Manitoba

Century-old message beneath toppled Victoria statue at Manitoba legislature bemoans booze ban

A 101-year-old message has been discovered by workers removing the base of a former statue in front of the Manitoba legislature.

MLA shared part of 1921 message in bottle, which decries lack of brandy due to Prohibition, on Wednesday

People in hardhats stand on top of a stone platform covered in handprints, while a piece of heavy machinery uses a rope to tie off the platform. Hundreds of orange flags cover the ground in front.
A crew works to remove the platform that once was home to the Queen Victoria statue. People pulled the statue down on Canada Day in 2021. (Randall McKenzie/CBC)

A 101-year-old message has been discovered by workers removing the base of a former statue in front of the Manitoba legislature.

Workers have been removing, piece by piece, the large base that held a statue of Queen Victoria. The statue was toppled last year by protesters. Its head was removed and thrown in the nearby Assiniboine River.

The base is now being removed to make way for a replacement.

When crews recently removed one section of the base, they found a broken bottle and a note that had been placed inside. The note was an apology of sorts, dated July 30, 1921 — an era when alcohol was outlawed.

"It says, 'On account of the Prohibition, we are unable to adhere to the custom of depositing a bottle of brandy under the stone, for which we are extremely sorry,' I believe is what it says," Reg Helwer, minister responsible for government services, said Wednesday as he tried to make out the wording on the worn dispatch.

The note is signed by a stonecutter, other workers and a bureaucrat — the province's deputy minister of public works at the time.

The government is now working out how to best preserve the document and what should be done with it.

Helwer said it's not the first time an item from Manitoba's early days as a province has been discovered unexpectedly.

"Apparently there are things of that nature around the legislature. As we move stones, we do discover things like this," he said.

"To me, it's a very neat story, especially with the age of the building, just recently celebrating a hundred years not long ago."