Extractions: Beausejour Fair on Ashton Avenue, c. 1925 Movement of people into the Parkland/Mixed-Woods region of Manitoba was the result of factors at work both in Canada and in the countries from which the immigration originated. The decision to emigrate to this southern part of the province, which connected the prairies in the south to the boreal forest in the north, was the result of a variety of factors. Some common to all emigrants, others specific to each particular group. The experiences and interactions of these groups have created the constantly changing social and cultural life of the region. Judging horses at Reston Fair, c. 1920 Both governments and individuals promoted and expedited the movement of people from their original homeland to the Parkland region. Just as the motives of the emigrants were varied, so were the possible motives of those who made the journeys possible. Governments limited access to the region, using criteria such as ethnicity, vocation, class and gender. Immigrants were not always welcomed to the Parklands by earlier settlers or Canadian society at large. Their degree of acceptance depended to a large part on their ethnic origin and economic status, according to an informal hierarchy of racial superiority. These attitudes were widely expressed in the press and the politics of the day. Aerial view of parade going down the main street of [ Each ethno-cultural group which migrated to rural Manitoba brought its own unique forms of cultural expression and techniques of adaptation to the specific environmental and socio-economic niches in the region. These are reflected in economic development and political expression, in religious life, in everyday lifestyles, and in the evolving popular culture of the Parklands region.
UW Libraries - Database Search Dept. of Cultural Affairs and Historical Resources manitoba. manitobaCulture, Heritage and Recreation. Subject, manitoba History. http://www.lib.washington.edu/resource/search/ResFull.asp?Field=record&ID=63884
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