Calgary - Geography.
Publié le 03/05/2013
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and other services to new suburbs is the greatest difficulty.
VII HISTORY
When European explorers first entered southern Alberta in the 1700s, it was chiefly the domain of the indigenous Blackfoot confederacy.
The Blackfoot lived by huntingbison (often called buffalo) and other large animals, as their ancestors had done for perhaps 10,000 years.
The evidence of this plains region way of life survives atnumerous archaeological sites, such as the nearby Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, now a World Heritage Site.
In 1873, alarmed by the activities of a few Americans who were trading whiskey and guns to the Blackfoot in exchange for bison robes, the Canadian governmentcreated the North-West Mounted Police—now the Royal Canadian Mounted Police—to bring law and order to the plains.
One of the police forts, built at the mouth of theElbow River in 1875, was Fort Calgary.
The fort’s commander, Colonel James F.
Macleod, named the fort after a place in Scotland.
A community soon grew up around it.
Then, in 1883, the main line of the Canadian Pacific Railway arrived, opening southern Alberta to white settlement.
The first bigindustry was cattle ranching on the open range.
After 1900, when the main wave of European immigrants arrived, grain farming became more important.
A vast areawas irrigated with water from the Bow River.
By the time the first Calgary Stampede was held in 1912, the heyday of the cowboy was over.
Calgary grew rapidly until 1914, but the next 30 years brought war, depression, and generally little change.
The most significant event, although it did not have muchimpact at the time, was the 1914 discovery of oil just south of the city.
The field was quite small, but it led oil companies to establish offices in Calgary.
The Great Depression—the economic hard times of the 1930s—brought great hardship to Alberta and generated interest in new political ideas, such as redistribution ofincome.
Calgary was the birthplace of the Social Credit Party, founded by school principal and lay preacher William Aberhart.
The party favored the radical economicdoctrines of British monetary reformer Clifford H.
Douglas, who proposed to pay everyone a “national dividend” (to be issued in the form of “social credit” certificates) toincrease the spending power of consumers.
In 1935 the party was swept into office, and Aberhart became premier.
Although the federal courts prevented the partyfrom testing its monetary ideas, such as a plan to pay a $25 yearly dividend to everyone in the province, it governed the province until 1971.
In the late 1940s, large oil fields were discovered around Edmonton, starting with Leduc in 1947.
Calgary companies developed these wells.
After the Leduc oil field wasopened, thousands of new residents poured into Calgary, many of them from Oklahoma, Texas, and other oil-producing areas of the United States.
Oil money helpedfinance a renewal of the city, and billions of dollars’ worth of construction went up in the downtown during the 1970s and 1980s.
In 1988 Calgary became the firstCanadian city to host the Olympic Winter Games.
Contributed By:Peter J.
SmithMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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