North Fork Road Explained

North Fork Road
Location:North Fork drainage, Fish Creek to Kintla Lake, Glacier NP, West Glacier, Montana
Coordinates:48.5481°N -113.9864°W
Architect:NPS Landscape Division
Added:January 19, 1996
Mpsub:Glacier National Park MPS
Refnum:95001572

The North Fork Road in Glacier National Park was built in 1901. The Butte Oil Company constructed a rough wagon road from Lake McDonald to its oil well at Kintla Lake, encouraging the development of the North Fork region. From 1935–1945, the National Park Service developed the road adding culverts and drains. The unpaved road extends nearly forty miles, to the Canada–United States border.[1]

In 1933 a proposal was advanced to extend the road to Canada to connect with a proposed road on the Canadian side of the border that would create a loop around Glacier and Waterton Lakes National Park. No further action was taken, and by the 1950s the plan had been abandoned.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: North Fork Truck Trail. 2008-11-14. List of Classified Structures. National Park Service.
  2. [{{NRHP url|id=02000529}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: North Fork Road]. pdf. June 1995 . Ann Hubber . National Park Service.