The documentary Beyond the Steel, filmed over four years, records the relocation of an industrial town in northern Manitoba.[1][2] The film was produced and directed by Frank Holmes, a Manitoban filmmaker. From 1950 to 1953 the town of Sherridon, Manitoba was relocated to Lynn Lake, Manitoba.

The film is preserved in the Manitoba Legislature's official library.[3]

References

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  1. ^ "Memorable Manitobans: Francis Joseph Sloan "Frank" Holmes (1908-1990)". Government of Manitoba. Retrieved 2017-01-15. Among his films were Beyond the Steel (1953), an account of the move of the town of Sherridon to Lynn Lake between 1950 and 1953, and Each Year They Come (1958), a story about waterfowl conservation made for Ducks Unlimited.
  2. ^ "Beyond the Steel & Pushing Back the Frontier". Retrieved 2017-01-15. The hard copies of the two videos had been handed down from the Eldon L. Brown family to Peter Goodwin, Peter handed the films to Del Hildebrandt to be put into the Lynn Lake Museum. Due to break-ins into the museum at the time, and the poor condition the films were in, it was necessary to donate the hard copies to the Archives of Manitoba where the films are stored at controlled temperatures.
  3. ^ "Beyond the steel [videorecording] / Land of Little Sticks Boreal Harvesters Association". Government of Manitoba Legislative Library. Retrieved 2017-01-15. The three recordings on this DVD cover the move from Sherridon to Lynn Lake by freight haul, the Lynn Lake Mines, Leaf Rapids and Fort Saskatchewan.