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Two-storey outhouse at the Bradwell Hotel

After several sad stories about hotels on the corners of Railway and Main, it is time for something a little more lighthearted. In 1907, Ben Cook built the hotel in Bradwel, complete with a two-storey outhouse.

After several sad stories about hotels on the corners of Railway and Main, it is time for something a little more lighthearted.

In 1907, Ben Cook built the hotel in Bradwel, complete with a two-storey outhouse. The four-holer – one side for men, one for women – was attached to the building by a catwalk. Cook likely built this unusual structure to spare his wife, and his hotel guests who occupied the rooms on the second floor, the inconvenience and possible embarrassment of going downstairs and walking through the saloon. The male patrons of the bar used the lower level of the two-storey outhouse.

Contrary to jokes about two-storey outhouses, the user of the lower level had nothing to fear if the upper level was in use at the same time. The upstairs facilities were offset from the ones below, situated a little further back so that the waste fell behind a false wall on the first floor.

This unique structure proved popular with more than just the patrons of the Bradwell Hotel. For example, Sig Olson owned the general store next to the hotel. This store did not have an outhouse, so the clerks and others used Ben Cook’s two-storey facility. According to Bradwell’s local history book, Ben was not happy about this arrangement. He said too many users would fill up the pits under the outhouse at a faster rate.

“One day, young Dean Cook [Ben’s son] and a friend were playing in the men’s side, when a clerk came into the ladies’ side and the young boys made a noise as they were peeking,” Bill Martyn recalls in the town’s history book. “The female panicked, ran out with clothes in disarray hollering and trying to arrange them. I understand it was rather funny for the onlookers.”

It wasn’t long before Sig Olson built an outhouse behind his store.

The Bradwell Hotel’s remarkable outhouse was torn down around 1950 by Wendelyn Heisler. He and his wife Theresa owned the hotel from 1948 until 1956. Their son Arnie observes in the Bradwell book that his father destroyed some history in the process of demolishing the two-storey outhouse. It might have become a rather peculiar tourist attraction.

Here’s a little background about Ben Cook. He was born in Ontario in 1861, married Sarah Slack in 1897, and settled in Bradwell in 1906. They had an adopted son, Wilbur. In 1918, Sarah was called to the home of her brother, John Slack in Vanguard, to assist with the care of his family who were ill with the Spanish Flu. Despite her efforts, John and three of his children died. Sarah returned to Bradwell where she became ill, passing away in 1919. Two years later, Ben married Beatrice Slack, John’s widow. She and her two surviving children Doris and Harry came to live in Bradwell. In 1921, a son, Dean, was born to Ben and Beatrice. Dean was killed in a plane crash near Vanscoy in 1942 while training as a pilot for the Second World War. Ben Cook died in 1948.