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Village Squire, 1980-07, Page 20Dungannon around 1911. Dungannon A village with a past and a future. BY MARIAN ZINN Even though Dungannon is only a small hamlet, split in half by Huron County Road #1, with half the residents in West Wawanosh Township and the other half governed by Ashfield, it is unique in many ways. Back in the 1885's, Dungannon was flourishing with much higher population than today and many more stores and industries. George Agar at that time manufactured dog churns. These churns were driven by dog power (a dog going round and round to make the barrel turn). It was often said that the mistress had to catch the dog and tie him up early in the morning before he suspected a day of churning. If the dog was smart and got away, the children had to take turns in powering the machine until the cream was made into butter. There are still a few of these churns left today,but they are collectors' items. DUNGANNON NEWS Then way back in those halcyon days of peace pre -Hitler, cold wars and atomic bombs, back in those days when life in small communities flowed on with the tranquility of the Nine Mile River - to be exact, June 1908, two loads of printing machinery rumbled over the roads from McGaw station to Dungannon and two weeks later the 'Dungannon News' was born. Located in the Smiley block, the 'News' was established to serve a prosperous community according to an announcement editorial. PG. 18 VILLAGE SQUIRE/JULY 1980 In those days, Dungannon was quite an important community business centre. The 'News' advertising column revealed two general stores, two hardware shops, two ' tailor shops, a harness shop, a drug store, a bank, two grist mills, two evaporators, a creamery, the head office of West Wawa - nosh Fire Insurance Company and the home of the Goderich Rural Telephone Company. There was also a jewellery store, two hotels, a millinery shop, a barber shop, a I ibrary, a bake shop, two blacksmith shops, furniture and undertaking parlour, a doctor, two veterinarians, three churches and Dungannon's Fall Fair was the stellar attraction for miles and miles around. ITS OWN RADIO STATION Ten years later, Dungannon had its own radio station which broadcast local talent programs that could be heard 75 miles away. Melville Culbert operated the station as a non-commercial enterprise. He built the set from a "do-it-yourself" diagram from Popular Mechanics magazine. He started experimenting with a broad- casting station about the same time as his friend 'Doc' Cruickshank of Wingham. At that time he was required to register and was given the call number of 10 BP, but had not yet applied for a license. He and Doc Cruickshank used the same license and by transporting it from Wingham to Dungannon and vice -versa, they could both broadcast a further distance. After a small fire in his equipment, Melville let Doc Cruickshank have the license and his call letter 10 BP. And so Dungannon lost its prestige once more. FOUNDER OF DUNGANNON But let us go back to the 1840's when William Mallough, a native of County Tyrone, gave the name of his home town, Dungannon, Ireland to this Huron County hamlet, when he settled here in 1844, with his wife Ann Jane Menary. They were married the previous year. They set sail for Canada, their journey lasting six weeks, and made their way to Hamilton and travelled by ox -cart through dense forest and settled on Lot 12, Con. 4, of the Eastern Division of the Township of Ashfield which they had taken out from the Crown. THE VERY FIRST CITIZENS OF DUNGANNON The following story was told by the Mallough's grandson, W.J. Stothers. "This story happened in the 1840's. William Mallough and his wife Jane had been in Canada only a few years. They lived in a one room log house heated by a stone fire -place which also helped to supply the light at night so they could do with less tallow candles. On this fire -place the cooking and baking was also done, as no stoves had gotten that far into the bush. This home was situated close to a fresh brook on high ground and to the west side of the Indian trail that passed by the front door. West of the house about forty rods was an Indian summer camp. The chief of this band was the same man who was mentioned in the book entitled "In the Days of the Canada Company." He had been in the war in 1812 and was a friend of General Brock. He had several medals which had been presented to him by the British for his valour and alliance. These medals he would show to his friends when he was presented ' ith a gift of tea, tobacco, flour, white sugar or white bread. The Malloughs and this oand of Indians were always friendly. They did not steal the Mallough cattle to eat, like the other bands to the East but helped to find them when they wandered away in the bush. When the weather became cold and winter set in, the Indians moved to a more sheltered place, where there was at that time a thick stand of cedar trees, which sheltered their dwellings from the wind and the snow (now William St.). The Mallough house was quite close and visits were exchanged quite often. When the hunting and fishing were poor and the Indians were hungry, some from the band would come to the Malloughs and by signs let them know of their troubles. The Malloughs would help out with bread, potatoes, dried beans and salt pork, and when the Indians returned from a good hunt with fresh venison or bear meat or had been to the lake and had lake trout or herring caught through the ice, Malloughs always received a share of it, along with