Der Hous Inspector
Home Inspections in Moose Jaw & Regina, Saskatchewan and surrounding cities.
306 - 684 - 1748
|
||
|
Regina Saskatchewan Home Inspector InspectionAs a home inspector I have visited many communities to perform home inspections. I have wondered about the histories of these cities, and decided I would provide a page about them. Regina is the capital of Saskatchewan and one city where I perform home inspections. I offer this page to give people a place to gather information about Regina, Saskatchewan, the history of Regina and other websites that may be of interest. Hiring a Regina home inspector can be a challenge; Der Hous Inspector LLC is your choice. Hundreds of years ago, the plains region of southern Saskatchewan was home to thousands of native Indians who lived off the land and the large numbers of buffalo that roamed here. The river was ideal for capturing and then killing buffalo. The meat was then washed and left to dry on the flat ground and the bones were piled up. When Colonel Palliser arrived in 1857, he heard the Cree name, and called the river Wascana. In the early days, the settlement was called Pile-o-Bones. After the 1876 Battle of Little Big Horn in Montana (where General Custer and his troops were wiped out), the North West Mounted Police met with the natives shortly after they crossed into Canada and gave the natives ammunition for hunting purposes, so they could hunt the buffalo herds in the area. But many starved from lack of food. In 1882, the Northwest Mounted Police Barracks were built as a base to police the border with the United States and the increasing number of settlers in the area. It was the headquarters of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police from 1885-1920. Today, the only training academy for the royal regiment is still located in Regina. The town of Pile-O-Bones was a thriving western settlement, but was finally renamed in 1883 by Princess Louise, the wife of Canada’s Governor General, in honor of her mother Queen Victoria. The building of the trans-continental railroad changed the city's landscape, making the vast Saskatchewan prairie accessible to thousands of new immigrant-farmers. In 1884, Regina had 400 buildings and a population of around 1,000. In 1886 the transcontinental railroad began carrying passengers and freight to the Pacific Ocean, and the city began to grow quickly, as it was a jumping off point for new settlers in the area. The city became a major commercial center as agricultural goods were sold for eastern consumption, and the farmers bought manufactured goods, brought from the east by the railroad. Later potash, which is used in fertilizer, was found near Melville. On May 23, 1906 it was declared that Regina would be the provincial capital. In the early years of the 1900s, Regina grew quickly. On June 30, 1912 a tornado roared through the young city, killing 28, destroying over 400 buildings, leaving 2500 people homeless, causing total damage of over $5 million. Much of the downtown was rebuilt in the next two years. After World War II, significant reserves of oil were found in Saskatchewan, both in the northwest around Lloydminster, and the east around Estevan. This broadened the resource base of the province away from agriculture and potash. Regina also benefited from the surge of European immigrants after the War, and doubled in size in the post-war era. Today the population is just over 200,000 people. Information provided by www.reginakiosk.ca/history.php For more information about Regina Saskatchewan, visit the following sites. Saskatchewan Home Inspector performing home inspections in Moose Jaw, Regina, White City, Pilot Butte, Belle Plaine, Tuxford, Herbert, Gravelbourg, Assinaboia, Swift Current, Weyburn, Estevan, Indian Head, Wosley, Fyfe Lake, Milestone, Yellow Grass, Lampman, Craven, Bethune, Wilcox, Lang, Briercrest, Rockglen, Sedley, Lumsden.
|
Home Inspection News
Moose Jaw Times Herald |