Lethbridge, city, southern Alberta, Canada. It lies on the Oldman River near its junction with the St. Mary River, 135 miles (217 km) south-southeast of Calgary and about 100 miles (160 km) west of Medicine Hat.
Founded in the 1880s as a mining town called Coalbanks, it was renamed Lethbridge for William Lethbridge, president of the Northwest Coal and Navigation Company, upon the arrival of the Canadian Pacific Railway (1885). Over the next 20 years, Lethbridge developed into a major railway junction and became the principal trade and service centre for a large agricultural region. At first, ranching was the main activity on the semiarid plains and foothills, but irrigation greatly increased the region’s productivity. By the early1900s, Lethbridge was becoming the centre of the most extensive irrigation network in Canada, permitting the cultivation of grain, hay, sugar beets, corn (maize), and many specialty crops. The Lethbridge region later became known for intensive beef cattle production.
A replica of Fort Whoop-Up (1860), once notorious for its whisky trade with the Indians, stands in Indian Battle Park on the Oldman River. The park marks the site of the last great encounter (1870) between the Cree and the Blackfoot Indians prior to a peace treaty (1871). In July the city holds the annual Whoop-Up Days exhibition and rodeo. The park is part of a string of green spaces in the city on both sides of the Oldman. Nikka Yuko Japanese Garden (created 1967), in the southern part of Lethbridge on Henderson Lake, is one of the largest authentic Japanese gardens in North America. The University of Lethbridge was founded in 1967 and Lethbridge College in 1957. Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump archaeological site, designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1981, is about 45 miles (72 km) west of Lethbridge near Fort Macleod. Inc. town, 1891; city, 1906. Pop. (2006) 74,685; (2011) 83,517.