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The Early Years (1800s-1949)
Alberta was incorporated as a
province in 1905, but even over a decade before that
event the game of ice hockey was played on frozen
ponds, rivers and outdoor rinks across the province.
The game was already a phenomenon in
Eastern Canada and while the spread of hockey was
slower in the major Alberta centres of Calgary and
Edmonton, it was establishing itself as the sport that
would eclipse cricket and soccer as the top pastime of
the region. As the West was opened and new immigrants
flooded into the province in search of land, the game was transformed from an
activity only for British-bred aristocrats into a true
sport for the people. Soon the game spread from the
cities to the rural regions; within just two decades of
the province’s birth, hockey had established itself as
the most popular game in Alberta, a game that would
survive drought, Depression and two World Wars.
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