Jump to content

Beverly Heights, Edmonton: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
The Anomebot2 (talk | contribs)
Adding geodata: {{coord missing|Canada}}
Replaced content with 'Beverly wants to visit Alberta. I want to go to ALberta. I like the fact that they have Cadillacs there. The Hondas are a turn off.'
Line 1: Line 1:
Beverly wants to visit Alberta. I want to go to ALberta. I like the fact that they have Cadillacs there. The Hondas are a turn off.
{{dablink|For the Town of Beverly, Alberta, see [[Beverly, Alberta]]}}
{{dablink|For the Provincial electoral district, see [[Edmonton Beverly-Clareview]]}}
{{dablink|For other uses of Beverly, see [[Beverly]] and [[Beverley (disambiguation)]].}}

'''Beverly Heights''' is a neighbourhood in east [[Edmonton]], [[Alberta]], [[Canada]]. Originally part of the [[Beverly, Alberta|Town of Beverly]], Beverly Heights became a part of Edmonton in [[1961 in Canada|1961]] when the town amalgamated with Edmonton.

The neighbourhood is bounded on the south by the [[North Saskatchewan River]] valley, on the north by [[Alberta Avenue|118 Avenue]], on the west by 50 Street, and on the east by 34 Street and 36 Street.

There are four schools in Beverly Heights, the Beverly Heights Public School, the Lawton Junior High School, the R.J. Scott Elementary School, and the St. Nicholas Catholic Junior High School.

Lawton Junior High School was the first junior high school in the Town of Beverly, and is named after Percy Benjamin Lawton. Lawton was a teacher, principal, Supervisor of Beverly Schools, and superintendent. He also served briefly as mayor of the Town of Beverly.<ref>"Herzog, Lawrence, "Built on Coal, A History of Beverly, Edmonton's Working Class Town", Beverly Community Development Society, 2000, Edmonton, Alberta.</ref>

The [[cenotaph|Beverly Cenotaph]], originally built to remember the men from Beverly who served and died in [[World War I]], is located in Beverly Heights. The original dedication ceremony was held on October 17, 1920, making the cenotaph the first to be erected in the Edmonton area, and one of the earliest in Alberta. The cenotaph was expanded and rededicated in 1958.<ref>Herzog pp. 99-100</ref>

==Beverly Mines in the Beverly Heights Area==

The Town of Beverly was a [[coal mining]] town with over twenty mines operating in the area during the town's history. The following major mine was active in area of Beverly Heights.

* Bush (Davidson) Mine

==Surrounding Neighborhoods==

{{Canadian City Geographic Location (8-way)
| Northwest = [[Newton, Edmonton|Newton]]
| North = [[Beacon Heights, Edmonton|Beacon Heights]]
| Northeast = [[Abbottsfield, Edmonton|Abbottsfield]]
| West = [[Highlands, Edmonton|Highlands]]
| Centre = Beverly Heights
| East = [[Rundle Heights]]
| Southwest = [[North Saskatchewan River]]
| South = [[North Saskatchewan River]]
| Southeast = [[North Saskatchewan River]]
| image=Edmonton-flag.png
}}

==Notes==
{{reflist}}

{{Edmonton neighborhoods}}

{{coord missing|Canada}}

[[Category:Neighbourhoods in Edmonton]]

{{Edmonton-geo-stub}}

Revision as of 23:26, 1 November 2008

Beverly wants to visit Alberta. I want to go to ALberta. I like the fact that they have Cadillacs there. The Hondas are a turn off.