
001 - Cover and Title of the Bell Farm Visitors' Register
Bell Farm History / 400 - Bell Farm Visitors' Register - 1884 - 1895

002 - Inside cover - maker's mark detail
Manufactured in Winnipeg, Manitoba in 1884

003 - Sample title for interior pages
Includes signatures on page 3

Register entry 001a - Bell Farm Visitors' Register - page 1
Original Signatures: entries 1 to 32: Aug 8 - 14, 1884

Register entry 001b - Rev. Adelbert Anson, Bishop of the Diocese of Assiniboia
Visited the Bell Farm in late August 1883 on the Grand CPR Tour with 65 others, and again on August 8, 1884 - Anglican Bishop Adelbert Anson, first Bishop of Qu'Appelle (1884-94).

Register entry 003-004 - Rev. John Grisdale, Dean of Rupertsland
Visited the Bell Farm on August 8, 1884 - John Grisdale was a theology professor at St. John's College and the Anglican Dean for the Diocese of Qu'Appelle in 1884.

Register entry 008 - Henry Hall Smith
Visited the Bell Farm on August 8, 1884 - Henry Hall Smith (b. 1867) was a lawyer, the Commissioner of Dominion Lands, and a member of the Dominion Lands Board in Winnipeg.

Register entry 009 - John McDonald Gordon
Visited the Bell Farm on August 8, 1884. - John MacDonald Gordon, Dominion land agent (promoted to Inspector of Dominion Lands Agencies 1885) visited the Bell farm August 8th, 1884 along with Commissioner H.H. Hall.

Register entry 012 - Lieut. Gov. Edgar Dewdney
Visited the Bell Farm on August 8, 1884. - Edgar Dewdney (1835-1916) was an early investor in and served as President of the Qu'Appelle Valley Farming Company.

Register entry 013 - Mrs. Jane Dewdney
Visited the Bell Farm on August 8, 1884. - Jane Shaw [Moir] Dewdney was the wife of Edgar Dewdney, Lieutenant Governor of the North-West Territories (1881-1888).

Register entry 014 - Richard Sykes
Visited the Bell Farm on August 8, 1884. In 1882, Richard Sykes (1839-1923), an English capitalist of Stockport, England, who began purchasing North American land in 1880, lived between England and the States, eventually permanently settling in Santa Barbara, California.

Register entry 016 - Capt. George Pritchard-Rayner
Visited the Bell Farm on Aug. 8, 1884 - Capt. George Pritchard-Rayner was a retired officer of the 5th Dragoon Guards and Master of the Anglesey Harriers.

Register entry 020 - Alfred Pegler
Visited the Bell Farm on Aug. 12, 1884 - Alfred Pegler JP, was a well known Southampton jeweler and Liberal politician

Register Entry 022 - John Fisher Wood
Visited the Bell Farm on Aug. 12, 1884 - John Fisher Wood

Register entry 024 - Alexander McArthur
Visited the Bell Farm on August 14, 1884 - A Winnipeg general merchant, Alex MacArthur helped found the Manitoba Historical and Scientific Society.

Register entry 027 - David MacArthur
Visited the Bell Farm on Aug. 14, 1884 - David MacArthur

Register entry 028a - Robert Crawford
Visited the Bell Farm on 14 September 1884 - Robert Crawford (1834-1897)
![Register entry 028b - Elizabeth [Miles] Crawford](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/614927369f334b622c88befd/1655327764178-GEGXVQ3WJWLHTPYXYJWS/20201116130453-cb2984fa-me.jpg)
Register entry 028b - Elizabeth [Miles] Crawford
Elizabeth Miles (c.1838 - ? ) was the daughter of Hudson's Bay Company Chief Factor Robert S. Miles.

Register entry 030 - Duncan MacArthur
Visited the Bell Farm on Aug. 14, 1884 - Duncan MacArthur

Register entry 033a - Bell Farm Visitors' Register - page 2
Original Signatures: entries 33 to 64: Aug. 15 - 20, 1884
The Bell Farm Visitors Register was printed in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and was first used in August 1884, a full two years after the Bell Farm began operations. Hence, it is not a complete record of all who visited the Farm, as many early visits are not recorded. As well, historical information from other sources indicates that not everyone who came to the Farm signed the Visitors Register.
This album includes approximately 310 entries. Most of the research on these people was undertaken by Michelle Cabana of Saskatoon. Her ability to decipher the signatures in the Register and to then locate historical information on and photos of those people has been most rewarding. The information attests to the great variety of people who visited the Bell Farm from diverse locations in Europe and North America, and the mixture of ages. Considering the transportation facilities of the late 19th century, it is remarkable that so many people found the time and resources to travel to the Canadian West and to take the time to include a visit to the Bell Farm in those itineraries. Even more remarkable is that so many of those visitors subsequently wrote about their experiences and publish them in newspapers, journals and books.
The Register Entry Numbers correspond with the sequential numerical system that Major Bell instituted. While he carefully numbered each line for the first few pages, he discontinued that process about 1/3 of the way through, at number 128. Hence, later numbers (129 to 310) were assigned by us in the same sequence as the visitors signed the book.
A photograph of each Register page is inserted immediately before the entry number at the top of that page. Click on the page to get an enlargement of the signatures and accompanying information.
There are 268 entries in the Register during the early years of the Bell Farm's operation, when the Farm's fame was wide-spread. However, after the Bell Farm suffered financially in 1885 and 1886, and was reorganized in 1886, the number of visitors dropped dramatically. Between 1888 and 1894 only 42 additional visitors signed the Register.
NOTE: In some instances, where evidence clearly indicates that both husband and wife visited the Bell Farm, an extra entry has been made for the spouse, generally by adding an "a" after the primary entry number, and a "b" after the secondary entry. For example: Entry 28a is for Robert Crawford, and Entry 28b is for his wife, Elizabeth [Miles] Crawford.
RESEARCH BY:
Pimary research was undertaken by Michelle Cabana, Saskatoon, Sask, with assistanbce from several others, including: Margaret Hryniuk and Frank Korvemaker, both of Regina, Sask., and Bill Pinfold, England.