You are looking for a Micro cache in a Preform container with some lapel pinsthat should be winter friendly at least for most of the year. I placed this cache when I was visiting my son who lives in the quaint community of Wabush.
The town of Wabush was officially opened by Newfoundland and Labrador premier Joseph R. Smallwood and John Sherwin - manager of Wabush Mines’ managing agent, Pickands Mather - in June 1965. The local improvement district of Wabush was incorporated by an order of council on April 11, 1967.
The town’s development began with the construction of a few streets: Whiteway (completed as far as No. 2 in 1962); Banting (half of current street); Dunfield (to No. 3 or 4); Carson (to No. 3 or 4); Anderson (to No. 3) and ; Bond. Bowater and Reid followed soon after. Grenfell did not exist past Bowater, though the water lines were laid for it quite early. Guy, Cormack, Gilbert, Cabot, Shea, and Baltimore did not come into existence until the late 1960's and early 1970's. These streets would eventually contain most of the towns prefab housing - houses brought in by train in two pieces, assembled in town and trucked to their streets to be placed on their basement foundations. The earliest houses in town were built from scratch in the town itself.
The population of Wabush grew so quickly that by 1963 there were already a housing shortage. The Sir Wilfred Grenfell Hotel was always full; people would sometimes have to sleep in the hotel lobby until a room opened up. Tom Gillespie ran a boarding house that handled some of the overflow, but eventually a trailer court was established as a “temporary” solution to the housing crisis. It still exists today, comprising the following streets: Legge, Cashin, Squires, Morris, Dunphy, and Walsh.
The first buildings in the town, apart from the bank and staff houses, included the cafeteria and the Sir Wilfred Grenfell Hotel (1962) followed by the recreation centre (1963), - the library and pool opened in 1964 and 1965 respectively - J.R. Smallwood Collegiate (1964) and the Wabush shopping plaza (1965). Bell Telephone had their office and staff house on Whiteway Drive. The Fire Hall on Whiteway housed both the fire department and the RCMP.