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While posted on the Thompson River to search for train robbers, S/Cst. Decker ordered two brothers on a boat to come ashore. During an altercation, S/Cst. Decker fired, killing David Haney, but was shot and killed by William Haney. Despite an intensive search, William Haney was never found. Constable John Hallworth Jr. Canadian Pacific Police ...
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N2Deep is an American Chicano rap duo formed in Vallejo, California in 1989. Consisting of James "Jay Tee" Trujillo and Timothy "TL" Lyon, they are best known for the 1992 hit single "Back to the Hotel", the title track of their debut album.
The County of Paintearth No. 18 is a municipal district in east central Alberta, Canada, located in Census Division No. 7. Its municipal office is located southeast of the Town of Castor near the intersection of Highway 12 and Highway 36.
Battle River is a river in central Alberta and western Saskatchewan, Canada. It is a major tributary of the North Saskatchewan River. [3] [4] The Battle River flows for 570 kilometres (350 mi) and drains a total area of 30,300 square kilometres (11,700 sq mi). Its mean discharge at the mouth is 10 m³/s. [5]
The 1935 Royal Canadian Mounted Police Killings were a series of murders of three Royal Canadian Mounted Police and one local constable from 5–8 October 1935. They began with the murders of Benito Constable William Wainwright and RCMP Constable John Shaw near Pelly, Saskatchewan, by three Doukhobor men who had been in the custody of the officers. [1]
Bad Heart River; Battle Creek (Milk River tributary) Battle River; Beaver River (Canada) Belly River; Berland River; Bighorn River (Alberta) Birch River (Alberta) Blackstone River (Alberta) Blindman River; Boundary Creek (Alberta–Montana) Bow River; Boyer River (Alberta) Brazeau River
The area was also the site of several confrontations between Cree and Blackfoot tribes, giving rise to the name Battle River. At the time of Canadian Confederation in 1867, Alberta was still owned by the Hudson's Bay Company , and European missionaries spread Christianity through the native tribes.