Rosebud, Alberta is a hamlet located in southern Alberta, about 100 km east of Calgary. Southern Alberta is a region located in the Canadian province of Alberta. Calgary (ˈkælgəriː is the largest city in the Province of Alberta, Canada It is located in the County of Wheatland. Wheatland County is a Municipal district in south-central Alberta, Canada, east of Calgary. The nearest city is Drumheller, about 30 minutes east. Drumheller is a town (formerly a city on the Red Deer River in the Badlands of east-central Alberta,
Rosebud sits in a sheltered river valley on the Rosebud River near the edge of the Canadian Badlands. This area was called Akokiniskway by the Blackfoot people, which translates roughly to "by the river of many roses". The Blackfoot Confederacy or Niitsítapi (meaning "original people" c
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The hamlet was founded in the 1885 by James Wishart. While following the Gleichen Trail to Montana with his family, they awoke to the river valley covered by wild roses, Alberta's official flower. Alberta (ælˈbɝtə is one of Canada's prairie provinces. It became a province on September 1 1905 Wishart then reportedly said, "Here's the promised land, we go no further. "[1]
The beauty of the valley has attracted many people throughout the years, from nature lovers to artists. Notable artists A. Y. Jackson and H. Alexander Young Jackson, CC, CMG (October 3 1882 in Montreal Quebec – April 5 1974 in Kleinburg Ontario) was a Canadian G. Glyde, members of the Group of Seven, spent a summer in 1944 painting in the area. The Group of Seven was a group of Canadian landscape painters in the 1920s originally consisting of Franklin Carmichael, Lawren Harris [2]
Over the years, farming and coal mining have been the primary industries. In 1972 the Severn Creek School was shut down as part of an Alberta wide education consolidating process and local children were bused to Standard and Drumheller. Standard is a village located in the southern part of the province of Alberta, Canada. This resulted in many of the local businesses being closed and the hamlet population dropped to under a dozen people. However, the farming community of around 400 still supported three elevators and a seed cleaning plant.
Easter 1973, a group of young adults from Calgary brought about 40 teenagers out and camped in the now empty mercantile. This pilot event evolved into a summer camp initially funded by a grant from the Alberta government and then supported as Rosebud Camp of the Arts by Crescent Heights Baptist Church in Calgary. The Executive Council of Alberta (informally and more commonly the Cabinet of Alberta) is the cabinet of that Canadian province. In 1977 a high school was founded using the old buildings of the town as classrooms and emphasizing practical, visual, music and the performing arts in its curriculum. In the 1980s, Rosebud School of the Arts began to run theatre, which eventually developed into Rosebud Theatre and the school shifted its emphasis to post-secondary education. Rosebud School of the Arts is a post-secondary guild school that provides Theatre training within a community of professional artists Rosebud Theatre, located in the hamlet of Rosebud Alberta, Canada is the only professional rural theatre in Alberta.
Currently the primary industries within the hamlet are tourism and the arts. Agriculture along with oil and gas production are significant industries in the surrounding area.
The current population is about 80 permanent residents. With the influx of students at Rosebud School of the Arts, the population changes throughout the year with a high of about 115.