- Province of Buffalo
The Province of Buffalo was a proposed
Canadian province in the early 1900s. Its main supporter wasSir Frederick Haultain , the premier of theNorth-West Territories . However Haultain's frosty relations with then-prime minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier did not help his cause, and the proposed province was divided intoAlberta in the west, andSaskatchewan in the east in 1905.History
The Province of Buffalo was one of several proposals for the area of what would become Alberta and Saskatchewan. Haultain proposed the idea in 1904, stating that "One big province would be able to do things no other province could." At the time the majority of
Calgarians andEdmontonians disagreed with the proposal, since Haultain thought the capital of the new province should be Regina, but the two major western cities each had their own ambitions to be a capital city (Edmonton eventually becoming the capital of Alberta). Laurier eventually decided to carve two provinces out of that section of the North-West Territories by dividing the land up vertically. This created Alberta in the west, and Saskatchewan in the east.Buffalo today
Some Albertans and Saskatchewanites believe one province would have been better suited to the area, curbing Albertan right-wing conservatism and giving resource-poor Saskatchewan access to greater financial resources. The idea of a union is still brought up occasionally by fringe politicians in the two provinces.
In 2005 "
Canadian Geographic " magazine ran a cover story, "A Province Called Buffalo", on Haultain's proposal.References
* [http://homepage.usask.ca/~byp066/Buffalo/ The Buffalo Province History Conference]
* [http://www.canadiangeographic.com/ "Canadian Geographic"]External links
* [http://homepage.usask.ca/~byp066/Buffalo/ The Buffalo Province History Conference]
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