Fort Qu'Appelle Heritage Museum

Fort Qu'Appelle Heritage Museum Discover the history of the capital of Treaty 4 Territory. The museum in Fort Qu'Appelle opens on May 21.

The museum is housed in a building that is 150 years old this year, and one which was used during the Resistance as General Middleton's headquarters. It has been refurbished to resemble what it might have looked like in 1885, many of the artifacts were in the room when Middleton and his aide de camp used it. Hope you can visit this summer, and see the many other displays, including a copy of Treaty 4...

Through the magic    of A1 we can   show    you what the RNWMP barracks  that were  built  in Fort Qu'Appelle in 1874 lo...
03/06/2026

Through the magic of A1 we can show you what the RNWMP barracks that were built in Fort Qu'Appelle in 1874 looked like. The foot print of these buildings can still be seen on the golf c ourse.

Thanks to the power of A1 imaging, we can show you what the "Master's House" at  the Hudson Bay Trading Post  looked lik...
02/25/2026

Thanks to the power of A1 imaging, we can show you what the "Master's House" at the Hudson Bay Trading Post looked like before the present McDonald House was built. The small addition to the left in this rendering is today the oldest building still standing on the prairies, and opened in 1938 as the the original museum. It also served as General Middleton's headquarters during the Riel Resistance. The Master's House was on the site from 1872 until it was demolished in 1885 to make way for McDonald House.

The McDonald House is  open  by appointment to visitors... It's exceptionally beautiful this m orning.
02/13/2026

The McDonald House is open by appointment to visitors... It's exceptionally beautiful this m orning.

The integration of   the McDonald   House into the museum is coming along nicely..The Yard (Archie McDonald Park)  has b...
10/18/2025

The integration of the McDonald House into the museum is coming along nicely..The Yard (Archie McDonald Park) has been cleaned up, and several of the formal rooms are being "dressed".

10/16/2025

NEW* Upcoming MAS Community Chat: SaskCulture Museum Grant Program

Thursday October 16, 2025
12:00pm CST
Online via Zoom

No registration required.

The Museum Grant Program (MGP) provides operational funding to help foster strong, vibrant, community-based Saskatchewan museums that are valued and supported by society. This funding enables museums to focus on excellence in their programs and operations and to contribute to the understanding of the world and our place in it – our past, our present, and our future.

Whether you have applied for the museum grant program in the past or applying for the first time this workshop will give you some helpful tips and tricks to put your best foot forward.

This workshop will focus on the following.

Eligibility criteria
Using the online grant platform
Grant application overview
Grant application assessment consideration
Budget tips
Q & A

This is also an opportunity to meet the SaskCulture MGP team, Tomasin Playford, Outreach Consultant (she/her), Leo Keiser, Grants Administrator (they/them) and Abiodun Oyelami, Grants Administrator (he/him).

We've acquired    the   McDonald House   and have begun the integration  of the historic mansion into the Fort Qu'Appell...
10/04/2025

We've acquired the McDonald House and have begun the integration of the historic mansion into the Fort Qu'Appelle Heritage museum. The desk in the reception hall came from John Diefenbaker's law office, and Diefenbaker memorabilia, including an autographed Aislin political cartoon from the 1960s is now hanging next to his desk.

The Heritage Museum is in the process of acquiring the historic McDonald House. Some views of the interior, including th...
09/12/2025

The Heritage Museum is in the process of acquiring the historic McDonald House. Some views of the interior, including the reception salon, Archie McDonald's den and the parlour.

09/12/2025

The Fort Qu'Appelle town council has agreed to loan the Fort Qu'Appelle Heritage Museum $208,000 without interest for ten years so the museum can buy the McDonald House. Fundraising will continue, but the purchase of the house has been secured..

McDonald House: Heritage worth saving...By Jacob BamhourJul 20, 2025 | 9:00 AMThe Fort Qu’Appelle Heritage Museum has la...
07/22/2025

McDonald House: Heritage worth saving...
By Jacob Bamhour
Jul 20, 2025 | 9:00 AM
The Fort Qu’Appelle Heritage Museum has launched a $500,000 fundraising campaign to purchase the McDonald House, a 28-room Victorian mansion built in 1888 by a Hudson’s Bay Company official and deeply tied to the region’s early history.
“Imagine the most serene place you can think of — like a cabin in the woods or sitting by a lake. That’s what that house felt like,” said Michael Lee, whose family lived there for 44 years. “Everyone who came there felt at home.”
The house was built by Archibald McDonald, a chief factor of the Hudson’s Bay Company, and stands just steps from the museum’s main building. With ornate woodwork, pressed-tin ceilings, and crown molding featuring a full hunting scene, the property remains one of Saskatchewan’s architectural treasures.
“It was Mom and Dad’s vision to always share the property with people,” Lee said. “Having it go to the museum is the best thing that could happen. It embodies that spirit.”
The museum is aiming to raise $300,000 to buy the property and another $200,000 to establish a foundation that would maintain it without using public funds.
“Buying the house is one thing. Maintaining it is something else,” said museum curator Alan Hustak. “We are determined to not cost the taxpayers any money.”
The McDonald House sits on the original site of Fort Qu’Appelle’s Hudson’s Bay trading post. The museum had considered a $2 million expansion, but Hustak says acquiring the mansion is both more affordable and more historically meaningful.
Michael Lee’s family bought the home in 1973, when it was the only house for sale in town. At the time, it was split into two suites and in poor shape. Over time, the family restored the original layout and transformed it into a warm, personalized space.
“My dad was always renovating,” Lee said. “By the end, we had seven bedrooms, two kitchens, three bathrooms, a formal dining room, and two rec rooms. He even opened up the attic and built custom bedrooms for each of us kids.”
His brother’s room looked like a rocket ship. His sister Jeanette had a greenhouse built off her bedroom.
Yet, even with all the changes, much of the original detail was carefully preserved.
“The formal living and dining rooms are completely original,” Lee said. “My parents stripped the paint from the woodwork and brought back the original fir stain. The floors were sanded and redone. Most of what you see is still from 1888.”
The home also carries decades of family memories.
“My brother’s wedding was in that yard. My sister’s wedding was in that yard. My father passed away peacefully in that house. It holds every memory you can think of.”
The McDonald House often drew in curious passersby.
“People used to stop thinking it was part of the museum,” Lee said. “And my mom would just smile and invite them in for a tour.”
That community spirit is exactly what the museum hopes to preserve. Hustak says the home would provide space for exhibits, archival collections, and educational programs the current museum can’t accommodate.
“This mansion has been part of the fur trade and the whole development of the valley,” Hustak said. “The entire history of early Saskatchewan is tied up in that house.”
With a 90-day campaign window, the museum is accepting tax-deductible donations through the Town of Fort Qu’Appelle.
“This house has withstood the test of time more than any other I’ve seen,” Lee said. “I hope people go see it for themselves — and feel that same warmth we did.”

Address

198 Bay Avenue North
Fort Qu'Appelle, SK

Telephone

+13069992253

Website

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