Three Hills

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Historical and geographical information

 

 

 

  

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The Farndale Directory

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Farndale History

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General Sir Martin Farndale KCB

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Introduction

 

Dates are in red.

Hyperlinks to other pages are in dark blue.

Headlines of the history of Three Hills are in brown.

References and citations are in turquoise.

Contextual history is in purple.

 

The Farndales of Three Hills

 

George Farndale (FAR00588) was a farmer at Three Hills, Alberta

 

Catherine Jane Farndale (“Kate”), later Kinsey (FAR00601) was the maternal ancestor of the Kinsey Family who farm at Three Hills, Alberta.

 

Three Hills

 

Three Hills is a town located in the southern part of the province of Alberta, Canada. It takes its name from the three highly visible hills that are situated to its north.

 

Three Hills Timeline

 

1911

 

George Farndale (FAR00588) went to Canada about 1911 and lived at Three Hills, Alberta. He never married.

 

He is shown on the passenger list of the SS Halifax (Dominion Line) sailing from Liverpool to Halifax on 1 April 1911, with James Farndale who wrote a diary of the journey.

George took a homestead near Three Hills, not far from Trochu and lived there all his life until he retired, when he went to live in Calgary. He lived alone all his life, remaining reserved and shy.

 

There are many stories about him. Once he came to help his younger brother, Alfred, to drill corn. He arrived and started and then, with the job only half done, he drove himself and the drill home. Something said had annoyed him; so he left. He was known as a very upright and honest man. His bank manager used to say he was one hundred per cent reliable. There is also a story that he cared for a local girl, a nurse, who also liked him. She knew he was shy and tried to help him propose. He thought she was trying to pressurise him, so he never spoke to her again! (Family knowledge).

 

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It is perhaps all these stories which describe this big, shy man best. Certainly he was alone most of his life. He had many Farndale qualities, but his was an extreme version of them.

 

1912

 

Three Hills was incorporated as a village in 1912, the year it was moved to its current location on the Canadian Northern Railway. With ranchers and farmers constituting its first residents, it soon became a centre for the surrounding wheat-growing area.

 

1917

 

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When Kate Farndale (FAR00601) arrived to look after Martin and George, a hard life after the farm in Yorkshire, she met the Kinsey family of Cheshire, already friends of her brothers. Then, on 28 June 1917, she married William Henry Kinsey at Stettler. Catherine Jane Farndale married William Henry Kinsey at Stettler, Alberta in 1917.

 

Bill Kinsey had homesteaded 16 miles north west of Three Hills and extended an existing prairie shack. They had three children, George, Dorothy and Alfred. They lived at Three HillsAlberta in Alberta, near Trochu where Kate’s brothers Martin, George and Alfred also lived (Family knowledge).

 

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William Kinsey was born on 13 February 1874 in Cheshire. For a number of years he lived on a dairy farm in the United States. In 1904 he homesteaded 16 miles northwest of Three Hills. His brother John and he bashed in a 12 foot by 14 foot shack. Later they built a main room onto it. In June 1917 William married Catherine Jane Farndale. They had three children. George later farmed 15 miles northwest of Three Hills, Dorothy Goodbrand lived southeast of Lake Am, and Alfred farmed 13 miles northwest of Three Hills. William Kinsey was a trustee of Curlew School. He joined the Council after Bill Hazel's death in 1938 and remained on until amalgamation, a period of about 5 ˝ years. His brother George Frederick Kinsey was on the council in 1912 and resided on his farm. William Kinsey died in February 1959 aged 83.


Kate is always remembered as very strict. She would not tolerate smoking or drinking alcohol. She was deeply religious and set high standards of behaviour for her own family. There are many stories of going out to the barn for a drink or a smoke to avoid her displeasure!

 

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Bill Kinsey’s threshing set in about 1917 in Alberta, Canada

 

1922

 

In 1922, Prairie College (originally founded as Prairie Bible Institute) was established in Three Hills with L. E. Maxwell as its first principal. This occurrence helped to increase the population of the town proper and its adjacent settlements.

 

1954

 

The Maxwell Tabernacle was Canada's largest religious auditorium before it was demolished in 2005. It operated from 1954 to 2005 as a local church, concert hall, and graduation auditorium of Prairie Christian Academy and Three Hills School high school classes.

 

1959

 

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When her husband died in 1959, Kate moved to a house at Three Hills, where she was close to her family.

 

George Kinsey married and moved onto his parents' farm.

 

Alfred William Kinsey was born on 11 January 1921 to William Henry Kinsey and Catherine Jane (Farndale) Kinsey. While growing up on the farm west of Trochu, Alfred along with his brother George and sister Dorothy attended Curlew School. He worked on the farm after school with his parents and alongside his brother as well as for various neighbours and relatives in the local farming community. Alfred attended bible college at Prairie Bible Institute and graduated in 1952.

 

 In 1958 he married Oneta Davis and they moved to the farm where he had grown up.

 

In 1960 they moved to Three Hills where they joined Prairie staff for 5 years. Alfred worked there on the farm and in the milk pasteurising plant.

 

1966

 

Kate died on 9 September 1966, aged 82 years, at Three Hills. She is buried not far from her brother, Martin, in Trochu graveyard.

 

1980s

 

In the mid 1980s, the 130-acre Prairie College campus and the nearby hamlets of Grantville and Ruarkville were annexed to the town.

 

1998

 

Although a relatively small community, Three Hills had the distinction of hosting the Alberta Seniors Games in the summer of 1998. The town was chosen to host this event because of its ability to utilize large and well equipped facilities at the college. This included the opening and closing ceremonies which took place in the 4,300 seat Maxwell Memorial Tabernacle, located on Prairie College's campus.

 

Because of development of the nearby methane fields, the food and lodging industries in Three Hills have grown considerably over the past few years.

 

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