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  • A group of workers standing outside the A-Channel headquarters, holding a sign that says "Scab TV"

    The Labour Dispute Will Be Televised

    John Vandenbeld

    An inside look at the 2003-2004 strike at A-Channel Edmonton. “The strike dragged on through the fall and into the winter,” writes John Vandenbeld. “I both wanted it to end and feared its conclusion, knowing that I’d have to work with these people again.”

  • A black and white photograph of a middle-aged woman shown in profile from the shoulders up. She wears a v-cut black top with a long white pearl necklace and her hair is pulled back into a low bun.

    Maud Bowman: The leader who kickstarted the Art Gallery of Alberta

    Danielle Siemens

    In the early 1920s, a resolute woman named Maud Bowman set out to start the Edmonton Museum of Arts – today’s Art Gallery of Alberta. Bowman was a somewhat unconventional model of a female museum leader. Her work is even more remarkable given the sexism she faced.

  • A daguerrotype of an older woman, a boy, and a young man.

    Lessons of loss and perseverance from Jane Klyne McDonald

    Catherine C. Cole

    During the early days of the Covid pandemic, I thought of my Métis great-great-great-grandmother, and the loss of three of her young children to scarlet fever in Edmonton in May 1845.

  • A photo of an Tom Daniels, one of the ironworkers featured in Alvin Finkel's story Waltzing with the Angels. Here he is an older man with glasses, sitting in an office.

    Waltzing With the Angels: The Metis Ironworkers Who Built Edmonton’s Downtown

    Alvin Finkel

    The people who did the most dangerous jobs constructing the skyscrapers in downtown Edmonton in the 1960s and 1970s were almost all Metis ironworkers. That included the CN Tower.

  • Roads of Misery: Following an Afro-Indigenous Family from Oklahoma to Edmonton (And Back Again) 

    Dr. Russell Cobb

    As the train pulled into the station at North Portal, Saskatchewan, Sarah Atkins had no idea if she would be admitted into Canada. Her daughter and son-in-law, Naoma Atkins Hooks and Sam Hooks, had made it across the border and on to Edmonton.

  • Leilani Muir and Eugenics in Alberta

    Kristine Kowalchuk

    NOTE: this article contains historical but outdated and offensive language related to mental illness and neurodiversity. Leilani Muir was born…

  • The Dutch Immigrants’ Church

    Harma-Mae Smit

    If you drive through Edmonton neighbourhoods, you’ll see many churches with names that reflect the cultural background of the immigrants…

  • Teachable Moments

    Bruce Cinnamon

    Velva Hueston moved to Edmonton with her mother in the early 1920s, after her father died in the 1918 flu…

  • Imrie House: Home of Canada’s First Female Architectural Firm 

    Josephine Boxwell

    Imrie House is unassuming. It is an older home, modest in size, tucked away at the end of a treed…

  • An Everlasting River Valley Retreat

    Ryan Stephens

    Here on Keillor Farm, the scenery and serenity of the vast Canadian prairies is everywhere, though it’s packed into a…

  • Filipino Pioneers of Edmonton

    Ida Beltran Lucila

    The 1952 Immigration Act introduced a points system that brought about the entry of professionals to fill labour gaps in Canada.

  • Connecting Through Dance

    Soni Dasmohapatra

    Soni Dasmohapatra shares her collaboration with Sissy Thiessen Kootenayoo and Felipe Canavera. — amiskwaciywâskahikan is “Beaver Hills House” It is…

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