Showing posts with label local. Show all posts
Showing posts with label local. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 December 2016

Shop Local!


 You've heard it before: "Shop local!". But have you ever wondered why? Let's highlight the reasons why shopping locally is beneficial to our community.

  • It encourages entrepreneurship
  • It generates various jobs
  • It builds sustainable and vibrant neighbourhoods
  • It keeps dollars in the local economy
  • It supports locally made products
  • And last, but not least, it creates personal relationships with the business and the customer. 

As we continue to rebuild our community, we encourage you to consider making your holiday purchases from local vendors and get to know your fellow neighbours. 

As an extra incentive to shopping local, the Fort McMurray Chamber of Commerce is hosting their second annual Shop Local Holiday Passport Program for a chance to win 1 of 3 McMurray Money Prize packages. 


From now until December 10, you can collect a passport stamp for every $10 spent at a participating business. All it takes is 10 stamps to fill a passport, with a max of four entries per person. Once your passport is complete, drop it off at a participating store, or at the Business Innovation Centre (#105, 9912 Franklin Avenue) to be entered into the draw to win one of the following McMurray Money Prize packages: 

1st Place - $1000
2nd Place - $500
3rd Place - $250 

The prize money can then be spent at the participating local businesses. Start collecting your stamps today! Visit www.fortmcmurraychamber.ca to see the complete list of participating vendors. 

Happy shopping!

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

Congratulations to Local Dance Students!





Congratulations Alex Villemere, Shanda Chapdelaine, Shelby Oickle, Sophia Hassenstein, Alaina Noseworthy, Chase Evtushevski, and Maria Durnford!

On October 19th, auditions for the School of Alberta Ballet program were held at the Suncor Community Leisure Centre. Students from around the community came out to audition.These seven dancers were selected to attend the summer program to audition for the year round professional division.

The Alberta Ballet is one of Canada's premiere ballet companies. The successful applicants will go on to a one month summer dance intensive to audition for the full-time professional program. More information can be found here:

http://schoolofalbertaballet.com/professional-division/summer-school/senior-summer-school.html

Monday, 5 May 2014

Local Theatre Group Wins Provincial Award


Congratulations to Theatre; Just Because, winners of the Outstanding Production Award at the Alberta Drama Festival Association (ADFA) Provincial Festival in Grande Prairie this past weekend. 

In the words of Wayne Ayling, Manager of the Grande Prairie Live Theatre, " Their play was superb and deserving of this provincial award!"

Thank you for being such great ambassadors for the Wood Buffalo region. Well done!

For more information about the group, visit their Facebook page 

Monday, 2 December 2013

HIStory& HERitage: Christina Gordon

                           HIStory & HERitage

When Christina Gordon arrived in Fort McMurray, it was little more an isolated Hudson’s Bay Company post. The land was vast, the weather was unforgiving, and living off the land was hard work.

Christina Gordon was the first white woman to permanently settle in the area. She emigrated from Scotland sometime in the 1890s while her brother, William, had arrived in Canada about a decade earlier. Christina appears to have first settled in Athabasca Landing, which was a popular layover site for those adventurous souls en route to the Klondike Gold Rush.  Christina is listed in the 1901 census as living at Athabasca Landing, but William is not listed as living with her at this time. She identified herself as the head of the household and she owned a restaurant. 

By 1906, Christina and her brother were living in Fort McMurray. Together they operated a successful trading post. Four years later, William was appointed the first postmaster of the growing settlement of Fort McMurray. Whenever he was away trading with Aboriginals, it was Christina who was left to run both their store and the post office in her brother’s absence.

Christina was truly a woman before her time.  In an era when women were expected only to be wives and mothers, Christina never married nor had children. She was a businesswoman and she even owned land in her own right, a very uncommon occurrence for women in the early 20th century. Her land was located south of the Clearwater River near the area where Home Hardware and Keyano College now stand. It was there that Christina grew her large garden of fruits, vegetables and herbs and where she prepared food and medicines for the ill and the poor.

This photo shows Christina Gordon (right) standing in front of a vegetable stand. Photo courtesy of the Fort McMurray Historical Society


Christina Gordon was a resident of Fort McMurray until her death in 1949. She was highly respected by the community for her kindness and generosity, so much so that she was awarded one of the highest honours of the Aboriginal people: a Lob Stick. When Chief Paul Cree was dying, he requested that a Lob Stick, a tree that has all of its branches removed except for a tuft at the very top, be created in Christina’s name. Her Lob Stick is said to be somewhere along the banks of the Athabasca River with her name carved at the bottom in the Cree language.


Christina is buried, along with her brother William, in the Fort McMurray Cemetery on Biggs Avenue. Although she didn’t leave any children to carry on her legacy, Christina’s name lives on in the region she so loved.  Both Christina River and Christina Lake are named in her honour as well as the future Christina Gordon Public School in Timberlea, which is scheduled to open in 2015. 

To see Christina in the census returns for 1901, 1906 and 1911, check out the websites below. They are available for free online at  www.collectionscanada.gc.ca.

1906 Census http://data2.collectionscanada.ca/e/e049/e001214443.pdf ( In this census return Christina lists her year of arrival as 1894 while William arrived in 1884).

Friday, 1 November 2013

HIStory & HERitage: Hudson's Bay Company

                               HIStory & HERitage

As discussed in the last edition of HIStory & HERitage, Henry John Moberly established the first HBC post in Fort McMurray in 1870, along the banks of the Athabasca River. What wasn’t mentioned was that this trading post was essentially a failure.

It wasn’t Moberly’s fault, though. It was just bad timing. He established the post in 1870 and within 10 short years the fur trade was already in decline. The severe winters and frequent forest fires in the area were the main culprits as they deterred trappers from staying in the area. 

Since it was no longer profitable for the HBC to retain a trading post in Fort McMurray, it was shut down. The building itself, however, continued to house the local post office and served as a steamboat transfer point for those wanting to travel further north.  

By the 1920s, the population of Fort McMurray began to increase. As a result, so did the number of businesses and shops downtown.  Realizing it could now make a profit in the area the HBC built a store on Franklin Ave, west of current day Morrison Street. Its new focus was providing the needs for the growing population, such as food, clothing, firearms, trapping supplies and building materials. 

The Hudson's Bay Store on Franklin Ave., circa 1925.

The HBC also realized the economic potential of another community in the area: Waterways.

The HBC also set up shop across the street from the railroad station in 1926. Both stores fared extremely well. The Waterways store was supported by the rail and the growing community of Waterways, while the Fort McMurray store made a profit by supplying dry goods to local trappers and residents.

When Waterways and Fort McMurray amalgamated in 1947, it was the only northern community to boast two HBC stores.  Following more than a century of service, the HBC permanently closed its doors in Fort McMurray in 1958 and in Waterways in 1972.  

Thursday, 22 August 2013

Call to Local Artists- Photographers, Poets and Visual Artists


Photographers, Poets and Visual Artist

Open to residents of the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo  
      
   Deadline for Entry: September 15, 2013

(late submissions will be accepted until October but priority given to those who entered in a timely fashion)                                                                                                                                                                            

Concept in Brief:
Photographer is asked to take a picture of a “Character”, the photo is then given to a poet who creates a poem using the photo as inspiration, the poem is then given to a visual artist who creates artwork using the poem as inspiration but without seeing the original photograph—the photograph, the poem, and the visual art are then displayed together.

Invitation to photographers, poets and visual artists to submit samples of past work in consideration for an exhibition of between 18 and 30 different artists.  Must be able to meet deadlines and complete original project within 4-6 weeks.  Preference given to those who can be inspired from concrete subject matter.  Reference letters accepted but not required. 
Acceptance will be determined by a 3 judge panel.


For full details on the project and submission requirements please contact Mike at:
FMMartshow@gmail.com