Timeline of Edmonton history

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The timeline of Edmonton history is a chronology of significant events in the history of Edmonton, Alberta.

Pre-European period

  • Indigenous peoples roamed Alberta for thousands of years, or even tens of thousands of years. The rim of the river valley and its ravines and hilltops in Edmonton are known to have been well-used as campgrounds and look-out points during this time. Rabbit Hill, today's Mary Lobay Park, Mount Pleasant Cemetery and Huntington Heights (near Whitemud Drive west of Calgary Trail) are known to be sites of human activity for millennia.[citation needed]

18th century

19th century

  • 1812 – Fort Edmonton (Hudson's Bay Company) moved to Rossdale, never again to move out of today's Edmonton.[3]
  • 1830 – Fort Edmonton moved up the hill, to near today's legislative building.
  • 1870 – Fort Edmonton becomes part of Canada and of the North-West Territories
  • 1871 – The first prominent buildings outside the walls of Fort Edmonton, a Methodist church mission building and manse, built by George McDougall and his family. They added mix to the existing log cabins of gold prospectors and frontier farmers and hunters, Indigenous, European and Métis, who lived in the bush where City of Edmonton sits today.
  • 1876 – Treaty 6 is signed, and title to the Fort Edmonton region is ceded to the Crown.
  • 1879 – Edmonton's first local exhibition.
  • 1880 – Edmonton Bulletin published. Frank Oliver, publisher
  • 1882 – Dominion Land Survey done in Edmonton area. incorporated existing river lots along river and helped firm up local land ownership.
  • 1886 – Edmonton's coldest temperature is recorded as −49.4 °C (−56.9 °F) January 19.[4]
  • 1891 – Community of South Edmonton (Strathcona) established south of the river upon opening of the Calgary and Edmonton Railway.(Became a town in 1899.)[5]
  • 1892
    • Second McDougall Church was built at site of first church.
    • Edmonton incorporated as a town with a population of 700.[6]
  • 1897 – Edmonton was a starting point for people making the trek overland to the Klondike Gold Rush. Nearby South Edmonton (Strathcona) was the northernmost railway point on the western Prairies.

20th century

  • 1900 – Low Level Bridge completed.
  • 1903
    • Edmonton Journal founded.
    • Methodist Church Board founds Alberta College
    • Edmonton, Yukon and Pacific Railway crossed Low Level Bridge to connect Edmonton by rail to Strathcona and thence to the outside world.
  • 1904 –
  • 1905
    • Edmonton became the capital of Alberta, as Alberta became a province in Confederation.
    • Canadian Northern Railway (CNoR) arrived in Edmonton, accelerating growth. This was first transcontinental line to enter Edmonton.
  • 1907-13 – real estate and construction boom. With amalgamation of Cities of Strathcona and Edmonton, the population of Edmonton grew to 72,500.[6]
  • 1907 – Six miners die in a fire at the Strathcona Coal Company, the worst industrial accident Edmonton has suffered
  • 1908
  • 1909
  • 1910 – Third McDougall Church completed, dedicated in the honour of George McDougall.
  • 1911 – Connaught Armoury built.
  • 1912
  • 1913
    • Alberta Legislature Building completed.
    • High Level Bridge opened. It carried a CPR rail-line as well as private vehicles (both horse-drawn and gas-fueled) and pedestrians.
    • Robertson-Wesley United Church completed.
    • Edmonton economy collapses. Land in the Hudson Bay Co reserve was put on the market and sold, with the money raised by the sales going to HBC headquarters out of the province. British investment dried up as Europe invested in military preparation for the coming war. This all helped cause real estate prices to drop. With the start of World War I, the city's population declined, going from 72,000 in 1914 to under 54,000 in only two years, people leaving to eke out existence on farms, or off to war, or to other centres.[6]
File:Hotel-Macdonald-Edmonton-Alberta-1A.jpg
The Hotel Macdonald in downtown Edmonton

21st century

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See also

References

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  3. Edmonton House Journal 1806-1821, Nov. 6, 1812
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  7. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Trunk_Pacific_Railway
  8. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arlington_Apartments_(Edmonton)
  9. Edmonton Bulletin, April 8, 1914, p. 5
  10. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1922_in_Canadian_football
  11. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmonton_Elks
  12. Rek, Municipal Elections in Edmonton
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  22. Nine dead in Edmonton shooting, Irish Times, 2014.
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