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Nonie Mulcaster was born in Prince Albert in
1915. She owned her first horse when she was 13 years old, rode in the
Prince Albert Horse Show in 1935 and moved to Saskatoon in 1942.
She became the instructor of the Saskatoon
Pony Club in 1945 and one of the first good signs was getting the
assistance of Clifford Sifton to build a pavilion for the club on the
Exhibition grounds. She taught at the club every day until 1973 and it
was a true labor of love, with no salary, reasonable costs for the
owners and a strong co-operative spirit.
During a year in Europe, she rode at
Portlock Vale and Fulmer School and came back to Saskatoon, convinced
the club should use guest instructors. Notable horse people like Ann
Wood, Christilot Hanson, Pat Salt, Pat Manning, Waldermar Suenig,
Michael Herbert and Dietrich von Hopffgarten came to Saskatoon for
clinics.
She influenced
the careers of many riders. Valerie Johnson Matheson competed for Canada
at the Pan-American Games in 1967. Cathy Wedge competed for Canada at
the Pan-American Games in 1971, the Olympic Games in 1976 and was on the
Canadian team, which won gold at the 1978 world championships. Gina
Smith won a bronze medal at the 1988 Olympic Games and a gold medal at
the 1991 Pan-American Games. Many of
her pupils, some still in Saskatoon,
have carried on as instructors.
Nonie enrolled in an
Ernest Lindner art school at Emma Lake in 1932 because she wanted to
draw a horse. She didn't paint a horse until 15 years later. She has
become one of Canada's leading landscape painters. |