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Niverville Pop Festival

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Niverville is a town in the Eastman Region , Manitoba , Canada. The town lies between the northwest corner of the Rural Municipality of Hanover and the southeastern portion of the Rural Municipality of Ritchot . Niverville's population as of the 2021 census is 5,947, making it the largest town and 10th-largest community in Manitoba.

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13-650: The Niverville Pop Festival was a rock music festival held on an acreage southeast of Niverville, Manitoba on May 24, 1970. Held nine months after Woodstock , the festival is widely regarded as the first rock festival in Manitoba and one of the most important festivals in Manitoba rock history. Attracting a crowd of tens of thousands, the festival included acts such as Joey Gregorash , Brother (featuring Bill Wallace and Kurt Winter ), Burton Cummings , Sugar 'n' Spice , John Einarson 's Pig Iron Blues Band, The Fifth, Billy Graham Jazz Group and many others. The festival

26-512: A fitness and dance gym, a nine-hole golf course, and Hespeler Park. The Crow Wing Trail also runs through the town. A heritage wall documenting Niverville's history was opened on Main Street in 2021. A museum documenting local history, including a Red River Ox Cart, is located on the second floor of the CRRC. The town is governed by a mayor and council elected by the residents. The current mayor

39-624: A unique round structure was built in Niverville in 1879 by Hespeler. Originally within the Rural Municipality of Hanover , Niverville was incorporated as a village in 1969. In 1970, Niverville was host to the Niverville Pop Festival , the first rock festival in Manitoba. Niverville has expanded on multiple occasions through annexation of land from the Rural Municipality of Ritchot to the west and Hanover to

52-490: Is Myron Dyck. Niverville lies within the federal riding of Provencher ; the current MP for this riding is Ted Falk . At the provincial level, Niverville has been part of several different ridings as boundaries have changed over the years. Currently, Niverville is part of the Springfield-Ritchot electoral district, represented by Ron Schuler . Niverville improved its Water Treatment Plant in 2012, expanding

65-531: Is based on agriculture and construction as the town has become a bedroom community for Winnipeg. Employers include the Great GORP Project (Food Industry), Spectis Moulders (polyurethane architectural products), Maple Leaf Foods ( agribusiness ), William Dyck and Sons (hardware store and lumberyard), Wiens Furniture (furniture, appliance and bedding retailer) and Niverville Credit Union. Niverville host an annual Niverville Olde Tyme Country Fair, which

78-747: Is held the second weekend of June. Niverville's Community Resource and Recreation Centre (CRRC) is the community's main indoor recreation complex that houses an athletic fieldhouse, theatre, and an ice hockey arena that is home to the Niverville Nighthawks of the Manitoba Junior Hockey League and Niverville Clipper ice hockey teams. The town's other recreational facilities include the Niverville Centennial Arena, Niverville Curling Club, an outdoor tennis court located at Niverville Middle School,

91-518: The CPR Emerson rail line, between Provincial Road 200 and Provincial Trunk Highway 59 . In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada , Niverville had a population of 5,947 living in 1,971 of its 2,010 total private dwellings, a change of 29% from its 2016 population of 4,610. With a land area of 8.7 km (3.4 sq mi), it had a population density of 683.6/km (1,770.4/sq mi) in 2021. Niverville's economy

104-605: The Niverville Pop Festival saw heavy rain and large crowds, many of them hippies who came from Winnipeg. After a large thunderstorm struck, many concert-goers stripped naked and ran around in the rain and mud waiting for local Mennonite farmers to tow their cars back to the pavement of Highway 59. Niverville, Manitoba In 1874, after the establishment of the Mennonite East Reserve , William Hespeler , who had recruited Mennonites to

117-438: The area, saw the opportunity to develop a rail station to supply the new Mennonite settlements, at a location selected by railway tycoon Joseph Whitehead . Initially the town that grew up around the station was named Hespeler, but eventually became known by the name of the railway station, Niverville, after 18th-century explorer and fur trader Chevalier Joseph Boucher de Niverville . The first grain elevator in western Canada,

130-471: The east and north. It was incorporated as a town in 1993. Many inhabitants today are Mennonite or British, with a growing number of immigrants of other backgrounds. In recent years, Niverville has grown into a "bedroom community" of Winnipeg and is among the fastest growing towns in the province. Niverville lies in the Red River Valley . It is located at the crossing of Provincial Road 311 and

143-544: The reservoir to 1.2 megalitres. In June 2017, hot, dry weather caused higher water usage, and town notified residents to cut back on water usage because the reservoir could not be replenished quickly enough. A new well field opened in 2017 to prevent future water shortages. Niverville schools are part of the Hanover School Division . Niverville Elementary School (K-4), Niverville Middle School (5-8), and Niverville High School (9-12) provide education for

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156-660: The students of Niverville and surrounding area. Niverville High School (NHS) replaced the former Niverville Collegiate Institute (NCI) in 2019. Niverville Nighthawks The Niverville Nighthawks are a Canadian junior 'A' ice hockey team based in Niverville, Manitoba . The Nighthawks are members of the Manitoba Junior Hockey League , with 2022-23 being the team's inaugural season. Note: GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, Pts = Points This Canadian ice hockey team-related article

169-499: Was organized to raise money for the Lynne Derksen Oxygenator Fund. Lynne Derksen was a student at Canadian Mennonite Bible College who had fallen from a hayride, resulting in life-threatening injuries, and required the use of an oxygenator. The festival, which had no expenses, was organized by Kurt Winter, Vance Masters, and Harold Wiebe, and raised about eight thousand dollars for the fund. Like Woodstock,

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