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  • Edmonton’s South Asian Community

    Sam Singh

    Today, Edmonton is home to more than 60,000 people of South Asian heritage.  Speaking Punjabi, Hindi, Urdu, Gujarati, Bengali, Malayalam,…

  • The Curious Case of the 1908 Enoch Surrender

    Rob Houle

    At the time of Treaty No. 6, much change and settlement was taking place in the West, with displacement and…

  • Beverly Cenotaph

    Lawrence Herzog

    Less than two years after the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, the first…

  • Edmonton’s Dearly Departed Funeral Parlours

    Lawrence Herzog

    Funeral homes and crematoriums can be found scattered around Edmonton today, but through most of the 20th century, downtown was…

  • McKernan’s Lost Lake

    Katherine Koller

    Although the lake is no longer visible, its “ghost” is discernable on early maps and in the form of flooding…

  • François Lucier and the Fight Against Horse Thieves

    Lauren Markewicz

    Horses were a vital resource at Fort Edmonton and hundreds were kept by the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) in the…

  • Edmonton’s Merchant Prince: James Ramsey

    Lawrence Herzog

    Echoes of one of Edmonton’s earliest successful retail enterprises can be found in the new Kelly Ramsey Tower now being…

  • Amiskwaciwâskahikan Ostêsimâwasinahikan Nikotwâsik

    Rob Houle

    Throughout Indigenous territories, histories, cultures and stories, there exist a number of locations that hold a special significance, apart from…

  • Little Mosque in the Park

    Shaylene Flanagan and Carolee Pollock

    How did a mosque come to be in Fort Edmonton Park? Where did it come from? Why does it look…

  • Big Island: A Window into the Past

    Peggy Donnelly

    Big Island, a 70-acre island located 16 miles upstream from the city of Edmonton, is a lesser-known piece of Edmonton’s…

  • There Were No Safety Nets, Part 3: Edmonton’s Italian Community, 1949 to the Present

    Adriana A. Davies

    The end of the Second World War in 1945 signalled an economic boom for Canada with primary and secondary industries…

  • There Were No Safety Nets, Part 2: Edmonton’s Italian Community, 1921 to 1945

    Adriana A. Davies

    With the ending of the First World War, the Government of Canada amended the 1910 Immigration Act.[1] The 1919 amendment…