Medicine Hat, Alberta, is also known as
the Gas City thanks to its vast reserves of natural gas. Rudyard Kipling
famously described it as "the city with all hell for a basement".
Attractions
• The
Medicine Hat Tourism office can be reached at 800-481-2822.
• Like many smaller prairie towns, Medicine Hat has a "largest" something.
The World's Largest Teepee was originally constructed for the 1988
Winter Olympic games in Calgary. The city has added original First Nations
artwork to the interior panels. There was once a small gift shop adjacent to
the site, which has been removed.
• Downtown Medicine Hat is lit with 277 old-fashioned gas lights
that burn around the clock.
• Saint Patrick's Church is one of the largest continuously-poured
concrete structures in the world, and a Heritage Site. It's a good example
of "Gothic Revival" architecture
• The city has opened a multi-million dollar arts and heritage center
called The Esplanade, which houses the municipal museum, an art
gallery, and a state-of-the-art performance space for touring and local
productions, concerts, etc.
• *Medicine Hat
Clay Industries National Historic District, 713 Medalta Avenue SE;
529–1070, Fax: 580–5868. May 14 Through September 5, 2005 9:30 To 5:00,
daily. A rich abundance of fine clay made Medicine Hat a center for
industrial cermaics. Most of the businesses are gone but the area has been
set aside as a historic district. The district features examples of over
20,000 pieces of ceramic and pottery as well as a guided tour of the
facilities and watching resident artists at work. Adults $6.00, Seniors 65 +
$5.00, Youths 7 - 16 $5.00, Children 6 & under Free, Family Day Pass $25.00,
2005 Family Season Pass $45.00.
Activities
• "Hatters" are proud supporters of their local WHL hockey team,
the Medicine Hat Tigers. The games are fun and inexpensive, but tickets sell
out within days of the season opener. An arena of 4006 houses some 3800
season ticket holders, leaving precious few remaining tickets to be snapped
up. Girls who become regulars at the games are referred to as "Tiger Tails".
• There is a permanent pottery exhibition at the Clay Products
Interpretive Centre, which houses the "Great Wall of China" (referring to
the ceramic China, as opposed to the country). Medicine Hat was the home of
both Medalta Pottery and Hycroft China, two of the most important industrial
pottery factories in the early twentieth century.
• Downtown Walking Tour; Maps for a self-guided walking tour
can be found at the Tourism Office. Free
Shopping
Medicine Hat obviously isn't a large metropolis, and downtown Medicine
Hat does not offer megastores with an excellent variety at excellent prices.
However, if you'll put your big-city condescension away for a minute, you'll
find it to be funky, hip and small-town sincere. Especially look for second
hand stores, which have yet to be picked over.
Get out
• Elkwater Provincial Park, Cypress Hills
•
Echo
Dale Regional Park ; West of Medicine Hat; 527-7344; Site of
restored 1887 house, a blacksmith shop and a coal mine.
•
Dinosaur Provincial Park ; 107 kilometers northwest of Medicine Hat
on Trans-Canada Highway 1; 378-4342; Hiking and guided tours through fossil
beds. The Park is designated as a World Heritage Site. Adults - $8, Children
(7-17) - $6
History
The town's name comes from the word Saamis, which is a native word that
means Medicine Man's Hat. According to the 1983 centennial song "Hats Off to
100 Years!":
In eighteen-eighty-three, the Blackfoot fought the Cree
in a battle raging on near the South Saskatchewan.
In a ritual of defeat, the Medicine Man fell to the ground
and laid his feathered headdress down as a legend for our town.
Links
City of Medicine Hat
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Steamer at Medicine Hat, c.1884
Get in
You'll probably arrive in Medicine Hat on the TransCanada Highway
(the #1), which is the principal highway crossing Canada. If you're
travelling across Canada by car, you're almost certain to pass through this
city. Alternatively, you can fly into the city from Calgary. Given the time
that it takes to transfer within the airport, check in luggage and board
(plus the inevitable delays that often accompany small planes), voyagers
almost always better off going by car, bus or shuttle.
Get around
Medicine Hat buses run regularly 6:45am to 10:30 pm Monday through
Friday, 10:45am to 10:45pm Saturday. It is important to note that you need
to telephone Transit Dispatch (529-8214) in order to schedule a pick-up
after peak hours (6:45pm). They will ask for your name and telephone number,
and tell you what time your bus will pass by your stop. All passengers must
wear shirts and shoes. Transit does not provide any service on Sundays and
Holidays.

Cottonwood Golf and Country Club
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