Brothers build homestead their grandfather never had chance to finish, using methods from 1910 - Action News
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Brothers build homestead their grandfather never had chance to finish, using methods from 1910

Twin brothers, alongside a host of volunteers, have spent several days building a homestead shack in homage to their grandfather, who built a sod house but never the shack to go with it.

Builders attempted to remain as close to authentic as possible, including hauling wood to site by horse

Three men crowd around a table and cut wood while others work in the background in an open outdoor space
John Robinson, right, uses a handsaw to cut through wood at the build site of the homestead shack he, his twin brother and about 20 other people are constructing to pay homage to Robinson's grandfather. (Brenda Garbut)

When John Robinson was a kid, he used to sit and stare at a picture of an old sod house his grandfather built more than a century ago. Robinson and his twin brother, Frank, decided they would test their mettle and finish what their grandfather started.

"I think it's just going to be a chance to forget about 2023 and concentrate on 1910," John had told Shauna Powers, host of CBC's Saskatchewan Weekend a week before the build.

Their grandfatherhad built the sod home near Willows, Sask.,but never finished a homestead shack, one they believe he would have constructed had he not died a few years after the home was built. They have been planning the homestead's construction for years.

Sod homes were a common style of home building in the Prairies in the latter half of the 1800s, cheaply built out of blocks of sod and basic house fittings.

LISTEN | Two twin brothers dedicated to building a homestead shack similar to ones built more than 100 years ago speak to CBC's Shauna Powers from the buildsite:
For the last several days a team of volunteers has been hard at work building a 1910 homestead shack. The plan was to get it done in just three days, using only the tools that would have been available at the time. Host Shauna Powers checks in with twin brothers John and Frank Robinson to hear how their dream is coming to life.

The construction began Thursday. At the build site Sunday, John said it had rained over their scheduled construction schedule, forcing a halt to the build for a time, though getting the tin on the roof Saturday was a sense of relief for him.

"No matter what happens now, the building is safe and secure," John said.

About 20 volunteers, from relatives to co-workers, are helping in what was planned to be a three-day build of the homestead shack on Frank's land in Lamont County, Alberta. When it's done, they plan to hang picturesinside to make it feel like it was their grandfather's shack.

John designs buildings in Regina,and built a cottage 14 years ago over a three-day span with more than 100 people.The blueprints for the 11-foot by 16-foot homestead shack are much different, though, including the lack of an electrical plan.

A wooden shed in an outdoor treed area
The outside of the homestead shack that John and Frank Robinson built, hoping to create what their grandfather may have constructed in the early 1900s to accompany his sod home. (John Robinson)

John was also dedicated to work within similar constraints his grandfather would have been under, even obtaining a wood-handled saw as part of his 1910-era tool set. He re-purposedold wood or gotlocally milled wood, and usedClydesdalehorses to bring the wood from the mill to the site.

"When I thought about how long this building would take, you forget how long it takes to handsaw every board and nail every board and I'm used to living in a world with chop saws and air nailers," he said.

He estimates the 20 hours that went into the flooring could have been completed with a chop saw and an air nailer in about an hour.

John also planned todressin century-old looking clothes, a time period he sometimes thinks he would be better suited forthough this build could change his mind.

The twins also had an elder and a pipe ceremony before they began to bless the land and to have a talking circle with people discussing what experience they would like to get out of the weekend build.

Frank said the ceremony, which included tying ribbons on the trees to represent the different directions,was very emotional and meant to honour those before them, both Indigenous and non-Indigenous.

Frank said his most overpowering feeling over the weekend was that he couldn't believe theirbuild was actually happening after the years of planning.

"The pipe ceremony was really emotional I feel more connected now than I ever did and we used [our grandfather's]box level every day, I think, and I just felt like there was a piece of him on that site," Frank said.

"It's hard to feel connected to someone you've never met but I think I did."