Crowsnest Pass, Alberta Explained

Crowsnest Pass
Official Name:Municipality of Crowsnest Pass
Settlement Type:Specialized municipality
Motto:Naturally Rewarding
Seal Type:Logo
Image Map1:AB locator MUNICIPALITY OF CROWSNEST PASS.svg
Mapsize1:200
Map Caption1:Location within Alberta
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Canada
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Alberta
Subdivision Type2:Region
Subdivision Type3:Census division
Subdivision Name3:15
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Blair Painter
Leader Title1:Governing body
Leader Name1:Crowsnest Pass Municipal Council
Leader Title2:CAO
Leader Name2:Patrick Thomas
Leader Title3:MP
Leader Name3:John Barlow
Leader Title4:MLA
Leader Name4:Chelsae Petrovic
Established Title:Incorporated [1]
Established Title2: - Town 
Established Date2:January 1, 1979
Established Title3: - Specialized municipality
Established Date3:January 16, 2008
Area Footnotes: (2021)
Area Land Km2:370.15
Population As Of:2021
Population Total:5695
Population Density Km2:15.4
Timezone:MST
Utc Offset:−7
Timezone Dst:MDT
Utc Offset Dst:−6
Coordinates:49.625°N -114.4681°W
Elevation M:1310
Postal Code Type:Postal code span
Postal Code:T0K 0E0, 0M0, 0C0, 1C0
Area Code:403 / 587
Blank Name:Highways

The Municipality of Crowsnest Pass is a specialized municipality in southwest Alberta, Canada. Within the Rocky Mountains adjacent to the eponymous Crowsnest Pass, the municipality formed as a result of the 1979 amalgamation of five municipalities – the Village of Bellevue, the Town of Blairmore, the Town of Coleman, the Village of Frank, and Improvement District No. 5, which included the Hamlet of Hillcrest and numerous other unincorporated communities.

History

The communities in Crowsnest Pass owe their existence to coal mining. The first coal mine in the area opened in 1900. Its ethnic and cultural diversity comes from the many European and other immigrants attracted to the area by the mines. Through the years, coal mining suffered from fluctuating coal prices, bitter strikes, and underground accidents. All the mines on the Alberta side of the pass closed throughout the 20th century as cheaper with the opening of safer open-pit mines on the British Columbia side of the pass. An operating coal mine just across the British Columbia boundary in Sparwood continues to provide employment for residents living in the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass.

Crowsnest Pass is known for tragedy. In 1903, the tip of Turtle Mountain broke loose and decimated part of the Village of Frank. The event was heralded as the Frank Slide). In 1914, the Hillcrest mine disaster occurred near Hillcrest, killing 189 people. Spring floods occurred in 1923 and 1942. Periodic forest fires have swept the valley, including one in the summer of 2003 that threatened the entire municipality.

The area was a centre for "rum-running" during prohibition, from 1916 to 1923, when liquor was illegally brought across the provincial boundary from British Columbia. The legacy is celebrated at the restored Alberta Provincial Police Barracks, which is now an interpretive centre.

On November 3, 1978, the Government of Alberta passed the Crowsnest Pass Municipal Unification Act, which led to the formal amalgamation of Bellevue, Blairmore, Coleman, Frank, and Improvement District (ID) No. 5 on January 1, 1979.[2] The new municipality was granted town status and named the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass.[2] A review of the amalgamation in 1983 concluded that the unification led to improved municipal services and housing within the new municipality.[3]

In the mid-1990s, the adjacent ID No. 6 was carved up with portions going to the MD of Pincher Creek No. 9 on December 31, 1994, the MD of Ranchland No. 66 on January 1, 1995, and ID No. 40 on December 31, 1995.[4] Crowsnest Pass then amalgamated with the remainder of ID No. 6 on January 1, 1996, while ID No. 40 was absorbed by the MD of Pincher Creek No. 9 on the same date.[2] The amalgamated municipality retained the name Municipality of Crowsnest Pass and its town status.[2] It subsequently became a specialized municipality on January 16, 2008.[2] The purpose of the status change was to enable membership in the Alberta Association of Municipal Districts and Counties for increased alignment with its neighbouring rural municipalities.[5]

Geography

The Municipality of Crowsnest Pass is in the southwest portion of the province of Alberta.[6] It borders the province of British Columbia to the west, the Municipal District (MD) of Ranchland No. 66 to the north, and the MD of Pincher Creek No. 9 to the east and south.[6] The Crowsnest River, which originates from Crowsnest Lake, meanders eastward through the municipality.[6] Parts of the Rocky Mountains Forest Reserve are in the northwest and southern portions of the municipality.[6]

Communities and localities

The following communities are the former municipalities that comprise the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass.[7]

Former towns
Former villages
Former improvement districts

The following localities are located within the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass.[8]

Localities

The following are the unincorporated places that were in Improvement District No. 5 prior to the amalgamation that formed the municipality of Crownsest Pass.[10] [11]

Demographics

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass had a population of 5,695 living in 2,759 of its 3,403 total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of 5,589. With a land area of, it had a population density of in 2021.[12]

In the 2016 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass had a population of 5,589 living in 2,567 of its 3,225 total private dwellings, a change of from its 2011 population of 5,565. With a land area of 371.44km2, it had a population density of in 2016.[13]

Municipality of Crowsnest Pass historical population breakdown
Component2016 population[14] 2006 population[15] 1976 population[16]
Bellevue
Blairmore
Coleman
Frank
Improvement District No. 5
Improvement District No. 6 -
Total Municipality of Crowsnest Pass

Attractions

The Municipality of Crowsnest Pass is home to parts of the Castle Provincial Park in the southeast and the Castle Wildland Provincial Park in the southwest.[6]

Within the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass, one can find the Frank Slide Interpretive Centre (Provincial Historic Site), an interpretive display at Leitch Collieries (Provincial Historic Site) near the former Passburg townsite, underground tours of the Bellevue Mine (Provincial Historic Resource), interpretive signs at the Hillcrest Cemetery (Provincial Historic Resource) and both the Crowsnest Museum and Alberta Provincial Police Barracks interpretive centre within Coleman National Historic Site. Pamphlets for self-guided historical walking and driving tours are available throughout the municipality.

The area offers hiking, fishing and mountain-biking in the summer, and in winter snowmobiling, a downhill ski hill (Pass PowderKeg), and a groomed cross-country ski area, and is about 70km (40miles) from major ski hills at both Fernie Alpine Resort and Castle Mountain Resort.

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Municipal Profile – Municipality of Crowsnest Pass . Alberta Municipal Affairs . Alberta Municipal Affairs . 2010-09-17 . 2010-10-02.
  2. Web site: Location and History Profile – Municipality of Crowsnest Pass . . October 15, 2021 . October 20, 2021.
  3. Book: Walchuk . Walter . Alberta's local governments: people in community seeking goodness . 1987 . . Edmonton . 978-0-7732-0014-2 . 100 . English.
  4. Web site: Interim List of Changes to Municipal Boundaries, Status and Names: January 2, 1991 to January 1, 1996 . . 248 . February 1997 . October 21, 2021.
  5. Web site: Municipality of Crowsnest Pass: Report on the Corporate Review . George B. Cuff & Associates Ltd. . October 2009 . October 21, 2021.
  6. 2021 Provincial Base Map: Municipalities . Alberta Environment and Parks . July 26, 2021 . October 20, 2021.
  7. Book: 2011 Municipal Affairs Population List . . 2012-10-05 . 2012-08-18 . 978-0-7785-9738-4.
  8. Web site: Standard Geographical Classification (SGC) 2006, Economic Regions: 4815007 - Crowsnest Pass, geographical codes and localities, 2006 . . 2010-03-05 . 2012-08-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130525211536/http://stds.statcan.gc.ca/sgc-cgt/2006/ersl-rerl-fin-eng.asp?criteria=4815007 . 2013-05-25.
  9. Book: Crowsnest Pass Historical Society. Crowsnest and its people. 1979. Crowsnest Pass Historical Society. Coleman. 0-88925-046-4. 241.
  10. Book: Special Bulletin: Unincorporated Settlements . Bulletin SP—1 . . Ottawa . 204–207 . Population of Unincorporated Places of 50 persons and over, 1971 and 1966 (Alberta) . March 1973 .
  11. Book: 1976 Census of Canada . Supplementary Bulletins: Geographic and Demographic (Population of Unincorporated Places—Canada) . Bulletin 8SG.1 . . Ottawa . Geographical Identification and Population for Unincorporated Places of 25 persons and over, 1971 and 1976 . May 1978 . October 24, 2021.
  12. Web site: Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities) . . February 9, 2022 . February 9, 2022.
  13. Web site: Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), 2016 and 2011 censuses – 100% data (Alberta) . . February 8, 2017 . February 8, 2017.
  14. Book: 2019 Municipal Affairs Population List . . 978-1-4601-4623-1 . December 2019 . July 1, 2021.
  15. Book: 2009 Official Population List . . 978-0-7785-7978-6 . September 15, 2009 . October 10, 2021.
  16. Book: Population: Geographic Distributions – Census Divisions and Subdivisions, Western Provinces and the Territories . . 3–41 . June 1977.