The park is named after
William Pearce (1848–1930), who served as the Inspector of Dominion Lands Agencies where he oversaw the "development and allocation of all land, forests, mineral and water resources" from "Winnipeg to the eastern foothills of the Rockies"—representing 400,000 square miles of land. With such influence, he earned the nickname the "Czar of the West". On October 21, 1880, the
Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) signed an agreement with the federal government to build a 1,900 mile-railway from
Kamloops, British Columbia to
Callander, Ontario. The railway was to receive "$25 million and 25 million acres of land 'fairly fit for settlement.'" Pearce convinced the CPR to build the line through Calgary, with the
Bow River watershed used to irrigate lands in southern Alberta.
John Palliser who led the 1857-1859 British
Palliser expedition to Western Canada, and for whom the
Palliser's Triangle was named, had said the land was "unfit for settlement." By 1915, Pearce's vision of a vast irrigation system had been realized; land that Palliser thought would never support settlement, was "fertile and valuable". A 1915 article in
Scientific American described it as "America’s Greatest Irrigation Project." According to E.J. (Ted) Hart, director of the
Whyte Museum in Banff, who is the author of "several histories" of the Bow River watershed region, the "irrigation history of the Bow is one of the great industrial projects of Canada’s history. It created an economy out of an area that was considered useless." Pearce moved to
Calgary, Alberta in 1884 and worked for twenty years for the CPR. A year before he died he donated his estate in the southeast of Calgary, which occupied about in a curve along the Bow River as it flows through the city. Pearce's land, on which the Pearce Estate Park is situated, was "devoted to experimental methods." Before Pearce owned the wetlands, they were once part of a "riverine forest complex". Pearce used some of the land for agriculture. Pearce "believed in urban parks" and he "is the reason so much of the Bow remains accessible" to the public as it runs through the city core. In 2004, the city opened the newly developed wetland area and
interpretive trail to the public. ==Features==