Red Deer, Alberta, Canada

History | Neighbourhoods | Arts and culture | Alberta Sports Hall of Fame | Canyon Ski Resort | Peavey Mart Centrium | G.H. Dawe Community Centre | Greater Red Deer Visitor Centre | Recreation Centre | Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery | Waskasoo Park | Westerner Exposition Grounds | Sport | Transport | Health care | Water | Education | Media

🇨🇦 Red Deer is a city in central Alberta, Canada. It is located near the midpoint of the Calgary–Edmonton Corridor and is surrounded by Red Deer County. The city is located in aspen parkland, a region of rolling hills that is home to oil, grain, and cattle production. It is a centre for oil and agriculture distribution, and the surrounding region is a major centre for petrochemical production.

History The area was inhabited by First Nations including the Blackfoot, Plains Cree and Stoney before the arrival of European fur traders in the late eighteenth century. A First Nations trail ran from the Montana Territory across the Bow River near present-day Calgary and on to Fort Edmonton, later known as the Calgary and Edmonton Trail. The trail crossed the Red Deer River at a wide, stony shallows. The "Old Red Deer Crossing" is 7 km (4.3 mi) upstream from the present-day city.

Cree people called the river Waskasoo Seepee, which means "Elk River". European arrivals sometimes called North American elk "red deer", after the related Eurasian species, and later named the community after the river. The name for the modern city in Plains Cree is a calque of the English name (mihkwâpisimosos, literally "red type of deer"), while the name of the river itself is still wâwâskêsiw-sîpiy or "elk river".

First Nations on the north side of the river entered into Treaty 6 in 1876 and on the south side Treaty 7 in 1877. Farmers and ranchers began to settle on the fertile lands.

A trading post and stopping house were built at the Crossing in 1882. This became Fort Normandeau during the 1885 North-West Rebellion.

Leonard Gaetz One early settler Leonard Gaetz gave a half-share of 1,240 acres (5.0 km²) he had acquired to the Calgary and Edmonton Railway to develop a bridge over the river and a townsite. As a result, the Crossing was gradually abandoned and the first trains arrived in 1891.

Gaetz founded the Westerner showgrounds and annual "Westerner Days", akin to the Calgary Stampede.

1900 to 1929 Following World War I, Red Deer emerged as a small, quiet, but prosperous, prairie city.

Bird watcher and citizen scientist Elsie Cassels helped to establish the Gaetz Lakes bird sanctuary.

1930 to 1945 During Great Depression of the 1930s, Central Alberta was not hit by severe drought. The city was virtually debt-free and profited from its ownership of the local public utilities.

In World War II, a large army training camp was located where Cormack Armoury, the Memorial Centre and Lindsay Thurber High School are now. Two training airfields were built south of the city at Penhold and Bowden.

Post–Second World War Red Deer expanded rapidly following the major discovery of hydrocarbons in Alberta in the late 1940s. Red Deer became a centre for oil and gas and related industries, such as the Joffre Cogeneration Plant.

Government and administrative services include a hospital, a courthouse and a provincial building.

The railway moved to the outskirts and passenger train service ceased. The CPR bridge is now a walking trail.

Red Deer was Alberta's third largest city between 1981 and 2019, when Lethbridge briefly regained it. Red Deer has since regained 3rd place.

Neighbourhoods Red Deer includes the following neighbourhoods: • Anders Park • Anders Park East • Anders South • Aspen Ridge • Bower • Bower Ponds Recreation Area • Central Park • Chiles Industrial Park • Clearview Extension • Clearview Meadows • Clearview Ridge • College Park • Davenport • Deer Park Estates • Deer Park Village • Devonshire • Downtown • East Burnt Lake • Eastview • Eastview Estates • Edgar Industrial Park • Evergreen • Fairview • Gaetz Lakes Sanctuary • Garden Heights • Glendale • Glendale Park Estates • Golden West • Grandview • Heritage Ranch • Highland Green • Highland Green Estates • Inglewood • Ironstone • Johnstone Crossing • Johnstone Park • Kentwood East • Kentwood West • Kingsgate • Lancaster Green • Lancaster Meadows • Laredo • Lonsdale • Maskepetoon Park • McKenzie Trail Recreation Area • Michener Hill • Morrisroe • Morrisroe Extension • Mountview • Normandeau • Northlands Industrial Park • Oriole Park • Oriole Park West • Parkvale • Pines • Queens Business Park • Red Deer College • Red Deer Golf and Country Club • Riverlands • Riverside Heavy Industrial Park • Riverside Light Industrial Park • Riverside Meadows • Rosedale Estates • Rosedale Meadows • South Hill • Southbrook • Southpointe Junction • Sunnybrook • Sunnybrook Extension • Three Mile Bend Recreation Area • Timber Ridge • Timberlands • Timberstone • Vanier Woods • Vanier Woods East • Waskasoo • Waste Management Facility • West Burnt Lake • West Park • West QE2 • Westerner Park • Westlake • Woodlea

Red Deer's corporate limits also includes the localities of College Park, Forth, Labuma, and North Red Deer.

Arts and culture Red Deer hosts many arts and cultural groups, including: Central Alberta Theatre, Ignition Theatre, Red Deer Players Society, Bull Skit Comedy troupe, Central Music Festival, the Red Deer Symphony Orchestra, the Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery, the Red Deer Royals and other performing arts and fine arts organizations. The Red Deer Arts Council is a member-based Multi-disciplinary Arts Service Organization and registered charity that serves the local and area community of visual, literary and performing artists.

Alberta Sports Hall of Fame The Alberta Sports Hall of Fame is adjacent to the Queen Elizabeth II Highway (Highway 2) and the Greater Red Deer Visitor Centre.

Canyon Ski Resort The Canyon Ski Resort is located 7.5 km (4.7 mi) east of Red Deer.

Peavey Mart Centrium The Centrium hosts sports events, concerts, trade shows and conventions. It is the home of the WHL’s Red Deer Rebels.

G.H. Dawe Community Centre The 12,000 m² (130,000 sq ft) G.H. Dawe Community Centre is shared by G.H. Dawe Community School, the G.H. Dawe Branch of the Red Deer Public Library, G.H. Dawe Centre Recreation Facility and St. Patrick's School.

Greater Red Deer Visitor Centre The Greater Red Deer Visitor Centre is adjacent to the Queen Elizabeth II Highway (Highway 2) and the Alberta Sports Hall of Fame.

Recreation Centre The Recreation Centre, located downtown, has indoor and outdoor pools, steam rooms and hot tubs among other features.

Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery The Red Deer Museum has a permanent exhibit detailing the history of the region, and temporary exhibits that change every few months. It is also the venue of multiple educational programs for both adults and children.

Waskasoo Park Waskasoo Park meanders through Red Deer from its outskirts in the south-west, through the heart of the city, to its outskirts in the north-east along the Red Deer River. It includes over 80 km (50 miles) of multi-use trails for biking, rollerblading, horseback riding, snowshoeing, cross-country skiing and walking. The park is one of the reasons Red Deer is known as "Park City".

Westerner Exposition Grounds The Westerner Exposition Grounds hosts events such as Agricon and Westerner Days. Held in early July, Westerner Days includes a rodeo, pony chuck-wagon racing, a fair, exhibitions and other events.

Sport The Red Deer Rebels of the Western Hockey League play at the Peavey Mart Centrium. Red Deer hosted the 2022 Hlinka Gretzky Cup and co-hosted the 2018 Hlinka Gretzky Cup. Red Deer co-hosted the COVID-interrupted 2022 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, later completed in Edmonton, and the 1995 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. In 2018, Red Deer replaced Edmonton as host of the Canadian Finals Rodeo. The Rebels hosted the 2016 Memorial Cup.

Red Deer hosted the 2019 Canada Winter Games, leaving the Gary W. Harris Canada Games Centre at Red Deer Polytechnic and the Downtown Servus Arena as legacy facilities.

The city is the hometown to well-known sporting personalities. Olympic gold medal pairs figure skater Jamie Salé and silver medal swimmer Rebecca Smith are from Red Deer. Olympic silver medalist speed skater Jeremy Wotherspoon also spent most of his childhood in Red Deer after being born in Saskatchewan. Olympic bronze medal aerialist Deidra Dionne grew up in Red Deer. Olympic bronze medal alpine skier Jan Hudec first immigrated to Red Deer for his father to ski coach. NHL players include Ron Anderson, Blake Wesley, Glen Wesley, Trent Hunter, Chris Mason, Randy Moller, Brandon Sutter, Paul Postma, Kris Russell, Colton Sceviour, Matt Fraser and Mark Tinordi. Hockey Night in Canada personality and Olympic host Ron MacLean calls Red Deer home.

Transport The Queen Elizabeth II Highway, Alberta's busiest and most economically important, links the North-South Calgary-Edmonton Corridor, including Wetaskiwin and Camrose, with Red Deer.

The David Thompson Highway links Rocky Mountain House in the West Country with Stettler in East-Central Alberta.

Red Deer Regional Airport, in Penhold, serves mostly general aviation. It is undergoing a significant expansion.

Red Deer Transit provides local bus service throughout the city.

Health care Health care is provided at the Red Deer Regional Hospital.

Water Red Deer receives its drinking water supply from the Red Deer River which is treated and distributed throughout the city. One distinct feature of the water distribution system is the Horton Water Spheroid which, at the time of its construction in 1957, was the world's largest spheroid shaped reservoir. Water from the Red Deer water treatment plant is distributed to neighbouring communities including Red Deer County, Lacombe, Blackfalds and Ponoka as managed by the North Red Deer Regional Water Services Commission. Wastewater is collected and sent to the City of Red Deer wastewater treatment plant which treats the sewage with a combination of grit traps, a primary clarifier, biological nutrient removal bioreactors, secondary clarifiers, and UV disinfection. Solids generated from the treatment process are treated using dissolved air flotation, anaerobic digestion, and biosolids lagoons. Treated effluent is then discharged back into the Red Deer River downstream of the water treatment plant.

Education Red Deer Polytechnic (RDP), formerly Red Deer College, was founded in 1964 as Red Deer Junior College. RDP offers certificates, diplomas, advanced certificates, applied degrees, bachelor's degrees, academic upgrading and apprenticeship in over 75 different career and academic programs, including the creative and liberal arts, engineering, and trades.

Media You can get the local news from Red Deer Advocate and rdnewsNOW. Edmonton CTV and Global News also carry Red Deer news. The City of Red Deer also releases regular updates.

Edmonton, Alberta 
Edmonton, Alberta
Image: Adobe Stock Drew #368926520

Red Deer has a population of over 100,418 people. Red Deer also forms the centre of the wider Red Deer County which has a combined population of over 119,959 people.

To set up a UBI Lab for Red Deer see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

Antipodal to Red Deer is: 66.191,-52.269

Locations Near: Red Deer -113.809,52.2685

🇨🇦 Calgary -114.058,51.046 d: 137  

🇨🇦 Edmonton -113.483,53.533 d: 142.3  

🇨🇦 St Albert -113.617,53.633 d: 152.3  

🇨🇦 Lethbridge -112.834,49.694 d: 294.3  

🇨🇦 Cranbrook -115.76,49.518 d: 335.1  

🇨🇦 Medicine Hat -110.667,50.033 d: 331.3  

🇨🇦 Nelson -117.283,49.5 d: 392.5  

🇺🇸 Sandpoint -116.567,48.267 d: 486.2  

🇨🇦 Fort McMurray -111.379,56.727 d: 519.9  

🇺🇸 Great Falls -111.306,47.507 d: 559  

Antipodal to: Red Deer 66.191,-52.269

🇫🇷 Saint-Pierre 55.478,-21.342 d: 16455  

🇫🇷 Le Tampon 55.515,-21.278 d: 16448.9  

🇫🇷 Réunion 55.532,-21.133 d: 16433.5  

🇫🇷 Saint-Benoît 55.713,-21.034 d: 16426.6  

🇲🇺 Mahébourg 57.7,-20.407 d: 16397.1  

🇲🇺 Curepipe 57.517,-20.317 d: 16384  

🇫🇷 Saint-Paul 55.27,-21.01 d: 16414.2  

🇫🇷 Saint-Paul 55.279,-21 d: 16413.4  

🇲🇺 Vacoas-Phoenix 57.493,-20.3 d: 16381.7  

🇲🇺 Quatre Bornes 57.479,-20.266 d: 16377.7  

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