Rural Municipality of Archie explained

The Rural Municipality of Archie is a former rural municipality (RM) in the Canadian province of Manitoba. It was originally incorporated as a rural municipality on December 22, 1883.[1] It ceased on January 1, 2015 as a result of its provincially mandated amalgamation with the RM of Ellice and the Village of St. Lazare to form the Rural Municipality of Ellice – Archie.[2]

Archie was named in 1883 after Archie McDonald, a chief factor with the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Ellice. Its economic base was primarily agriculture and the geography included the Assiniboine River and related valleys. It was about 345 square kilometres and the largest centre was McAuley.

It bordered a small part of the Birdtail Sioux First Nation in its northeast section.

Communities

Reeves

NameIn Office
Samuel Leslie1884–1887
John Traquair1888–1889
R. J. Anderson1890–1894
Charles Poole1895–1910
William Macdonald1911–1916
Robert J. Hewitt1917–1922; 1927; 1929–1937
J. E. Jamieson1923–1926
William Pateman1938–1957
C. Donald McAree1958–1967
E. Arthur Poole1968–1971
Stuart A. Grant1972–1975
Ronald J. McAuley1976–1977
Aime J. Hudon1978–1988
Robert B. Peters1989
C. Terrance Johnson1990–1992; 1999–2001
Charles U. Lowes1993–1998; 2002–2004
Brian Bajus2005-2014?

External links

References

50.1964°N -101.3242°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Manitoba's Municipal History: Rural Municipalities and Local Government Districts . The Manitoba Historical Society . September 21, 2014 . January 2, 2015.
  2. Web site: Manitoba's Municipal History: Municipal Amalgamations (2015) . The Manitoba Historical Society . December 1, 2014 . January 2, 2015.