Sports and recreation
Canadians participate in a wide array of sports and other recreational activities. Sports play an important role in the Canadian school system, largely the result of the country’s well-coordinated network of governmental and nongovernmental agencies devoted to physical education.
Several of the sports played in Canada are derived from those of the Indigenous peoples or the early settlers. Lacrosse, which had become Canada’s national game by the time of confederation, was played in many parts of the country and adopted by later immigrants. By 1867 definite rules had been established, and the game had become organized. Ice hockey is also Canadian in tradition and leadership. Its exact origins are disputed: one theory traces it to the Irish game of hurling and another to a French field game called hoquet, known in English as field hockey. The game has spread far afield since its rules were first codified in 1875, and it remains one of Canada’s most popular winter sports. The original teams of the National Hockey League were all Canadian, and the league’s champion is awarded the Stanley Cup, which is named for Frederick Arthur, Lord Stanley of Preston, Canada’s governor-general from 1888 to 1893. “Hockey Night in Canada” broadcasts, originating with announcer Foster Hewitt on radio in 1931 and still televised, are popular with millions of Canadians. Many of the game’s best players are Canadians, and Wayne Gretzky and Gordie Howe are widely held to be two of the greatest hockey players of all time. Toronto is home to the Hockey Hall of Fame, founded in 1943.
Other team sports have been more strongly influenced by the United States. The Canadian Football League (CFL) plays a gridiron football game only slightly different from American football in the United States. The annual Grey Cup game that decides the CFL championship has become a national event. Toronto has two teams, the Blue Jays and Raptors, that compete, respectively, in major league baseball and the National Basketball Association. There are even Canadian connections to the origins of baseball and basketball; a version of the former was played as a modified game of rounders in the 1830s near what is now London, Ontario, and the latter was developed by Canadian-born James Naismith while he was working in the United States. Curling, a sport similar to lawn bowls and played on ice, is a popular recreation in Canada, and the national teams are among the most competitive in the world. Other winter sports widely enjoyed by Canadians, as both participants and spectators, include ice skating and downhill and cross-country skiing. Among the many warm-weather recreational activities, fishing, hunting, and canoeing are perhaps most associated with Canada.
The Canadian Olympic Association was founded in 1904 and was officially recognized by the International Olympic Committee in 1907. Canadian athletes have participated in every Olympic Games since 1904 (with the exception of the 1980 Summer Games in Moscow). Montreal hosted the 1976 Summer Games and Calgary the 1988 Winter Games; Vancouver was selected as the site of the 2010 Winter Games. Canadian Olympians have excelled in a variety of events, including figure skating, swimming, track and field (athletics), and diving. Although Canada has dominated international ice-hockey competition more than any other sport, the Olympic gold medals won by the men’s and women’s teams in 2002 were the country’s first since 1952.
Canada’s vast national park system, which extends from coast to coast, began around the hot springs centred in Banff National Park (established in 1885) in Alberta. Tourists from the United States and elsewhere and Canadian vacationers are attracted to the park sites throughout the year to view the striking natural scenery and to partake of the numerous recreational activities offered. Many of the parks, including those in the Canadian Rockies, have been designated World Heritage sites. Alberta’s Waterton Lakes National Park was joined to Montana’s Glacier National Park in 1932 to form the world’s first binational park. There are also extensive provincial park systems, with one (Cypress Hills) straddling the Alberta-Saskatchewan border. Auyuittuq National Park in Nunavut is the country’s largest and one of the few national parks in the world above the Arctic Circle.
In 1919 the federal government established the Historic Sites and Monuments Board to advise on matters of national historic importance, with particular reference to commemoration or preservation. Most of the national historic parks are military or fur-trading forts, historic buildings, or reconstructions of historic buildings; most have museums. They range from Cape Breton’s Fortress of Louisbourg to the boyhood home of former prime minister W.L. Mackenzie King in Ottawa and a reconstructed theatre of the gold-rush days in Dawson, Yukon. Two are preserved Yukon riverboats. The provinces have similar preservation policies. In the west many of the marked sites, such as Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump in Alberta, commemorate Indigenous cultures past and present. Several provinces have restored or reconstructed pioneer communities. British Columbia’s first provincial historic park was the restored gold-mining town of Barkerville. In Ontario, Sainte-Marie, the headquarters of the Jesuit mission to the Huron people in the 17th century, has been restored.