Regina, Saskatchewan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Regina | |||
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| Nickname: The Queen City | |||
| Motto: Floreat Regina ("Let Regina Flourish") |
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| Location of Regina in the SE quadrant of Saskatchewan | |||
| Coordinates: | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Country | Canada | ||
| Province | Saskatchewan | ||
| District | Municipality of Sherwood | ||
| Established | 1882 | ||
| Government | |||
| - City Mayor | Pat Fiacco | ||
| - Governing body | Regina City Council | ||
| - MPs | Dave Batters Ralph Goodale Tom Lukiwski Andrew Scheer |
||
| - MLAs | Ron Harper Bill Hutchinson Warren McCall Sandra Morin John Nilson Laura Ross Christine Tell Kim Trew Harry Van Mulligen Trent Wotherspoon Kevin Yates |
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| Area | |||
| - City | 118.87 km² (45.9 sq mi) | ||
| - Metro | 3,408.26 km² (1,315.94 sq mi) | ||
| Elevation | 577 m (1,893 ft) | ||
| Population (2006) | |||
| - City | 179,246 (Ranked 24th) | ||
| - Density | 1,507.9/km² (3,905.4/sq mi) | ||
| - Metro | 194,971 | ||
| - Metro Density | 57.2/km² (148.15/sq mi) | ||
| Time zone | Central (CST) (UTC-6) | ||
| NTS Map | 072I07 | ||
| GNBC Code | HAIMP | ||
| Website: http://www.regina.ca/ | |||
Regina (IPA: /rɛˈdʒaɪnə/) is the capital of Saskatchewan, Canada. The city is a cultural and commercial metropole for both southern Saskatchewan and adjacent areas in the neighbouring American states of North Dakota and Montana. It attracts numerous visitors for the vitality of its commerce, theatre, concerts and restaurants and to its summer agricultural exhibition (originally established in 1884 as the Assiniboia Agricultural Association and since the mid-1960s styled "Buffalo Days"[1]). It is governed by Regina City Council. Regina is the cathedral city of the Roman Catholic[2] and Romanian Orthodox[3] Dioceses of Regina and the Anglican Diocese of Qu'Appelle.[4] Citizens of Regina are referred to as Reginans.
Regina was previously the territorial headquarters of the North-West Territories, of which today's provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta originally formed part. Regina was also the district headquarters of the District of Assiniboia. Regina was named in 1882 after Queen Victoria, i.e. Victoria Regina, by her daughter Princess Louise, wife of the then-Governor General the Marquess of Lorne.[5] Regina's elevation is 577 metres (1,893 ft) above mean sea level.
Unlike other planned cities in the Canadian West, on its treeless flat plain Regina was a tabula rasa, entirely without topographical features other than the small spring run-off Wascana Creek. Early planners took advantage of such opportunity by damming the creek and creating a mostly decorative lake to the south of the central business district; Regina's importance was secured when the new province of Saskatchewan designated it the provincial capital in 1906.[6] Wascana Centre, created around the artificial focal point of Wascana Lake, remains Regina's signal attraction and contains the Provincial Legislative Building, both campuses of the University of Regina, the provincial museum of natural history, the Regina Conservatory (in the original Regina College buildings), the Saskatchewan Science Centre, the Norman Mackenzie Art Gallery and the Saskatchewan Centre of the Arts.
Residential neighbourhoods in Regina are largely indistinguishable from those in other western Canadian cities but several precincts beyond the historic city centre are historically or socially noteworthy. Immediately to the north of the central business district is the old warehouse district, increasingly the locus of tony shopping and residential development;[7] as in other western cities of North America, the periphery contains numerous shopping malls and big box stores. Generally a prosperous and tranquil city, its long-problematic north-central sector and the difficult Scott Collegiate have in recent years become the focus of national attention for their poverty, drug abuse and prostitution.[8] Regina was the territorial headquarters of the North-West Territories before the creation of the provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta in 1905 and is notable for its aboriginal and Métis population, the seventh largest in any Canadian urban centre,[9] the original North-West Territories Government House and the original North-West Territorial government buildings. In 1912 Regina was a focus of international attention when the Regina Cyclone destroyed much of the town;[10] in the 1930s the Regina Riot brought further attention and, in the midst of the 1930s drought and Great Depression, which hit the Canadian Prairies particularly hard with their economic focus on dryland grain farming,[11] the CCF (now the NDP, an important left-wing political party in all provinces west of Quebec), formulated its foundation Regina Manifesto in Regina.[12] In recent years Saskatchewan's resources have come into new demand, and it is anticipated that it will enter into new period of strong economic growth.[13]
Contents |
[edit] History
Lieutenant-Governor Edgar Dewdney had acquired land adjacent to the route of the future CPR line at Pile-of-Bones, which was distinguished only by collections of bison bones near a small spring run-off creek, some few kilometres downstream from its origin in the midst of what are now wheat fields. There was an "obvious conflict of interest" in Dewdney's promoting the site of Pile-of-Bones as the territorial headquarters[16]and it was a national scandal at the time,[17] but until 1897, when responsible government was accomplished in the Territories,[18] the lieutenant-governor and council governed by fiat and there was little legitimate means of challenging such decisions outside the federal capital of Ottawa, where the Territories were remote and of little concern. Commercial considerations prevailed, however, and the town's authentic development began as a collection of wooden shanties and tent shacks clustered around the site designated by the CPR for its future station, and not two miles to the east where Dewdney had reserved substantial landholdings for himself and where he sited Government House.[19]
Regina's early history is remembered for its rapid growth which continued until the Great Depression began in 1929, at which point Saskatchewan had been the third province of Canada[24] in both population and economic indicators. Thereafter, Saskatchewan never recovered its early promise and Regina's growth slowed and at times reversed, although a recent resources boom promises to rekindle development. From the 1930s onward, Regina became a centre of considerable political activism and experiment as its people sought to adjust to new, reduced economic realities.
Events of national political importance which occurred in Regina include
- the trial of Louis Riel (followed by Riel's execution) in July 1885;
- the adoption in 1933 by the new CCF (now the NDP) of the Regina Manifesto, which set out the new party's goals[31];
- the Regina Riot on 1 July 1935[32];
- the 1944 election of the CCF under T.C. Douglas, the first social democratic government in North America[33] and a pioneer of numerous social programs – notably of course Medicare[34] – which were later adopted in other provinces and nationally; and
- the Saskatchewan Doctors' Strike in 1962 when medical doctors withheld their services in response to the introduction of Medicare with the enactment of the Medical Care Insurance Act, 1961 (Sask.)[35]
[edit] Geography and climate
[edit] Demographics
According to the Canada 2006 Census:
| • Population: | 179,246 (+0.6% from 2001) |
| • Land area: | 118.87 km² (45.9 sq mi) |
| • Population density: | 1,507.9 people/km² (3,905.4/sq mi) |
| • National population rank (Out of 5,008): | Ranked 24 |
| • Median age: | 35.8 (males: 34.4, females: 36.9) |
| • Total private dwellings: | 78,692 |
| • Dwellings occupied by permanent residents: | 74,803 |
| • Mean household income:↑ | $57,500 |
References:
Footnotes: ↑ The data has not yet been released and is based on 2001 Census. [41]
The Canada 2006 Census indicates Regina's ethnic configuration to be, in order of size: (1) German, (2) English, (3) Scottish, (4) Irish, (5) Ukrainian, (6) French, (7) Aboriginal, (8) Polish and (9) Norwegian, with a significant Asian and South Asian component as well, although actually the third largest constituency was, by numbers of respondents, undifferentiated "Canadian," indicating perhaps mixed ethnic background (though other explanations of this identification present themselves) and confirming the perception that Reginans in large number, like other western Canadians, do not particularly distinguish among themselves as to ethnicity.
The 2006 Census indicates that religious affiliation is of reduced significance among Reginans, with fully 19.0% of Reginans identifying as having no religion; Protestant at 41.5%; Roman Catholic, 32.3%; Eastern Orthodox, 1.8%; other Christian (including Oriental Orthodox), 2.9% and other religion (including Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist), 2.5%.[43] A more useful demonstration of religious realities would be to set out the startling decline in numbers of Christian parishes in recent years, especially among the historically predominant Protestant denominations of the United Church of Canada, Anglican Church of Canada and Presbyterian Church in Canada, as amply demonstrated by historic Saturday church advertisements in the Leader-Post which indicate a drastic decline in the number of congregations in recent decades.
[edit] Economy
[edit] Culture
Regina has a rich cultural life in music, theatre and dance, amply supported by the substantial fine arts constituency at the University of Regina, which has faculties of music, theatre and plastic arts. At various times this has attracted notable artistic talent: the Regina Five were artists at Regina College (the University's predecessor) who gained national fame in the 1950s; Donald M. Kendrick, Bob Boyer and Joe Fafard, now with significant international reputations, have been other stars. The Regina Conservatory of Music operates in the former girls' residence wing of the Regina College building. Annual festivals in and near Regina through the year include the Cathedral Village Arts Festival; the Craven Country Jamboree[52]; the Regina Folk Festival[53]; the Regina Dragon Boat Festival[54]; and Mosaic, mounted by the Regina Multicultural Council,[55] which earned Heritage Canada’s designation of 2004 "Cultural Capital of Canada" (in the over 125,000 population category).[56] As in other cities and towns across Canada the annual Kiwanis Music Festival affords rising musical talents the opportunity to achieve nation-wide recognition.
The Regina Public Library is a city-wide library system with nine branches playing key roles in their respective neighbourhoods. Its facilities include the RPL Film theatre, the Dunlop Art Gallery, special literacy services and a prairie history collection.[64] The Norman Mackenzie Art Gallery in Wascana Centre and the Dunlop Art Gallery have permanent collections and sponsor travelling exhibitions.[65]
[edit] Parks and outdoor attractions
Regina has a substantial proportion of its overall area dedicated as parks and greenspaces, with biking paths, cross-country ski-ing venues and other recreational facilities throughout the city; Wascana Lake, the venue for summer boating activities, is regularly cleared of snow in winter for skating and there are toboggan runs both in Wascana Centre and downstream on the banks of Wascana Creek. Victoria Park is in the central business district and numerous greenspaces throughout the residential subdivisions and newer subdivisions in the north and west of the city contain large ornamental ponds to add interest to parks such as Rochdale, Lakewood, Lakeridge, Spruce Meadows and Windsor Parks; older school playing fields throughout the city have also been converted into landscaped parks.[66]
The City operates five municipal golf courses, including two in King's Park northeast of the city. Kings Park Recreation facility is also home to ball diamonds, picnic grounds, and stock car racing. Within half an hour's drive are the summer cottage and camping country and winter ski resorts in the Qu'Appelle Valley with Last Mountain and Buffalo Pound Lakes and the four Fishing Lakes of Pasqua, Echo, Mission and Katepwa; slightly farther east are Round and Crooked Lakes, also in the Qu'Appelle Valley, and to the southeast the Kenosee Lake cottage country.
[edit] Bedroom communities
[edit] Sports
The Saskatchewan Roughriders, formed in 1910 as the Regina Rugby Club and renamed the Regina Roughriders in 1924 and the Saskatchewan Roughriders in 1950[84] are a community-owned professional sports team. The Riders have a strong and loyal fan support base. Out-of-town season ticket holders often travel 300 to 400 kilometres (200–250 mi) or more to attend home games[85]. Regina's curling teams have distinguished the city for many decades. Richardson Crescent commemorates the Richardson curling team of the 1950s; in recent years Olympic Gold medal winner Sandra Schmirler and her rink occasioned vast civic pride. North-east of the city lies Kings Park Speedway, a ⅓-mile paved oval used for stock car racing since the late 1960's. Regina hosted the Western Canada summer Games in 1975 and again in 1987, as well as being the host city for the 2005 Canada Summer Games.
[edit] Visitor attractions
[edit] Local news media
Regina has the largest free civic wireless internet program in Canada.[92] The Downtown, Warehouse, 13th Avenue and University regions have government-sponsored wireless internet called Saskatchewan! Connected, which is also available in Saskatoon, Prince Albert, and Moose Jaw. The city has a number of radio, television and cable stations; the once privately-owned CKCK Television station is now owned by CTV, however, both CTV and CBC have in recent years increasingly rationalised regional programming; the once-thriving local television production is now largely confined to local newscasts.
[edit] Education
[edit] University of Regina
Ultimately the financially hard-pressed United Church of Canada (the successor to the Methodist Church), which in any case had ideological difficulties with the concept of fee-paying private schooling given its longstanding espousal of universal free education from the time of its founding father Egerton Ryerson, could no longer maintain Regina College during the Great Depression of the 1930s, and Regina College was disaffiliated from the Church and surrendered to the University of Saskatchewan; it became the Regina Campus of the University of Saskatchewan in 1961. After a protracted contretemps over the siting of several faculties in Saskatoon which had been promised to the Regina campus, Regina Campus sought and obtained a separate charter as the University of Regina in 1974.
Campion College and Luther College now have federated college status in the University of Regina, as does the First Nations University of Canada;[93] St Chad's ultimately consolidated with Emmanuel College on the then-Saskatoon campus of the University of Saskatchewan. The Regina Research Park is located immediately adjacent to the main campus and many of its initiatives in information technology, petroleum and environmental sciences are conducted in conjunction with university departments. A member in the research park is Canada's Petroleum Technology Research facility, a world leader in oil recovery and geological storage of CO2.
[edit] Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology
The Wascana campus[94] of this province-wide polytechnical institute is adjacent to the University of Regina. It occupies the former Plains Health Centre, previously a third hospital in Regina which in the course of rationalizing health services in Saskatchewan was in due course closed. It offers diplomas in some 175 trade and semi-professional fields ranging from accountancy and auto-mechanical technician through corrections worker, dental hygiene, driving instructor, nursing and school secretarial qualifications.[95]
[edit] Royal Canadian Mounted Police Academy, Depot Division
[edit] Public, separate and private schools
The Regina Public School Board operates some 50 elementary schools and 10 high schools with approximately 21,000 students enrolled throughout the city. The publicly-funded Roman Catholic Separate School Board operates 25 elementary schools and four high schools, and has a current enrollment of approximately 10,000 students. Public and separate schools are amply equipped with state-of-the-art science labs, gymnasia and drama and arts facilities: already by the 1960s Regina high schools had television studios, swimming pools, ice rinks and state-of-the-art drama facilities.
A small number of parents choose to opt out of the public and separate school systems for home-schooling under the guidance of Regina Public School Board. Private schools in Regina include Luther College, operated by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada, the Regina Huda school for Islamic education; Harvest City Church and Christian Academy (occupying the former Sister Marion McGuigan High School site); the Western Christian College and High School operated by the Churches of Christ, using premises vacated by the former Canadian Bible College; and the Regina Christian School, in the former Campion College premises.
[edit] Transportation
The city's public transit agency, Regina Transit, operates a fleet of 110 buses, on 16 routes, 7 days a week with access to the city centre from most areas of the city. A massive fire at the streetcar barns, on January 23, 1949, destroyed much of the rolling stock of streetcars and trolley buses and helped to propel Regina's diesel bus revolution in 1951. Because of the 1949 fire, original Regina streetcar rolling stock was rare, though through later years a few disused streetcars remained in evidence — a streetcar with takeaway food, for example, on the site of the Regina Theatre at 12th Avenue and Hamilton Street, until the Hudson's Bay Company acquired the site and built its 60s-through-90s department store there, and for many years another in the Scarth Street Mall.
Regina International Airport is situated on the west side of the city and is the oldest established commercial airport in Canada.[97] The current, continuingly expanded, 1960 terminal replaces the original 1940 Art Deco terminal; it has recently undergone further major upgrades and expansions to allow it to handle increases in traffic for the next several years. Its location beyond what was once the outer city periphery has limited westward property development, but with virtually limitless land in all directions and only moderate overall population increase, a somewhat lopsided growth outwards from the central business district has not been an issue.
[edit] Infrastructure
Domestic water, originally obtained from Wascana Lake and later the Boggy Creek reservoir north of the city and supplemented by wells, is supplied from Buffalo Pound Lake in the Qu'Appelle Valley, a natural reservoir on the Qu'Appelle River, since 1967 with water diverted into it from Diefenbaker Lake behind the Gardiner Dam on the South Saskatchewan River.[98] Electricity is provided by SaskPower, a provincial Crown corporation which maintains a province-wide grid with power generated from coal-fired base load, natural gas-fired, hydroelectric and wind power facilities. Medical services are provided through two city hospitals, Regina General and Pasqua (formerly Grey Nuns) — a third city hospital, Plains Health Centre, has been converted to the Wascana campus of SIAST — and by private medical practitioners. Although Saskatchewan's medical health system is widely characterised as "socialised medicine," in fact it is entirely private, and medical practitioners in Saskatchewan, as in other Canadian provinces, remit their accounts to the publicly funded Saskatchewan Medical Care Insurance Plan rather than directly to patients, although unlike in Australia, which has a similar structure of universal health care, they are not permitted directly to supercharge patients over and above the statutory tariff for their services.
[edit] Sister city
[edit] See also
- Assiniboine First Nation
- Bethune weather radar
- List of Canadian cities
- HMCS Regina (FFH 334)
- HMCS Regina (K234)
- List of famous Reginans
- List of mayors of Regina, Saskatchewan,
[edit] Notes
- ^ Ipsco Place website, "History." Retrieved 11 December 2006.
- ^ Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Regina website. Retrieved 11 December 2007
- ^ Directory of Saskatchewan Churches Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Anglican Diocese of Qu'Appelle website. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Daria Coneghan, "Regina," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Coneghan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Regina's Old Warehouse District. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Gatehouse, Jonathon. "Canada's worst neighbourhood", Maclean's, 2007-01-08. Retrieved on 2007-01-31. (English)
- ^ According to the 2001 Canadian Census "Regina had an Aboriginal-identity population of 15,685 (8.3% of the total city population), of which 9,200 were First Nations, 5,990 Métis, and 495 other Aboriginal": Alan Anderson, "Urban Aboriginal Population," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Dagmar Skamlová, "Regina Cyclone," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Steven J. Shirtliffe, "Agronomy," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ "The Regina Manifesto (1933) Co-operative Commonwealth Federation Programme, Adopted by the founding convention in Regina, Saskatchewan, July, 1933." Socialist History Project. South Branch Publishing. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ "Saskatchewan Poised for Strong Economic Growth Says RBC Economics," Royal Bank of Canada Financial Group, 30 March 2007. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Coneghan.
- ^ Daria Coneghan, "Regina," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
- ^ After his term as Lieutenant-Governor of the North-West Territories, Dewdney was again elected to Parliament and served as the member for Assiniboia East (now southeastern Saskatchewan) from 1888 to 1891. During this period he also served as minister of the Interior and superintendent of Indian Affairs. In 1892 he was appointed to the now non-executive post of Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia. He served in this post until 1897. He retired from politics in 1900 after unsuccessfully running for Parliament in New Westminster, British Columbia.
- ^ Pierre Berton, The Last Spike: The Great Railway 1881-1885 (Toronto: McLelland and Stewart, 1973), 120)
- ^ David J. Hall, "North-West Territories," The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 19 November 2007.
- ^ Berton, op. cit., pp.121-23)
- ^ City of Regina Archives 2004 Photo/Biography of the Month Gallery. Retrieved 5 June 2007.
- ^ Berton, 379. Qu'Appelle had been founded as Troy in 1882, was renamed Qu'Appelle Station in 1884 when the CPR arrived, again renamed South Qu'Appelle in 1902 and as Qu'Appelle 1911. See Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan and David McLennon, "Qu'Appelle, The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 13 July 2007.
- ^ McLennon, "Qu'Appelle, The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 13 July 2007.
- ^ Maggie Siggins, Riel: A Life of Revolution (Toronto: HarperCollins, 1994), 447.
- ^ Kevin Avram, "A tale of two provinces," Farmers for economic freedom: Updates from the Prairie Centre/Centre for Prairie Agriculture in Regina, Saskatchewan. 21 May 2001. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ latterly deemed "Market Square," and not to be confused with the historic Market Square, the site of the Regina Riot on what is now the location of the Regina City Police Station). Bill Waiser, "On-to-Ottawa Trek and the Regina Riot," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Public Works and Government Services Canada, "Revitalizing Downtown Regina" (Fall 2002).
- ^ Regina's Old Warehouse District: History Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ Michael Jackson, "Government House," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Trevor Powell, "Anglican Church of Canada," in Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 18 October 2007.
- ^ Recalled though not explicitly named by Erika Ritter in her humorous memoir Ritter in Residence.
- ^ J.T. Morley, "Co-operative Commonwealth Federation," The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 18 November 2007.
- ^ Victor Howard, "On to Ottawa Trek, The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 18 November 2007.
- ^ "Saskatchewan," The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 18 December 2007.
- ^ Dan de Vlieger, "Political History of Saskatchewan," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 18 December 2007.
- ^ Jean Larmour, "Saskatchewan Doctors' Strike," The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 18 November 2007.
- ^ Environment Canada Canadian Climate Normals: Regina, Saskatchewan. Retrieved 17 July 2007.
- ^ Coneghan.
- ^ "Regina," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ CBC "Saskatchewan Story" article on Regina's trees
- ^ [1]
- ^ Population of census metropolitan areas (2001 Census boundaries), Statistics Canada. 2006. Released 4 April 2006. Last modified: 2006-06-12
- ^ Alan Anderson, "Urban Aboriginal Population," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
- ^ Ibid.
- ^ Saskatchewan "has an estimated 75% of the world’s potash reserves": Peter Phillips, "Economy of Saskatchewan," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 1 December 2007.
- ^ Peter Phillips, "Economy of Saskatchewan," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 1 December 2007.
- ^ "Regina: Economy and Labour Force," The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 17 July 2007
- ^ Peter Phillips, "Economy of Saskatchewan," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 1 December 2007.
- ^ Lauren Black, "Regina Wartime Industries Ltd.," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 19 November 2007.
- ^ IPSCO: A Division of SSAB website. Retrieved 25 November 2007.
- ^ Canada Life website, "Canada Life in Agreement with Crown Life; Strong Presence in Regina to Continue, Regina - May 26, 1998. Retrieved 25 November 2007.
- ^ "Regina: Economy and Labour Force," The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 17 July 2007
- ^ Craven Country Jamboree website. Retrieved 20 December 2007.
- ^ Regina Folk Festival website. Retrieved 20 December 2007.
- ^ Regina Dragon Boat Festival Homepage. Retrieved 20 December 2007.
- ^ Regina Multicultural Council homepage. Retrieved 20 December 2007.
- ^ Regina Multicultural Council: Mosaic. Retrieved 17 July 2007.
- ^ [http://[www.conexusartscentre.ca/ Conexus Arts Centre website.] Retrieved 17 July 2007.
- ^ Kathleen Wall, "Regina Symphony Orchestra," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
- ^ Encyclopedia of Canada. "Regina: Cultural Life." Retrieved 17 July 2007.
- ^ Iain Stewart, "Royal Saskatchewan Museum," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
- ^ Stewart.
- ^ Mary Blackstone, "Globe Theatre," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
- ^ Thomas Chase, "Casavant, Opus 1409, 1930/1993. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Regina Public Library website
- ^ J. William Brennan, "Regina," The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 19 November 2007.
- ^ See city map at Google Maps. Retrieved 12 December 2007.
- ^ Fletcher, Tom. "The Work of Minoru Yamasaki," New York Architecture Images and Notes. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Riddell, W. A. The Origin and Development of Wascana Centre. Regina, 1962.
- ^ Riddell, W. A. The Origin and Development of Wascana Centre. Regina, 1962.
- ^ Dagmar Skamlová, "Big Dig," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Mark Partridge, "The Ebb and Flow of Rural Growth: Spread, Backwash, or Stagnation." Presentation for the Department of Rural Development, Regina, Saskatchewan June 9, 2005.
- ^ "Dominion Lands Act/Homestead Act," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "Farming," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "Qu'Appelle," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "Fort Qu'Appelle," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "Indian Head," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "White City," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "White City," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "Balgonie," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "Pilot Butte," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "Lumsden," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "Regina Beach" The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ "Rouleau," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
- ^ Daria Coneghan, "Saskatchewan Roughriders, Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
- ^ [2]
- ^ Scott Langen, "Saskatchewan Science Centre," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ Norman Mackenzie Art Gallery website Retrieved 26 December 2007.
- ^ Canadian Western Agribition website Retrieved 26 December 2007.
- ^ People at the Leader Building, Regina: The Early Years. Accessed 21 September 2006.
- ^ Regina Leader-Post website. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
- ^ L'eau vive website. Retrieved 17 July 2007.
- ^ Government of Saskatchewan press release Retrieved 24 September 2007
- ^ *First Nations University of Canada. Retrieved 17 July 2007.
- ^ Its Regina presence a merger of the former Wascana Institute of Applied Arts and Sciences and Regina Plains Community College: Lorne Sparling, "Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology (SIAST)," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
- ^ SIAST website retrieved 19 October 2007.
- ^ Feature: East Regina TCH. Saskatchewan Highways. Retrieved on 2006-09-21.
- ^ Coneghan.
- ^ World Lakes Database: Buffalo Pound Lake. Retrieved 8 December 2007.
- ^ As designated by Sister Cities International, Inc. Retrieved 8 December 2007.
[edit] Further reading
- "Germantown" 11th Avenue East. Regina’s Heritage Tours, City of Regina, 1994.
- Argan, William. Cornerstones 2: An Artist’s History of the City of Regina. Regina: Centax Books, 2000.
- Argan, William. Cornerstones: An Artist’s History of the City of Regina. Regina: Centax Books, 1995.
- Barnhart, Gordon. Building for the Future: A Photo Journal of Saskatchewan's Legislative Building. Canadian Plains Research Center, 2002. ISBN 0-88977-145-6
- Brennan, J. William. Regina, an illustrated hist