Swift Current–Battleford Trail Explained

Swift Current–Battleford Trail
Map Type:Saskatchewan#Canada
Map Relief:y
Established:1883
Location:Swift Current, Saskatchewan
Coordinates:50.3019°N -107.8051°W
Type:Historic Trail

The 300km (200miles) Swift Current–Battleford Trail was an important late-19th century transportation and communications link between settlements of Swift Current and Battleford the result of a brisk trade, in buffalo bones which resulted heavy traffic between the two regions. Because of the large volume of Red River cart traffic, the ruts created during this period are still visible. The historical significance of this resulted in The Battleford Trail becoming a provincial heritage site in 1982.[1]

History

Important sites on the trail

Sixty Mile Bush Outpost Sixty Mile Bush Outpost was an important rest stop on the Swift Current–Battleford Trail. It was close to the current town of Biggar on Township 34, Range 15 West of the 3rd Meridian. It was named Sixty Mile Bush as a result of being about south of Battleford. It served as a NWMP post and a way station for travellers and the stagecoach. Half-way houses were established about every along the trail to supply the stagecoaches with a fresh set of four horses. They were stocked with food and provisions for the winter months for stagecoach stopovers and a rest stop for passengers. In 1910 a few Métis were ranching in the area at which time a Catholic mission was established. Settlers began arriving in the area around 1906 and began laying claims to homesteads. The Sixty Mile Bush Outpost Monument, erected to commemorate the post reads, "This was the site of the sixty mile bush outpost. A stopping place on the Swift Current–Battleford Trail. A log house provided lodging over the trail. Two NWMP were stationed here from 1886 to 1889. The house later became a store for the settlers. A Roman Catholic Church was built at the site in 1906. The settlement disbanded about 1911 after the Grand Trunk Pacific Railroad and the town of Biggar were established."[7]

Battleford Trail Wheel Rut Area The Battleford Trail Wheel Rut Area is located in the city of Swift Current. It consists of a small plot of native grass prairie that contains two deep and parallel Red River cart and wagon wheel ruts. These marks in the ground are the remnants of the historic Swift Current–Battleford Trail and have been designated as a Municipal Heritage Property.[8]

Communities near the trail

Several modern communities exist on or near the original Swift Current–Battleford trail, some of them, like Swift Current and Battleford, existed at the time, while others have grown up along the trail since then.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Walk retracing historical Swift Current – Battleford Trail route The Southwest Booster. Anderson. Scott. en-US. 2019-04-07.
  2. Web site: Trail Walk from Swift Current to Battleford - Westcentralonline.com. www.westcentralonline.com. 2019-04-07.
  3. Web site: Trail walk to remember Battlefords area history. News. battlefordsNOW North Battleford, Saskatchewan News, Sports, Weather, Obituaries, Classifieds. en. 2019-04-07.
  4. Web site: The Battleford Trail. www.forgottenlives.ca. 2019-04-07.
  5. Web site: Saskatchewan History and Folklore Society - Trail Walk 2017. 2017-10-10. www.shfs.ca. en. 2019-04-07.
  6. Web site: Battleford Trail somethinggrand. en. 2019-04-07.
  7. Web site: Sixty mile bush - Biggar Encyclopaedia. biggarencyclopaedia.wikifoundry.com. 2019-04-07.
  8. Web site: HistoricPlaces.ca - HistoricPlaces.ca. www.historicplaces.ca. 2019-04-07.