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Manitoba Ghost Towns

Abandoned Manitoba Ghost Towns – travel blog.

A swing and crumbling house in the abandoned Manitoba ghost town of Ste. Elizabeth.

First – I absolutely need to recommend Gordon Goldsborough’s two excellent books on Manitoban history. He has done so much in preserving, documenting and highlighting Manitoba’s rich history. He is a Manitoban legend.

Second – Please be aware that most of the towns below are NOT ghost towns. They are small towns with a few historic and crumbling buildings surrounding them. People live there. Do NOT wander around without permission.

Ste. Elizabeth

Probably the closest to an actual ghost town as it gets.

Ste. Elizabeth, Manitoba was founded in the late 1800’s by French settlers. Russian and Hutterite immigrants followed a few decades later.

There was a failed attempt to get the railway to stop nearby and 2 wells which had poor quality ground water which that most likely contributed to its demise.

Sad to see the graffiti, even though some of it makes me giggle.

Just a few abandoned houses remain.

The Roman Catholic Church is in beautiful shape, well maintained and still hosts an annual pic-a-nic every summer.

Grain Elevators

Small Manitoban towns were usually made up of a grain elevator, a school, a church and a few small houses.

Lyleton, Manitoba

Quite frequently, these massive structures are all that’s left behind.

The railway that once served them moves on and so does the town.

Barnsley, Manitoba

Due to modern grain production, small farms are integrated into larger ones. Farming communities slowly become single farms spread out over the vast prairies.

Oberon, Manitoba

But they are all beautiful reminders of Canadian prairie history.

Elva Grain Elevator – believed to be one of the oldest in Canada (1897).

Manitoba Ghost Towns – Schools

Along with grain elevators, schools frequently mark the locations of abandoned Manitoba ghost towns. These markers are usually the only evidence that remains behind.

Matchettville School (1905 – 1951). Damage caused by farm machine accident in 2003.
Former site of Richview School (1888 – 1967).
A lot of schools have sign in books for visitors like Bernice School Division No. 547. Call the phone number on the door and someone will stop by to let you visit.
Morning Star School Site (1910 – 1967).
Some schools are now open museums like the one in Star Mound (1886 – 1962).

Tilston

Tilston it NOT an abandoned town – it is definitely populated. I’m including it because there were some lovely buildings there. And the sky was cooperating.

Buildings and Homes

The towns of Elva, Snowflake and Lauder are considered abandoned Manitoba ghost towns due to a few crumbling buildings in the area, even though much of the area is still occupied.

Abandoned farm house, near Elva, Manitoba.
Abandoned farm house near Lauder, Manitoba.

The famous “Lyons House” near Carberry has been abandoned since 1964.

It was built to last in 1895 by Robert Fern Lyons a member of the Manitoba Legislature. After all of these years you can still imagine what a grand mansion this would have been.

Manitoba Ghost Towns – The Rest

This famous abandoned church is familiar to anyone travelling south towards the United States due to it’s position between a divided highway. The sky always looks enormous around here.

The United Church and Cemetery is all that remains of Union Point and is a peaceful place for anyone who needs a rest while driving.

The concrete skeleton of the Kilkenny General Store was built to last in the abandoned ghost town town of Broomhill. In 1976 a storm washed out a nearby railway bridge and was never repaired, forever sealing Broomhill’s fate.

Former site of Matchettville Church (1898 – 1961).
This marker is one of the last things remaining from Bender Hamlet – a former shtetl-style Jewish farm colony from 1903 to 1926.

Want more Manitoba?

Check out my travel blog “Giants of the North – The Giant Statues of Manitoba!”

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