Blairmore, Alberta

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Location of Blairmore, Alberta

Blairmore is a town in the Crowsnest Pass of the Rocky Mountains of southern Alberta, Canada. Formerly an independent town, it is now the principal commercial centre of the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass (population: about 6500).

[edit] History

Originally a Canadian Pacific Railway stop called Tenth Siding or The Springs (for the cold sulphur spring to the east), the settlement was renamed Blairmore in November 1898. A ten-year dispute over land ownership between the CPR station agent and the section foreman stunted early development.[1] Blairmore’s principal industry was lumber and, after 1907, coal. Other industries followed and on September 29, 1911 Blairmore was incorporated as a town. With the declining fortunes of the nearby town of Frank, Blairmore soon became the region’s economic centre.

One of the town’s early characters was Emilio Picariello (1875 – 1923). “Emperor Pic” settled in Blairmore in 1918 and operated several businesses, but also illegally imported alcohol from nearby British Columbia during prohibition. Picariello and Florence Lossandra were hanged after the shooting death of Alberta Provincial Police constable Steve Lawson in 1921.

Like many Canadian industrial towns in the 1930s, Blairmore had some sympathies with Communism. Canada's first Communist town council and school board were elected in Blairmore in 1933, which reformed the tax system, and refused to observe Remembrance Day as an Imperialist holiday and honoured the Russian Revolution instead. A street was named after the leader of the Communist Party of Canada, Tim Buck, a decision that was reversed by the next town council.[2]

Blairmore joined four other local towns in a legal amalgamation into the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass in 1979.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Crowsnest and its People Crowsnest Pass Historical Society, 1979
  2. ^ Crownest Pass Promoter - street name controversy


Coordinates: 49°36′N 114°26′W