
Destroyed historic landmark brings rural Albertan community together
CBC
A fire shattered the Bentley, Alta., community after it destroyed a historic landmark — but its restoration could bring the town closer together.
Seven months after the picturesque Monkey Top Saloon burned down, a new group of owners is hoping to return the historic building to its former glory. They're also hoping to heal the community by involving the town in the rebuilding process.
Kjeryn Dakin bought the burned down bar in June after she heard that there was a possibility it wouldn't come back. Family friends, Randy and Rosie Lunn joined as co-owners after a late night at Dakin's sister's birthday party.
"I said, 'No, that can't happen, that's not an option,'" Dakin said in an interview. "For it to not come back to Bentley, even driving there now, it just feels like there's a hole in the community."
Her husband, Kevin Dakin, used to eat lunch at the saloon three or four times a week. He said it was the "pulse of the town."
Nestled in the rolling hills of Alberta's Prairies and 187 kilometres outside of Edmonton, the Town of Bentley harkens to an older time. For Pam Hansen, who is a fourth generation Bentley resident, it's the close-knit community that makes the town feel like home.
"Everybody supports each other and helps each other in bad times and in good times," she said.
Located at the end of Cowboy Trail, the building itself is over a century old.
The original building used to be a store, which was owned by Frank Thorp, who became the first mayor of Bentley in 1915. It was destroyed by a fire in 1919. Since then, the building has undergone changes in ownership and business.
It was a grocery store when Hansen was born. In 1994, it turned into the Monkey Top Saloon. She was hired to do cleaning and maintenance for the bar a few years before it burned down.
The bar mimicked an old-fashioned saloon, with wood floors and furnishings and high ceilings. Hansen recalled that Harley Davidson memorabilia, antique saddles and animal taxidermy lined the walls.
"It was just very different and I think that's why people came to visit. They were always surprised at everything to look at," she said.
One year earlier, another local landmark, a grain elevator owned by Healthy Herds feed mill, was also destroyed in a fire. So when the Monkey Top Saloon burned down, residents were left confused.
"People were just sad and shocked and wondering what was going to happen next, if they were going to rebuild or not rebuild," Hansen said.