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SEE INSIDE AND SAVE!

WATER HEMLOCK CAN BE DEADLY FOR CATTLE » Pg 28

GOOD BUGS AND BAD BUGS » Pg 16

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VO L U M E 9, N U M B E R 1 7

12-07-20 3:38 PM

AUGUST 1 3, 2012

VALHALLA: Tiny community hasn’t just survived, but thrived RENEWAL  With a thriving restaurant,

charter school and community centre, Valhalla Centre remains a going concern BY REBECCA DIKA

AF CONTRIBUTOR / GRANDE PRAIRIE

I Mavis Breitkreutz had moved away but was part of a committee that was first struck to hold a reunion and then decided to do more. PHOTO: REBECCA DIKA

BARLEY:

t’s named for the afterworld of Norse legend, and Alberta’s Valhalla might have passed into the Great Beyond save for the dogged efforts of a small community group. Valhalla Centre, the tiny Norwegian community west of Grande Prairie, had been in a decades-long decline when the Valhalla Heritage Society was formed in 1988. Their efforts have since proven the wisdom of Margaret Mead’s words that a “small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world.” Originally founded in 1912 by a Norwegian missionary, the community’s claim to fame — aside from the Valhalla Brass Band — was its creamery, which opened in 1919 and later won first prize for its butter at Toronto’s Royal Winter Fair. But it was sold and closed in 1946. “When the creamery was sold in

1946 is when the downturn of the community started,” said Mavis Breitkreutz, a former local resident whose parents both worked in the creamery. Breitkreutz had moved away but was part of a committee that was first struck to hold a reunion and then decided to do more. The first move by the Valhalla Heritage Society was to have the town’s store, which dated back to 1918, declared a historic site. Funding from the Alberta Historical Resources Foundation paid for a new foundation, which was poured a few feet back from its original site close to the highway. The 1,700-square-foot structure was initially leased to a private operator of a small restaurant and eventually taken over by the society. Today, Melsness Mercantile restaurant (named after the longtime operators of the store) employs eight, attracts patrons from as far away as Grande Prairie, and showcases community

SEE VALHALLA  page 6

UNIFORMITY BEATS PLUMPNESS FOR MALTSTERS  Pg 12

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