Heritage Community Foundation Presents
Alberta Online Encyclopedia

Alberta In The Early Days Logo
Alberta: How the West was Young

Listen to all the Heritage Trails:

1. Archaeology and Pre-Contact

To listen to the Heritage Trails, you need the RealPlayer, available free from RealNetworks: download the RealPlayer from Real Networks!

2. First Nations and Métis

To listen to the Heritage Trails, you need the RealPlayer, available free from RealNetworks: download the RealPlayer from Real Networks!

First Nations in Alberta

  • 28 - The Iroquois in Alberta.
    Summary: During the late 1780s the fur trading companies began to recruit from Iroquois communities around Montreal - in particular Kahnewahke. Listen to hear how the Iroquois came to Alberta.
  • 324 - The Métis, Part One.
    Summary: Who were the Métis? Historian David Leonard gives a brief history.
  • 325 - The Métis, Part Two.
    Summary: More Métis moved to Alberta after the Métis Rebellion of 1870. Louis Riel once again challenges the dilution of the culture of the west.

Place Names in Alberta

Trade and Early Contact

Treaties in Alberta

3. Fur Trade and Mission History

To listen to the Heritage Trails, you need the RealPlayer, available free from RealNetworks: download the RealPlayer from Real Networks!

Traders:

Missionaries:

Explorers:

  • 156 - Early Mountaineers.
    Summary: Mountaineering was a sport for the idle and adventurous - and the person who named a number of features in the Lake Louise area was only a teen.
  • 380 - Akka Makkoye, Indian Mapmaker: Part Two.
    Summary: The person to map the territory from the Red Deer River south to Wyoming and west from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean was Akka Makkoye, or Many Swans.

Traders at Work:

Traders at Rest:

Mission:

Lakes and Rivers:

Mountains:

  • 171 - Akamina Pass and South Kootenay Pass.
    Summary: Akamina Pass's name is descriptive of the area's appearance. What does "akamina" mean?
  • 172 - Athabasca Pass.
    Summary: This amazing pass takes its name from the nearby natural features in the Rocky Mountains between Alberta and British Columbia.
  • 176 - Healy Pass.
    Summary: This pass was named after a colourful adventurer and explorer. Find out more about him.
  • 177 - Kicking Horse Pass.
    Summary: This pass was named after an incident on one of the side trips taken by a member of the Palliser expedition.

Historic Trails:

[previous] [next] [back to top]

Albertasource.ca | Contact Us | Partnerships
            For more on the Aboriginal history of Alberta, visit Peel’s Prairie Provinces.