  177. Rush Lake: Rush Lake Hotel, October 5, 1926 
  178. Ruthilda: Boon’s Hotel, summer 1926 
  179. St. Benedict: St. Benedict Hotel, April 18, 2018
  180. Shaunavon: Empress Hotel, December 17, 1914 
  181. Shell Lake: Shell Lake Hotel, 1956 
  182. Shellbrook: Former Tynen Hotel, January 18, 1943.
  183. Somme: Somme Hotel, 1943 
  184. Sonningdale: Sonningdale Hotel, March 19, 1995 [cooking oil to blame]
  185. Sovereign: Sovereign Hotel, 1915
  186. Spalding: Spalding Hotel, 1922 
  187. Speers: Speers Hotel, December 7, 1989 
  188. Spiritwood: Spiritwood Hotel, November 20, 1946
  189. Spy Hill: Spy Hill Hotel, 1940
  190. Star City: Queen’s Bar and Grille, March 2021
  191. Stenen: King George Hotel, October 26, 2011
  192. Stoughton: King Edward Hotel, February 1, 1905 
  193. Stoughton: Stoughton Hotel, August 1975 [two fatalities]
  194. Sturgis: Hotel Sturgis, March 1926 
  195. Swift Current: Empress Hotel, December 25, 1931 [$100,000 loss] 
  196. Tantallon: Tantallon Hotel, December 5, 1938 
  197. Tantallon: Valley View Hotel, April 25, 2019
  198. Tisdale: Imperial Hotel, February 7, 1933
  199. Tompkins: Pypres(?) Hotel, February 3, 1925
  200. Turtleford: Glenhavon Hotel, February 1, 1922 
  201. Tway:  Tway Hotel, April 5,1996 
  202. Val Marie: Val Marie Hotel, April 20, 1954
  203. Vidora: Vidora Hotel, Feb. 19, 1925 [also pool hall and a store; $14,000 loss] 
  204. Vonda: Vonda Hotel, 1924 
  205. Walpole: Walpole Hotel, 1923 or 1924 
  206. Wapella: Wapella Hotel, June 1890 [two arsonists convicted of setting fire] 
  207. Webb: [Weere’s] Hotel, January 1962
  208. Willow Bunch: European Hotel, November 11, 1959
  209. Willow Bunch: Hotel Manoir, Feb. 1995 [arson] 
  210. Wolseley: Windsor Hotel, 1906
  211. Wolseley: Leland Hotel, October 5, 1923 
  212. Wynyard: Wynyard Hotel, March 6,1932 
  213. Yellow Grass: Yellow Grass Hotel, November 13, 1994 [arson]
  214. Young: Young Hotel, November 13, 2011

© Joan Champ, 2011