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・ Canada's History
・ Canada's Hundred Days
・ Canada's Largest Ribfest
・ Canada's National Ballet School
・ Canada's National History Society
・ Canada's New Government
・ Canada's Next Great Prime Minister
・ Canada's Next Top Model
・ Canada's Next Top Model (cycle 1)
・ Canada's Next Top Model (cycle 2)
・ Canada's Next Top Model (cycle 3)
・ Canada's Northern House
・ Canada's Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium
・ Canada's role in the Afghanistan War
・ Canada's Smartest Person
Canada's Sports Hall of Fame
・ Canada's Stonehenge
・ Canada's Story
・ Canada's Technology Triangle
・ Canada's Top 100 Employers
・ Canada's Top 20 Countdown
・ Canada's Walk of Fame
・ Canada's Wonderland
・ Canada's World
・ Canada's Worst Driver
・ Canada's Worst Driver (season 1)
・ Canada's Worst Driver 10
・ Canada's Worst Driver 11
・ Canada's Worst Driver 2
・ Canada's Worst Driver 3


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Canada's Sports Hall of Fame : ウィキペディア英語版
Canada's Sports Hall of Fame

Canada's Sports Hall of Fame is a hall of fame established in 1955 to "preserve the record of Canadian sports achievements and to promote a greater awareness of Canada's heritage of sport."〔(The Canadian Encyclopedia )〕 It is located at Canada Olympic Park in Calgary, Alberta. There are 548 honoured members of the hall.
==History==

The Hall, first known as the ''Canadian Sports Hall of Fame'', was founded in 1955 through the efforts of Harry I. Price, a former assistant athletics commissioner of Ontario.〔 It was first housed in the Stanley Barracks, located in Toronto on the grounds of Exhibition Place. It moved in 1961 to a wing of a new building shared with the Hockey Hall of Fame. The Hockey Hall of Fame moved out in 1993, leaving the building to the Sports Hall of Fame. Without the Hockey Hall of Fame, attendance declined and the Sports Hall made plans to move to Ottawa. The move to Ottawa never took place, because the venues promised for the Hall by the federal government were allocated for other uses, and the move eventually was cancelled.
In 2006, the Hall of Fame building was demolished to make way for BMO Field and the collection moved to the Stanley Barracks in preparation for an opening in some new location. One facade, which incorporated a tile mosaic, was incorporated into the BMO Field structure. Nine cities across the country bid for the right to host the new hall, and in 2008, a proposed site at Canada Olympic Park in Calgary was chosen. The new facility opened on Canada Day, July 1, 2011. It has 11 galleries and numerous interactive displays.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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