THE SECOND MAJOR EUROPEAN WAR OF THIS CENTURY UNFOLDS
ALBERTA HISTORY 1945-1949
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1938
(IV)-Jack Salzl, born 1908 Edmonton married 1938 Edmonton a Velma Brumonit, born 1911 Nebraska. They moved to the (III)-Mathias Salzl homestead at Sandhills District, across the river from Devon, and farmed there until 1957 when they moved to Devon, Alberta.
North America's first Islamic Mosque, Al Raschid, is built in Edmonton, Alberta this year.
The Metis Betterment Act is passed in Alberta where lands were set aside for for Metis Settlement Associations and social welfare programs. Metis settlements include Paddle Prairie, Peavine, Gift Lake , East Prairie, Buffalo Lake, Kinino, Elisizabeth and Fishing Lake and are the only Metis settlements constitutionally protected. Touchwood, Marlboro, Cold Lake and Wolf Lake were originally included but were later rescinded by order of the Alberta Government. The cultures of these communities attempt to retain the mixed cultures of French Ojibwa and British Cree and retain many of the Indian spiritual principles, beliefs and values.
The Metis Betterment Act is passed, setting aside unsettled and marginally arable land for their exclusive use. Seven colonies came into being, some near Frog and Cold Lakes, others near Lac La Biche and in the general High Level area and one at Paddle Prairie near Keg River. The Crown however held title as they have done in the past in order to retain control over the people.
The Metis Settlements Act was passed by the Alberta Legislature, forming 12
Metis settlements in Alberta, Canada. These included:
Buffalo Lake
East Prairie
Elizabeth
Fishing Lake
Gift Lake
Kikino
Paddle Prairie
Peavine
These four were dissolved in the 1960's:
Marlboro
Touchwood
Cold Lake
Wolf Lake
May 22: Robert Garneau joined the City of Edmonton Fire Fighters. Unemployment increased by thirty percent this year over 1937. However, rains finally fell in May and June on the prairies, ending the eight years of drought. Marion Garneau is born December 23, 1938 at Edmonton, Alberta daughter Robert Garneau born 1909 and (IV)-Marion Salzl born 1910.
1939
By the end of the war, 73,320 Alberta men and women had served in it. Robert Garneau and his seven member family, including (IV)-Danny Salzl, moved to a very small two bedroom house at 11721 - 80 street in Edmonton, Alberta, an improvement over the rented suite on 109A avenue between 95-96 street. (IV)-Danny Salzl was driving cab before signing up for the Air Force.
September 10: Canada declares war on Germany on September 10, 1939, seven days after Britain and France. By the end of the war 130,000 airmen will be trained at bases across Canada. (II)-Jim Brady (1908-1967) is refused entrance into the Canadian Army because of his communist affiliations but he was finally accepted in 1943. That the communists were our allies against the Germans in this war is noteworthy. It is noteworthy that 67% of United States citizens didn't want to get involved in what they considered a European problem.
1940
Edmonton has a population of 93,817, whereas Calgary has a population of 88,904. The jobless rate, by the fall, is at four percent.
Of the six thousand Hutterites in the world, more than half are in Alberta. They own all property in common, receive no wages and share equally in the management of the colony.
June 4: Italy entered the war as Hitler's ally. Air raid and black out practice commenced and became a weekly routine in Edmonton. It was much later before people learned that no Second World War plane had the range to reach Edmonton. Sunday mornings, however, are a somber occasion, as the war dead are announced in church. William Lyon Mackenzie King (1874-1950) a Liberal and raciest interned hundreds of Italian Canadians as "enemy aliens". They were rounded up and interned at camp Petawawa in northern Ontario. Others were victims of widespread prejudice, lost their jobs or had their shops vandalized. It is noteworthy that Germans were not considered as enemy aliens.
1941
John Garneau moved to Edson, Alberta to work in the hospital as their stationary steam engineer for the next two years.
June 11: The population of the west is: Saskatchewan 895,000, B.C. 817,000, Alberta 796,000, Manitoba 729,000 and the Yukon and N.W.T. 16,000.
1942
Fanny and Yuke Iriye are our Japanese neighbors who, very often, baby-sat the Garneau's. Someone in the Edmonton neighborhood had taken up a petition to have this family interned with the other Japanese from British Columbia. I recall my father getting very upset and starting a counter petition, as these are fine folks and very close to our family. I believe one of their sons is in the Canadian Armed Services. Years later, when we discovered what had happened to the Canadian Japanese, my father's actions made me feel proud of our heritage. One family had been spared the embarrassment of bigotry and racism by their government. This action taught me to never again support a Liberal party in the future.
The Alcan Road to Alaska is built in six months (1942-1943) through sixteen hundred miles of remote wilderness. It is built at the rate of eight miles per day. It is built from Dawson Creek, British Columbia to Alaska. The workers had a recreational site at Lac La Nonne, Alberta. As children we played with the abandoned life jackets making huge rafts. The workers also used dept charges to create pickerel holes.
One interesting highlight of the fur trading business, not commonly known, is that this year nearly six million rabbit skins, mostly snared and shot by schoolboys, are shipped from Alberta. This is a peak rabbit year which normally occurred every 9.6 years.
1943
(II)-James Brady, d-1967, Metis, joined the armed forces.
Earnest Charles Manning, Social Credit, is elected Premier of Alberta 1943-1968
'Bible Bill' (William Aberhart) Premier of Alberta from 1935 to 1943 was a socialist wannabe dictator. Most of his inner circle folks considered him a tyrant. Most of his economic legislation was struck down by the courts. He even tried to muzzle the freedom of the press through legislation but this was also struck down.
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ALBERTA HISTORY 1945-1949
ALBERTA HISTORY
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