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Subcategories:
1800s - 1904 (Early Settlement)
1905 - 1912 (First Real Estate Boom)
1913 - 1945 (Pre-modern Buildings)
1945 - Present (Modern Buildings)


  Total Records Found: 583   -   Page 18 of 59  First Prev 10 Pages [ 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 ] Next 10 Pages Last
  • FIRE HALL NO. 1, 1908
    The new Fire Hall No.1 was constructed on the same site as the 1891 fire hall, using 85% of the materials salvaged from the original building as a means of holding down costs.
  • FIRE STATION NO. 3
    Fire Station No. 3 was one of the first satellite fire stations in Calgary, and is similar in style to others built at that time.
  • FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
    The original First Baptist Church was built in 1888, but was subsequently destroyed by fire. It was rebuilt in 1900, but a growing congregation and the crowding of business blocks around the original site led the congregation to decide on relocation and construction of yet another new church.
  • FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
    The First Presbyterian Church was built in 1911, and officially opened in 1912. Reverend D.G. McQueen was pastor of the Presbyterian Church in Edmonton between 1883 and 1930.
  • FLEXFORD HOUSE
    The precise date of construction of this modest brick and sandstone apartment house is unknown, although it first appeared in the Henderson's Directory in 1915.
  • FORT CALGARY
    F-Troop of the North-West Mounted Police, commanded by Inspector E.A. Brisebois, established Fort Calgary on this site, south-west of the junction of the Bow and Elbow Rivers in August 1875.
  • FORT WHITE EARTH AND THE GRIST MILL
    Downstream from Victoria, near the confluence of the White Earth and North Saskatchewan Rivers, are the remains of another, earlier, fur trading post. It was known as Fort White Earth, or Lower Terre Blanche.
  • FRANK MITCHELL'S MUSEUM
    Mitchell’s museum building is itself something of an artefact. It is the former home of Benjamin Sinclair Jr., who held the patent title on River Lot 10 of the Lobstick Settlement.
  • FRANK SLIDE
    Early in 1901 two Americans, S.E. Gebo (Gibeau) and H.L. Frank acquired the mineral rights to a large area at the base of Turtle Mountain.
  • FRASER AND SEABLOOM BLOCK
    Calgary, like the rest of Alberta, had a development boom from 1910 to 1912. The Fraser & Seabloom Block was built during the late stages of this boom.

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