The Balmoral Hotel on Livingstone Street was a Yorkton landmark for almost 90 years. It was owned in the early 1900s by Harry Bronfman, whose family later owned the vast Seagram empire founded on the production and sale of liquor. Their booze business started primarily at the Balmoral during prohibition from 1915 to 1924, leading to stories about tunnels, Studebaker Whisky Six cars, a blending and bottling operation housed next to the Balmoral, and much more, as we talked about in the previous podcast.
In 1950, the Balmoral was sold to Emanuel and Marj Balacko and friends from Winnipeg, with the Balackos taking sole ownership a few years later. They owned and operated the hotel until their retirement in 1980, and lived in a suite in the north wing. Their son Ron, a toddler when they took over, grew up in the hotel. We talked to him about his parents, the hotel, and, of course, those tunnels.
Front Street in 1900, with the original Balmoral Hotel the last large building to the right of the photo.
Photos in the gallery above: City of Yorkton Archives.
Family photos and photos of hotel artifacts in the gallery below courtesy Ron Balacko.
Advertisement: www.jhcwc.org website of the Jewish Heritage Centre of Western Canada.
Marjorie Balacko in her wedding dress
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