Fort Chipewyan , commonly referred to as Fort Chip, is an unincorporated hamlet in northern Alberta, Canada, within the Regional Municipality (RM) of Wood Buffalo.
One of the founders of the fort, Roderick Mackenzie of Terrebonne, had a taste for literature. Later he opened correspondence with traders all over the north and west, asking for descriptions of scenery, adventure, folklore and history. He also founded a library at the fort that was not only for the residents of Fort Chipewyan, but also for traders and clerks of the whole Lake Athabasca region. He hoped it would be what he called, in an imaginative and somewhat jocular vein, "the little Athens of the Arctic regions." This library, started in 1790, held more than 2000 books.Ft. Chipewyan Bicentennial Museum, 2013, It became one of the most famous in the whole extent of Rupert's Land.
In 1798, Fort Chipewyan was relocated to its current site on the north shore. In 1802, the HBC set up another post on English Island at the lake's outlet, called Nottingham House, but was abandoned in 1806.
From about 1815 to 1821 the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) operated a competing Fort Wedderburn (named after Andrew Colvile's family) on Coal or Potato Island from the North West Company's fort. This fort was established by John Clarke, and Sir George Simpson stayed here 1820–1821, during which time he reorganized the fur trade. When the HBC and NWC merged in 1821, Fort Wedderburn was abandoned and all HBC's fur-trade operations moved to Fort Chipewyan.
Sir John Franklin set out from Fort Chipewyan on his overland Arctic journey in 1820.
In 1887–1888 there was a great famine in the Fort Chipewan area. Electricity and electric lights arrived in Fort Chipewyan in 1959.
In 2023 about a thousand people were evacuated from the centre due to threat by a wildfire.[1]
Historic places in the community include the site of the third Fort Chipewyan established in 1803, the Anglican Church built in 1880 and Day School built in 1874, and the Roman Catholic Mission Church built in 1909.
The population of Fort Chipewyan according to the 2018 municipal census conducted by the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo is 918, a decrease from its 2012 municipal census population count of 1,008.
As a designated place in the 2016 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Fort Chipewyan had a population of 852 living in 295 of its 372 total private dwellings, a change of from its 2011 population of 847. With a land area of , it had a population density of in 2016.
The hamlet's population is predominantly made up of Cree and Chipewyan (Dene) First Nations and Métis people.
The table below shows the mean daily global insolation (kWh/m2) in Fort Chipewyan for each month of the year using five different fixed solar array orientations and one which tracks the sun. The data was provided by Natural Resources Canada's Municipality database of photovoltaic potential and insolation which used data collected over 50 years from 144 locations compiled from Environment Canada's CERES CD.
Phase 1 was planned to include 1,500 panels (400 kW) but was reported at the project completion as a 600 kW facility, while phase 2 was planned include 6,000 panels and was reported at the project completion to include 5,760 panels with the planned output of 2,200 kW. The Government of Canada provided $4.5M and the Government of Alberta provided $3.3M of the project's $7.8M cost.
ATCO will buy the solar farm's energy under a long-term purchase agreement and supply it to the local power grid, which is disconnected from the province-wide grid. ATCO stated that with the completion of the 2.2 MW-capacity project, about 25 fewer tanker trucks will trek across the winter ice road connecting the community with Fort McMurray, 220 kilometres to the south. In the summer, the community is only accessible by air or barge.
Historic sites
Geography
Climate
Demographics
Transportation
Air
Water
Road
Solar energy
+ Mean daily global insolation (kWh/m2) in Fort Chipewyan
! Month !! South facing (tilt = vertical) !! South facing (tilt = latitude) !! South facing (tilt = lat+15o !! South facing (tilt = lat-15o !! Two-axis sun-tracking !! Horizontal (tilt=0o) 0.56 1.42 3.02 4.71 5.82 6.23 5.82 4.5 2.8 1.49 0.65 0.34 3.12
Fort Chipewyan Solar Farm
See also
Notes
External links
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