Amber Valley, Alberta

Amber Valley
Unincorporated
Amber Valley

Location of Amber Valley in Alberta

Coordinates: 54°43′58″N 112°55′46″W / 54.73278°N 112.92944°W / 54.73278; -112.92944Coordinates: 54°43′58″N 112°55′46″W / 54.73278°N 112.92944°W / 54.73278; -112.92944
Country  Canada
Province  Alberta
Region Northern Alberta
Census division 13
Municipal district Athabasca County
Government[1]
  Reeve Doris Splane
  Governing body
Time zone MST (UTC-7)
  Summer (DST) MDT (UTC-6)
Website www.athabascacounty.com

Amber Valley is an unincorporated community in Alberta, Canada, about 100 miles north of the capital Edmonton. Its elevation is 1,995 ft. Originally named Pine Creek, Amber Valley was among several Alberta communities settled by early black immigrants to the province. Location of Obadiah Place heritage site.

History

See also: Black Canadians

In 1909, a group of 160[2] African American settlers led by Parson H. Sneed, a clergyman and mason, settled in an area by the Athabasca River. For the first few years it was difficult for them. They had to cut out an area for planting crops and building houses. The climate is not what they were used to since they came from areas like Oklahoma which had milder winters. The settlers were tough as was their surrounding and three quarters of them stayed.

They built a school house in 1913 and a nondenominational church in 1914. They had a baseball team that was widely known in the north. Amber Valley was the largest community of black people in Alberta until the 1930s.

Beginning in the 1950s, many descendants of the original settlers began moving to near cities such as Edmonton to escape rural life. In Edmonton, many Amber Valley descendants founded the Shiloh Baptist Church, one of few black churches in Western Canada.[3]

Popular Interest

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.