Timeline of Calgary history
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2023) |
This is a timeline of the history of Calgary, Alberta, Canada..
18th century
edit- 1787 – Cartographer David Thompson spent the winter with a band of Peigan encamped along the Bow River. He was the first recorded European to visit the area.
19th century
edit- 1870 – The future site of Calgary becomes part of Canada and of the North-West Territories.
- 1873 – John Glenn was the first documented European settler in the Calgary area.[1]
- 1875 – Originally named Fort Brisebois, after NWMP officer Éphrem-A. Brisebois, it was renamed Fort Calgary by Colonel James Macleod.
- 1877 – Treaty 7 is signed, and title to the Fort Calgary area is ceded to the Crown.
- 1882 - First sawmill on the Bow River.[2]
- 1883 – The Canadian Pacific Railway reached the area and a rail station was constructed.
- 1884 – Calgary was officially incorporated as a town and elected its first mayor, George Murdoch.
- 1885 – Calgary Police Service established.
- 1886 – The Calgary Fire of 1886.
- 1888 – Anglican Diocese of Calgary established.
- 1891 – Calgary and Edmonton Railway opened.
- 1894 – It was incorporated as "The City of Calgary" in what was then the North-West Territories.[3]
- 1900 – Downtown East Village, Calgary established.
20th century
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2023) |
- 1910 – Parkdale is annexed to the City of Calgary.[4]: 77
- 1910 - the 103rd Calgary Rifles is created.
- 1912 – The Calgary Stampede is held for the first time.
- 1915–18 – The Mewata Armouries are constructed.
- 1919 - The Victory Stampede was Calgary's second rodeo, honoring the end of the Great War.
- 1920 - The 103rd Rifles is reorganized as The Calgary Regiment.
- 1923 – The Calgary Stampede held for the third time and annually since then.
- 1924 - The Calgary Highlanders split from the Calgary Regiment to become its own regiment.
- 1932–33 – The Glenmore Dam is constructed.
- 1945 - The current Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League begin play.
- 1947 – Stampede Wrestling established.
- 1948 - The Calgary Regiment renamed The King's Own Calgary Regiment
- 1967 – Construction of the Husky Tower started. Opened to the public on June 30, 1968.
- 1970 – First +15 enclosed pedestrian walkway constructed downtown.
- 1980 - The NHL's Calgary Flames begin play after relocating from Atlanta.
- 1984 – Suncor Energy Centre completed construction and becomes the new tallest building in Calgary.
- 1988 – Calgary hosts the 1988 Winter Olympics.
- 1989 – Bankers Hall-East completed construction.
- 1989 – The Flames win the Stanley Cup, the only time a visiting team has won the Stanley Cup in Montreal.
- 1992 – Stephen Avenue is designated as a National Historic Site of Canada.
- 1996 – Canadian Pacific Railway moves its head office from Montreal to Calgary.
- 1997 – Calgary Declaration
- 1999 – Hub Oil explosion
- 2000 – Bankers Hall-West is completed 11 years after its twin.
21st century
edit- 2002 – J26 G8 Protests
- 2007 – City surpasses 1,000,000 residents.
- 2010 – After 26 years, the Suncor Energy Centre is surpassed by The Bow as tallest building in Calgary.
- 2011 – Eighth Avenue Place I completed construction.
- 2013 – Widespread flooding across southern Alberta forces the evacuation of 75,000 Calgary residents.
- 2018 – Brookfield Place East is completed and becomes the new tallest building in Calgary.
List of riots and civil unrest in Calgary
editThe following is a timeline of riots and civil unrest in Calgary, Alberta.[5] Since its incorporation as a town in 1884, like other cities, Calgary has had to deal with a variety of violence. Calgary has been credited with maintaining relative civility during duress.[6] The Great Depression in Canada has received particular attention from sociologists and historians, including Thomas Thorner and Neil Watson who wrote, "There is little question that Calgary experienced its share of civil strife during the Depression. Battles between police and the single unemployed men, full scale riots and threats to blow up public buildings appear to have been almost annual events."[7] According to Stephen Graham, a Professor of Human Geography at Durham University, recent events have seen the City of Calgary change their tactics towards civil unrest activities such as protests.[8]
Events
editDate | Issue | Event |
---|---|---|
August 2, 1892 | Racial tension | After the Chinese community was blamed for a smallpox outbreak, a race riot ensued. The event started when city authorities burned a laundry where a Chinese worker contracted the disease, and its occupants were quarantined. Nine Chinese contracted the disease, and three died. Alleging the spread was caused by unhygienic living conditions, a mob of over 300 men smashed doors and windows of all the Chinese laundries, destroyed and looted property, and assaulted Chinese residents. As the riot ended, police arrived. Many in the Chinese community sought refuge at the North-West Mounted Police barracks or in the homes of clergymen. The NWMP patrolled Calgary continuously for the next 3 weeks to protect Chinese Calgarians.[9][10][11][12] |
July 16, 1902 | Labour unrest | The Calgary Trades and Labour Council hosts a demonstration with several thousand participants in support of local labour.[13] |
February 10, 1916 | Ethnic and labour tension | An anti-German riot destroys the Riverside Hotel at 4 Street S.E. and Boulevard Avenue. It reportedly started because the owner was German.[14] During the same month 500 servicemen and civilians destroy Nagel's White Lunch Cafe after the owner reportedly hired an Austrian immigrant instead of a returning soldier.[15] |
October 11, 1916 | Military unrest | Soldiers from the 218th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force, or CEF, overcame the local police. "The city virtually is in the hands of the soldier mob"[16][17][18][19] Morris "Two Gun" Cohen was implicated as a leader of the events during a series of trials held in the city; however, he was acquitted after successfully defending himself in court.[20][21] |
January 1918 | Labour unrest | Calgary freight handlers go on strike in defiance of a federal ban on strikes. Civic workers, street railway workers and teamsters walked out in sympathy. Five strike leaders were arrested, paving the way towards the creation of the One Big Union.[22] |
February 8, 1917 | Military unrest | Soldiers from the former 218th Battalion of the CEF having been relocated from Calgary to Edmonton, rioted on 101 Street after being ordered to depart immediately for Europe. They attacked 14 stores, restaurants and cafes throughout the city.[23] |
May 1919 | Labour unrest | After the formation of the One Big Union in Calgary in March 1919, the Calgary General Strike was held in solidarity with the Winnipeg General Strike. There was almost a full stoppage of local government, industrial and commercial activities in the city after thousands of workers stopped work for more than a month.[24] |
January 1926 | Unemployment | More than 40 protesters with the Central Council of the Unemployed were arrested by police after ordering meals and refusing to pay in protest of the city's refusal to provide relief for the homeless and jobless. |
December 1926 | Unemployment | 300 protesters with the Central Council of the Unemployed marched on City Hall for "relief" in the form of places to sleep, food to eat and transportation to work sites.[25] |
June 30, 1931 | Unemployment | After several days of "ominous silence" among Calgary's unemployed, a meeting was held between the National Unemployed Workers Association and members of the Calgary City Council. When the crowd gathered outside, it was told to disperse by the Calgary Police. They re-assembled in a nearby vacant lot called "Red Square." After a series of speeches, the crowd was told to disperse, and when they did not, police took away a popular speaker from the platform. A riot ensued, which a local newspaper referred to saying, "It appears to have come to a showdown; the authority of the city is challenged which must be met decisively."[26] |
June 10, 1935 | Unemployment | Hundreds of protesters participating in the On-to-Ottawa Trek took hostages at the Calgary Relief Office for several hours before continuing out of the city. Prime Minister R.B. Bennett decided not to take action against the trekkers in Calgary. Hundreds more unemployed, some from Edmonton, joined the Trek as it left the city. The Trek was brutally disbanded in Regina several weeks later.[27] |
1940 | Racial tension | A group of 300 white soldiers rioted in Calgary's "Harlemtown" near the railway tracks east of downtown. After they invaded the home of a black band leader, military police intervened and were credited with ending the incident.[28][29][30][31] |
November 28, 1974 | Racial tension | The Calgary Urban Treaty Indian Alliance held a demonstration over social service funding in which dozens of men, women and children occupied the Indian Affairs office in the city. Government officials labeled the participants "terrorists". The local papers charged the protesters with "public mischief" and civil infractions. While charges were not lodged against demonstrators, several reported increased government discrimination against them afterward.[32] |
December 2, 1983 | Sporting disruption | A riot broke out during a Stampede Wrestling match at the Victoria Pavilion. Speaking of the events, announcer Ed Whalen remarked, "We're starting to scare the patrons with this violence outside the ring, and I will not be associated with it anymore."[33] The event led to Stampede Wrestling being banned from Calgary for six months by the city's wrestling and boxing commission, and within a year the operation was sold to the World Wrestling Federation.[34] |
October 25, 1993 | Education | 2,000 students walkout of Calgary's schools to protest cuts to education, causing public disruption and raising awareness about the situation in education funding.[35] |
June 11–15, 2000 | Anti-globalization | 2,000 protesters participated in a "carnivalesque" atmosphere at the World Petroleum Congress while 1,500 police from a number of jurisdictions were involved in counter-protest operations. Other measures included, "police 'spotters' positioned on top of downtown office towers while helicopters busily circled overhead."[36] |
June 25–27, 2002 | Anti-globalization | About 4000-5000 demonstrators participate in a variety of events throughout Calgary in protest of the Group of Eight, or G8, meeting in Kananaskis, Alberta.[37][38] |
March 21, 2008 | Racial tension | The Aryan Guard staged a demonstration in downtown Calgary on Good Friday and United Nations International Day for the Elimination of Racism.[39][40][41] More than 40[42] supporters of the Aryan Guard faced a crowd of more than 200 anti-racist protesters, including anarchists, communists and union leaders, who prevented the Guard from reaching their planned meeting place at the Mewata Armouries. Police then formed a human barrier between the two groups and blocked the movement of the counter-protesters while escorting the Aryan Guard down Stephen Avenue and up the steps of City Hall, where they waved flags proclaiming "White Pride Worldwide".[43] Members of the Aryan Guard also taunted local anti-racism activists whose home was fire bombed on February 12, 2008, while they and their four children were inside.[44] |
List of localities annexed
editThrough its various annexations, the following localities are now in Calgary.[45]
- Academy
- Albert Park
- Altadore
- Barlow
- Barlow Junction
- Beddington
- Bel-Aire
- Bowness
- Brentwood
- Brickburn
- Bridgeland
- Britannia
- Calgary International Airport
- Cambrian Heights
- Camp Sarcee
- Capitol Hill
- Charleswood
- Collingwood
- Eagle Ridge
- Forest Lawn
- Glamorgan
- Glenbrook
- Glengarry
- Haysboro
- Heritage Woods Subdivision
- Hillhurst
- Hubalta
- Inglewood
- Keith
- Killarney
- Kingsland
- Lincoln Park
- Lynnwood
- Manchester
- Midnapore
- Montgomery
- Mount Royal
- Mount View
- North Haven
- Ogden
- Parkdale
- Princes Island
- Renfrew
- Rideau Park
- Rosscarrock
- Roxboro
- Sarcee Junction
- Shepard
- Silver Springs
- Simons Valley
- Southwood
- Spruce Cliff
- Spruce Meadows
- St. Andrews Heights
- St. Georges Heights
- St. George's Island
- St. Patrick's Island
- Stanley Park
- Sunalta
- Thorncliffe
- Turner
- Tuxedo Park
- Windsor Park
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Alberta Tourism, Parks, Recreation and Culture. "The Glenns". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-08-24.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Fitzgerald, J.G. (1885). Business directory of Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Calgary, Alberta: Calgary Herald Printing & Publishing Co.
- ^ City of Calgary. "Historical Information". Retrieved 2007-09-23.
- ^ "Parkdale Community Heritage Inventory". Land Use Planning and Policy Planning, Development and Assessment. December 2008. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
- ^ Jamieson, S. "Some reflections on violence and the law in industrial relations," in Bercuson, D.J. and Knafla, L.A. (1979) Law and society in Canada in historical perspective. University of Calgary. See pp. 141, 145 and 150 for multiple analyses of the riots and civil unrest in Calgary.
- ^ Torrance, J.M.C. (1986) Public Violence in Canada, 1867-1982. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. p 135.
- ^ Thorner, T. and Watson, N. (1981) "Patterns of Prairie Crime: Calgary, 1875-1939," in Crime and Criminal Justice in Europe and Canada. Knafla, L.A. (ed.) Waterloo, Ontario: Wilfried Laurier University Press, p. 231.
- ^ Graham, S. (2004) Cities, War, and Terrorism: Towards an Urban Geopolitics. Blackwell Publishing. p 223.
- ^ "Calgary Timeline" Archived 2007-08-20 at the Wayback Machine, Calgary Public Library. Retrieved 4/22/08.
- ^ "Asian North American History Project." Archived 2007-07-30 at the Wayback Machine ExplorASIAN. Retrieved 4/22/08.
- ^ "Calgary's Chinese community", University of Calgary. Retrieved 4/22/08.
- ^ Torrance, J.M.C. (1986) Public Violence in Canada, 1867-1982. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. p 31.
- ^ Bright, D. (1999) The Limits of Labour: Class Formation and the Labour Movement in Calgary. UBC Press. p 85.
- ^ "Glenbow library and archives", University of Alberta/Glenbow Museum. Retrieved 4/22/08.
- ^ Bright, D. (1999) p 139.
- ^ "Soldiers riot in Calgary", The New York Times. October 12, 1916. Retrieved 4/22/08.
- ^ Lackenbauer, P.W. (2007) "Soldiers Behaving Badly: CEF Soldier 'Rioting' in Canada during the First World War," in The Apathetic and the Defiant: Case Studies of Canadian Mutiny and Disobedience, 1812 to 1919, ed. Craig Leslie Mantle. Kingston: CDA Press/Dundurn. p 195-260.
- ^ Lackenbauer, P. W. (2005) "Partisan Politics, Civic Priorities, and the Urban Militia: Situating the Calgary Armoury, 1907-17", Urban History Review 33(2) p. 45-60.
- ^ Lackenbauer, P.W. (2001) "The Government is in No Way Responsible for the Wrong-Doing of its Soldiers:’ Disciplinary and Legal Dimensions of the Canadian Expeditionary Force Riots in Calgary." In Perspectives on War: Essays on Security, Society and the State. C. Bullock and J. Dowding (eds) Society for Military and Strategic Studies. p 75-91.
- ^ Levy, D.S. (2002) Two-Gun Cohen. Macmillan. p 82-95.
- ^ Drage, C. (1964) The Life and Times of General Two-Gun Cohen. Funk and Wagnals. p 61.
- ^ The Strike as Political Protest. Simon Fraser University. Retrieved 4/22/08.
- ^ Levy, D.S. (2002) Two-Gun Cohen. Macmillan. p 95.
- ^ "Calgary 1919: The Birth of the OBU and the General Strike - Eugene Plawiuk". Libcom.org. Retrieved 4/22/08.
- ^ Bright, D. (1999) p 187.
- ^ Knafla, L.A. (ed.) (1981) Crime and Criminal Justice in Europe and Canada, Waterloo, Ontario: Wilfried Laurier University Press. p 246.
- ^ Ross, J.I. (2004) Violence in Canada: Sociopolitical Perspectives, Transaction Publishers. p 82.
- ^ "Calgary Timeline" Archived 2007-08-20 at the Wayback Machine, Calgary Public Library. Retrieved 7/8/08.
- ^ Palmer, H., Palmer, T. J. and Palmer, T. (1985) Peoples of Alberta: Portraits of Cultural Diversity. Western Producer Prairie Books. p. 387.
- ^ (1963) "Color prejudice in Canada", Anthropological Journal of Canada. Anthropological Association of Canada, Guild of American Prehistorians. p 7.
- ^ Carter, S. (1997) Capturing Women: The Manipulation of Cultural Imagery in Canada's Prairie West, McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. p 197.
- ^ Treat, J. (2003) Around the Sacred Fire: Native Religious Activism in the Red Power Era, Macmillan. p 258.
- ^ McCoy, H. (2005) Pain and Passion: The History of Stampede Wrestling. CanWest Books. p 187.
- ^ Meltzer, D. (2004) Tributes II: Remembering More of the World's Greatest Professional Wrestlers. Sports Publishing LLC. pp 105-106.
- ^ Harrison, T., Kachur, J.L. (1999) Contested Classrooms: Education, Globalization, and Democracy in Alberta. p 127.
- ^ della Porta, D., Peterson, A. and Reiter, H. (2006) The Policing of Transnational Protest: An introduction, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p 83.
- ^ della Porta, D., Peterson, A. and Reiter, H. (2006) The Policing of Transnational Protest: An introduction. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p .
- ^ Marquis, S. "Thousands protest G8 in Calgary". Asheville Global Report, 2. June 2002. Retrieved 7/13/08.
- ^ Barr, MA. :Fight against racism is far from over", Red Deer Advocate. March 25, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-06-18.
- ^ Cariou, K. "Calgary Anti-racists challenge Neo-Nazi threats", People's Voice. March 16–31, 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
- ^ "International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination 21 March" Archived 2009-10-17 at the Wayback Machine, United Nations website. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
- ^ Komarnicki, J. "Anti-racists clash with Aryan Guard" Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Machine, Canada.com, Retrieved March 21, 2008.
- ^ Fernandez, P. "Skinhead rally causes clash", Calgary Sun. March 22, 2008. pg 3.
- ^ Fernandez, P. "Faces of hate unashamedly spew message", Calgary Sun. March 23, 2008. p 4.
- ^ "Economic Regions - SGC 2006 (4806016 - Calgary)". Statistics Canada. August 10, 2021. Retrieved September 21, 2021.