Morley, Alberta

Morley
Settlement

Location of Morley in Alberta

Coordinates: 51°09′42″N 114°51′03″W / 51.16153°N 114.85095°W / 51.16153; -114.85095Coordinates: 51°09′42″N 114°51′03″W / 51.16153°N 114.85095°W / 51.16153; -114.85095
Country  Canada
Province  Alberta
Census division No. 15
Government
  Type Unincorporated
Elevation 1,240 m (4,070 ft)
Time zone MST (UTC-7)

Morley is a First Nations settlement within the Stoney 142/143/144 Indian reserve in southern Alberta, Canada. It is located along the Canadian Pacific Railway between the Trans-Canada Highway and the Bow River, upstream from Ghost Lake. It has an elevation of 1,240 metres (4,070 ft). The settlement is located in census division No. 15 and in the federal riding of Wild Rose. The settlement and the Indian reserve are part of the Stoney Nation.

The historic McDougall Memorial United Church is located a few miles from Morley. Built in 1875, it is southern Alberta's oldest surviving Protestant church and the oldest remaining structure in the Bow Valley. It was once a part of Morleyville, the oldest pioneer settlement in southern Alberta and home to its first herd of breeding cattle. Founded by the Methodist missionary George McDougall and his sons as a missionary outpost, Morleyville existed until 1921 when a new church was built in the present settlement of Morley, which had developed around the Morley Indian Agency building. The old church is now a provincial historic site. Other milestones in the settlement's history include the construction at Morley in 1920 of the first airport established by the Canada Air Board and the 1969 establishment of Canada's first magistrate's court to be held in a First Nations owned building on First Nations land.

History

Settlement in the Morley area began with the arrival of the Methodist missionary John McDougall and his wife in 1873 to establish a missionary outpost in the Bow Valley for outreach to the Nakoda (Stoney) and Siksika (Blackfoot) First Nations.[1] They founded the mission at the request of John's father, George McDougall, the superintendent of Methodist missionary work in western Canada.[1] The site John chose was originally called Ghost River,[2] but he renamed it Morleyville in honour of his friend Morley Punshon, an Ontario doctor.[1][3]

John McDougall and his wife began their work by constructing a two room log shack with a sod roof for themselves and a small church. Shortly thereafter, the McDougalls moved their fledgling outpost to a new site to the south, closer to the river.[2] In 1875, they built a larger church with the help of George McDougall and Andrew Sibbald, a carpenter and teacher.[1] Logs and boards laboriously fashioned from local timber with a whipsaw were used to build the one room church. Aside from the framed gable ends, the exterior surface of the log walls remained unfinished, but the interior surfaces were daubed with mud and painted white, except for the paneled end walls.[2][4] Around 1900, the log walls were covered with board-and-batten siding and a steeple was built.[1] It is southern Alberta's oldest remaining Protestant church, the oldest remaining structure in the Bow Valley, and is the province's earliest example of a building constructed in the carpenter gothic style still standing at the place of its original construction.[1][5]

David McDougall later joined his brother John at Morleyville and helped to found the Indian Trading Post.[2] In its early days, some seven hundred First Nations people visited the post to barter animal skins for food, blankets, stockings, and prints.[6] The homes and the trading post were enclosed by a stockade of heavy logs erected to provide defense in case a party of First Nations warriors attempted a raid.[2] The outpost became a hub for settlers coming into the Bow Valley and reached a population of over two hundred at its peak; Morleyville was southern Alberta's first pioneer settlement.[1][5] A school, orphanage, missionary residences, barns and corrals were built. Southern Alberta's first herd of breeding cattle supplied Morleyville's residents with meat and milk.[5] Sibbald, one of Alberta's first trained teachers, taught at the school.[5]

An Indian residential school operated by the Methodists was located in Morley from 1886 until 1949.[7] A school textbook was published for teaching English to the students residing there.[8] This textbook makes reference to Morley and McDougall.

Morleyville's early prominence declined in the 1880s after the Canadian Pacific transcontinental railroad bypassed the settlement as it was routed through the valley on the opposite side of the Bow River.[5] John McDougall and his wife remained there until their retirement to Calgary in 1898.[2] The church remained in use until 1921 when it was replaced by a new church located a few miles away at a First Nations settlement that developed around an Indian Agency building.[4] This newer settlement is the present-day Morley. The old settlement and its church stood abandoned until volunteers affiliated with the United Church of Canada formed the Morley Church Restoration Society.[1] Work was completed in 1952 and the restored church continues to be used for weddings and special occasions.[4] The building has been declared a provincial historic site and is listed in the Canadian Register of Historic Places; a historical marker at the site describes its significance.[1][5] The McDougall Stoney Mission Society currently maintains the church and the surrounding fifty acres of ecologically significant native prairie that has never been disturbed by agricultural activities.[1]

The first airport and test station to be established by the Canada Air Board began operation at Morley in 1920. It was equipped with six Airco DH.9A aircraft used for aerial reconnaissance of Banff National Park, forestry ranging in the Rocky Mountain Foothills, and aerial firefighting.[9]

In 1969, Morley hosted the first magistrate's court in Canada to be held in a First Nations owned building located on First Nations land.[10]

Demographics

Statistics Canada has not recently published a population for Morley.

However, Industry Canada shows that Morley's greater rural area had a total population of 35 living in 8 dwellings in 2001. With a land area of 58.2 km2 (22.5 sq mi), its greater rural area has a population density of 15.0/km2 (39/sq mi).[11]

Notable people

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Alexander, Rob (2012-08-02). "McDougall church connects to broader Alberta story". Rocky Mountain Outlook. Canmore, Alberta. Retrieved 2012-11-14.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Mrs. McDougall Dies". Calgary Herald. Calgary, Alberta. 1941-03-31. p. 2. Retrieved 2012-11-14.
  3. Curtis, Linda (1955-07-18). "Son of Famous Missionary Has Name of His Birthplace". Calgary Herald. Calgary, Alberta. p. 6. Retrieved 2012-11-14.
  4. 1 2 3 Liverant, Bettina (1986-06-14). "Tiny Morley church keeps historic trappings". Calgary Herald. Calgary, Alberta. p. A14. Retrieved 2012-11-14.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "McDougall Memorial United Church". Canada's Historic Places. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  6. "Morley Trading Post Link With Old West". Calgary Herald. Calgary, Alberta. 1946-04-01. p. 9. Retrieved 2012-11-14.
  7. http://www.residentialschoolsettlement.ca/schools.html#Alberta
  8. https://archive.org/details/cihm_30552
  9. "First Air Harbor in Alberta will open at Morley". Edmonton Journal. Edmonton, Alberta. 1920-02-26. p. 1. Retrieved 2012-11-14.
  10. Hogg, Carol (1969-09-13). "Morley Band Makes History; Court To Be Held On Reserve". Calgary Herald. Calgary, Alberta. p. 55. Retrieved 2012-11-14.
  11. Industry Canada/Web Archive (2006-11-04). "Morley - Community demographics (2001 census)". Retrieved 2010-02-07.
  12. John Niddrie - Alberta Online Encyclopedia, University of Alberta
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