Fort Calgary
We are very fortunate to enjoy a close working relationship
with our partners at Fort Calgary.
The confluence of the Bow and Elbow Rivers has been a historical and cultural gathering place from the first Indigenous people thousands of years ago to the arrival of the North-West Mounted Police in 1875.
Origins
In the summer of 1874, 150 men of the North-West Mounted Police marched west across the prairie from Dufferin, Manitoba to establish a series of forts. Part of the Force established Fort Macleod to the south and spent their first winter in a harsh and unfamiliar environment, aided by the Blackfoot. The following year they built Fort Calgary.
The NWMP, now called the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), came as part of a larger national policy to establish Canadian sovereignty and bring Canadian law and order to the west, to stamp out the whiskey trade, and to prepare the way for the treaties that would open the land for settlement.
Treaty 7 + The Railway
In 1877, the government signed Treaty 7 with the Blackfoot Nations of the Siksika, Kainai, and Piikani, and with the Stoney Nakoda and Tsuut’ina Nations. This Treaty covers most of southern Alberta and is still in effect today.
Between 1875 and 1914, the Fort grew into Calgary Barracks and became the centre of a flourishing community. Fort Calgary was a police administration centre, a hospital, a refuge, a social centre, and a focal point for settlers, ranchers and business.
In 1914, Fort Calgary was sold to the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway who later sold the site to the Canadian National Railway. For the next 61 years, Calgary’s origins were hidden under a railway yard and storage area. In 1925, Fort Calgary was declared a National Historic Site.
In 1974, thanks largely to the efforts of Alderman John Ayer, The City of Calgary bought the site and returned the city’s birthplace to the public domain. The Interpretive Center opened in 1978.
New Museum Project
In 2006, Fort Calgary launched a three-phase project to revitalize and redevelop the site to broaden and deepen the story told here.
In Phase I, the Deane House was rehabilitated and the Hunt House was restored. The Métis Cabin was restored and returned to its original location and upgrades to the park on the east side of the Elbow River were completed.
In Phase II, artist Jill Anholt completed the interpretive art piece, Markings, to symbolize the original fort building.
Phase III is now underway. This phase, called the New Museum Project, is a complete reconstruction of the current museum and partial renovation of the 1888 Barracks. It is part of a larger revisioning being undertaken by Fort Calgary in order to evolve as an organization, and commit to sharing the complicated histories of this region.