Yoho National Park Map 2020

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Yoho National Park Map 2020 Visitor centre HI-Whiskey Jack Hostel YOHO NATIONAL PARK Parking Alpine Club of Canada Hut Washrooms Backcountry lodge Wi-Fi Red chairs T HE G Picnic area Hiking trail R E A T Viewpoint Hiking and biking trail (e-bikes D allowed) IV Parks Canada station Amiskwi WAPTA ICEFIELD I Pass D Highway 1 996 m E Lake O’Hara bus Mt Gordon Road YOHO GLACIER Backcountry campground Park boundary Campground Mt Des Poilus (rst-come, rst-serve) Road with no Balfour Pass cell phone coverage 2 454 m Campground (reservable and rst-come, rst-serve) No left-hand turn at intersection Yoho Peak GLACIER DES POILUS Mt Balfour Cell phone coverage is not reliable in many areas of the park. Isolated Twin Mt McArthur Peak Falls 26 19 3 015 m Laughing WAPUTIK 3.8 6.5 Falls ICEFIELD Y 2.1 o Amiskwi Peak 2.9 h 27 o R River oho iv Mt Daly Y tle e t Li r 3 152 m 4.4 23 4.8 24 4.2 I 10 Mt Niles C The President E 233 km to Jasper F 3 139 m I Takakkaw DALY E 3.2 L 3 GLACIER D O Kiwetinok Pass Falls Yoho Valley Road: Vehicles over 7 metres S t to EMERALD in length must reverse in order to navigate P C around the tight switchbacks in the road. A r 2.5 R e GLACIER 2.1 No trailers. Open late June to early October, K ek W weather permitting. A Y Mt Carnarvon 3 040 m Yoho Pass 4.0 Paget Peak Sherbrooke Mt Bosworth Continental 93 3.0 Wapta 2 565 m 15 4.8 Lake Divide Mountain Mt Ogden Hamilton 7 16 Kicking Horse Pass Destinations in the area 18 2 695 m 1 627 m Mt. Horsey Lake 6.1 are very popular. Parking Upper 1 at Emerald Lake and Spiral 1.7 2 Emerald 2.1 1.8 LAKE Takakkaw Falls is limited 17 Tunnel 1.4 8 9 1.3 and lls quickly. Be 5.5 Lake LOUISE 1.6 Viewpoint prepared for crowds. 22 Mt Field 2.5 3.2 Burgess 4 2 635 m 58 km to Banff 3 6.8 Wapta A Pass Ross Spike Peak m Hamilton 2 5 Lake i 1.5 Lake sk w Falls i 1 Narao Tocher Ridge R Spiral iv E Peak e m Tunnels r BANFF e Mt Burgess r a 7.3 l 2 599 m d k NATIONAL 7.7 o R o i r v PARK e B r T t O a c l 3.0 il tt l ra Mt Stephen a y r er Ho T Cathedral h 3 199 m a e t ad Mountain a 1.8 C R FIELD 3 189 m (no vehicle or cycle access) iv 6 Lake O'Hara Fire Road 11 km er 1 256 m Mt Victoria Van Horne Range Natural il Bridge Duchesnay a r 11 T Mt Dennis Basin Abbot Pass e s 2 539 m r o Lake 4.5 H Mt Lefroy O’Hara g in k Mt Odaray Reservations and payment are c i Mt Duchesnay K 3 159 m required to take the bus to Lake P O'Hara for day use and camping. o Mt King rc 1 u parkscanada.gc.ca/lakeohara p in e Opabin Pass C Lake Hungabee re McArthur Mountain e McArthur Pass k r 3 493 m e v i Ottertail Trail Mt Owen R Park 3 087 m e Mt Mt Biddle s r k o 3 319 m O e H t e 16.2 te r Wenkchemna Pass g r t C a n i il r k R u c i h i v e t r K r 21 A ALBERTA c M Mt Hunter COLUMBIABRITISH Mt Hurd 1 27 km to Golden T Finn Creek RAN SCA NAD Mt Vaux A H 3 319 m KOOTENAY IGH Ottertail WA HANBURY Y GLACIER 28 Falls NATIONAL Be 13 av 2.4 k e e r f Faeder Lake e PARK o r 8.9 o Park gate Please note some trailheads C t R r and picnic areas are only o 3.6 i a s d signed and accessible from 12 2.6 d k o Goodsir Pass one direction on the ee o Cr 2 201 m TransCanada Highway. 14 o G do Left hand turns are only allowed oo H Chancellor Peak at signed intersections. 4 3 280 m 4.0 2.0 Goodsir Tower 2.3 I 3 562 m c Wapta e Hiking trails Easy Moderate Difcult Falls 1 R i v e r 1 Wapta Falls 14 Hoodoos 2 Emerald Lake 15 Emerald Basin 3 Hamilton Falls 16 Paget Lookout 4 Centennial 17 Hamilton Lake 5 Walk-in-the-Past 18 Yoho Pass 6 Kicking Horse to Amiskwi 19 Twin Falls 7 Sherbrooke Lake 21 Ottertail Valley to McArthur 8 Great Divide 22 Emerald Triangle Be ave 9 Ross Lake 23 Iceline via Little Yoho rfoo t R iv 10 Laughing Falls 24 Iceline via Celeste Lake e r 11 Kicking Horse to Otterhead 26 Whaleback 12 Mt. Hunter Lookout 27 Little Yoho Valley Note: distances on map are indicated in kilometres. 13 Mt. Hunter Upper Lookout 28 Goodsir Pass This is not a topographical map and is not suitable for route-nding. Trail information is available on page 7..
Recommended publications
  • Day Hiking Lake Louise, Castle Junction and Icefields Parkway Areas
    CASTLE JUNCTION AREA ICEFIELDS PARKWAY AREA LAKE LOUISE AREA PLAN AHEAD AND PREPARE Remember, you are responsible for your own safety. 1 7 14 Castle Lookout Bow Summit Lookout Wilcox Pass MORAINE LAKE AREA • Get advice from a Parks Canada Visitor Centre. Day Hiking 3.7 km one way; 520 m elevation gain; 3 to 4 hour round trip 2.9 km one way; 245 m elevation gain; 2.5 hour round trip 4 km one way; 335 m elevation gain; 3 to 3.5 hour round trip • Study trail descriptions and maps before starting. Trailhead: 5 km west of Castle Junction on the Bow Valley Parkway Trailhead: Highway 93 North, 40 km north of the Lake Louise junction, Trailhead: Highway 93 North, 47 km north of Saskatchewan Crossing, • Check the weather forecast and current trail conditions. (Highway 1A). at the Peyto Lake parking lot. or 3 km south of the Icefield Centre at the entrance to the Wilcox Creek Trailheads: drive 14 km from Lake Louise along the Moraine Lake Road. • Choose a trail suitable for the least experienced member in Lake Louise, Castle Junction campground in Jasper National Park. Consolation Lake Trailhead: start at the bridge near the Rockpile at your group. In the mid-20th century, Banff erected numerous fire towers From the highest point on the Icefields Parkway (2070 m), Moraine Lake. Pack adequate food, water, clothing, maps and gear. and Icefields Parkway Areas where spotters could detect flames from afar. The Castle Lookout hike beyond the Peyto Lake Viewpoint on the upper self-guided • Rise quickly above treeline to the expansive meadows of this All other trails: begin just beyond the Moraine Lake Lodge Carry a first aid kit and bear spray.
    [Show full text]
  • Field Townsite
    T HE G R E PHONE NUMBERS A T D YOHO area code (250) IV WAPTA ICEFIELD ID Amiskwi E EMERGENCY NUMBERS Pass YOHO GLACIER Gordon Ambulance 344-6226 Fire 343-6028 Des Poilus Kilometres0510 Miles R.C.M.Police 344-2221 Balfour Pass 0 5 WARDENS GLACIER (403) 762-4506 (24 hours) DES POILUS Yoho Balfour Peak OTHER NUMBERS to Jasper Yoho Information Centre 343-6783 Twin Falls Yoho National Park WAPUTIK Yoho Park Administration 343-6324 (see pages I Isolated Peak Laughing ICEFIELD C McArthur 20/21) E Falls F I Amiskwi E Daly L Yoho River River D le S Litt DALY P Niles Yoho Valley Road A GLACIER R K only open Mid-June W British A The President Takakkaw to Mid-October Y Kwetinook Pass Falls Columbia Alberta O EMERALD 5 t 4 Left-hand turns to GLACIER C Yoho Pass on the Trans-Canada Jasper re Highway are 93 ek Bosworth permitted at signed Banff Yoho Carnarvon Emerald Paget Peak intersections only. JASPER Kootenay Basin Sherbrooke Wapta Lake 1 NATIONAL Hamilton PARK Lake Ogden 2 Horsey Emerald 1A LAKE 6 LOUISE Lake Burgess Jasper Amiskwi River Field Wapta Ross to Town of Banff Pass APM Lake Lake Tocher Ridge Hamilton 3 (85 km from Falls 4 Field) and Spike Peak Narao Peak Kootenay National Emerald River Emerald 3 Park (see pages Burgess 24/25) 1 ? Stephen ALBERTA Cathedral O FIELD Cataract Brook tt er APM Lake O'Hara Fire Road BRITISH he ad BANFF R Victoria COLUMBIA i 5 Duchesnay Van Horne Range ve Abbot NATIONAL r Dennis Basin Pass PARK BANFF Duchesnay Lefroy Lake (p.
    [Show full text]
  • CANADA's MOUNTAIN Rocky Mountain Goats
    CANADA'S MOUNTAIN Rocky Mountain Goats CANADA'S MOUNTAIN PLAYGROUNDS BANFF • JASPER • WATERTON LAKES • YOHO KOOTENAY ° GLACIER • MOUNT REVELSTOKE The National Parks of Canada ANADA'S NATIONAL PARKS are areas The National Parks of Canada may, for C of outstanding beauty and interest that purposes of description, be grouped in three have been set apart by the Federal Govern­ main divisions—the scenic and recreational ment for public use. They were established parks in the mountains of Western Canada; the to maintain the primitive beauty of the land­ scenic, recreational, wild animals, and historic scape, to conserve the native wildlife of the parks of the Prairie Provinces; and the scenic, country, and to preserve sites of national his­ recreational, and historic parks of Eastern Can­ toric interest. As recreational areas they pro­ ada. In these pages will be found descriptions vide ideal surroundings for the enjoyment of of the national parks in the first group—areas outdoor life, and now rank among Canada's which lie within the great mountain regions outstanding tourist attractions. of Alberta and British Columbia. Canada's National Park system teas estab­ * * * lished in 1SS5, when a small area surrounding mineral hot springs at Banff in the Rocky This publication is compiled in co-operation Mountains was reserved as a public posses­ with the National Parks Branch, Department sion. From this beginning has been developed of Northern Affairs and National Resources. the great chain of national playgrounds note Additional information concerning these parks stretching across Canada from the Selkirk may be obtained from the Park Superintend­ Mountains in British Columbia to the Atlantic ents, or from the Canadian Government Travel Coast of Nova Scotia.
    [Show full text]
  • 1961 Climbers Outing in the Icefield Range of the St
    the Mountaineer 1962 Entered as second-class matter, April 8, 1922, at Post Office in Seattle, Wash., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Published monthly and semi-monthly during March and December by THE MOUNTAINEERS, P. 0. Box 122, Seattle 11, Wash. Clubroom is at 523 Pike Street in Seattle. Subscription price is $3.00 per year. The Mountaineers To explore and study the mountains, forests, and watercourses of the Northwest; To gather into permanent form the history and traditions of this region; To preserve by the encouragement of protective legislation or otherwise the natural beauty of Northwest America; To make expeditions into these regions in fulfillment of the above purposes; To encourage a spirit of good fellowship among all lovers of outdoor Zif e. EDITORIAL STAFF Nancy Miller, Editor, Marjorie Wilson, Betty Manning, Winifred Coleman The Mountaineers OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES Robert N. Latz, President Peggy Lawton, Secretary Arthur Bratsberg, Vice-President Edward H. Murray, Treasurer A. L. Crittenden Frank Fickeisen Peggy Lawton John Klos William Marzolf Nancy Miller Morris Moen Roy A. Snider Ira Spring Leon Uziel E. A. Robinson (Ex-Officio) James Geniesse (Everett) J. D. Cockrell (Tacoma) James Pennington (Jr. Representative) OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES : TACOMA BRANCH Nels Bjarke, Chairman Wilma Shannon, Treasurer Harry Connor, Vice Chairman Miles Johnson John Freeman (Ex-Officio) (Jr. Representative) Jack Gallagher James Henriot Edith Goodman George Munday Helen Sohlberg, Secretary OFFICERS: EVERETT BRANCH Jim Geniesse, Chairman Dorothy Philipp, Secretary Ralph Mackey, Treasurer COPYRIGHT 1962 BY THE MOUNTAINEERS The Mountaineer Climbing Code· A climbing party of three is the minimum, unless adequate support is available who have knowledge that the climb is in progress.
    [Show full text]
  • 2007 Sustainability Summary Elk Valley Coal Operations Letter from the President and CEO
    2007 Sustainability Summary Elk Valley Coal Operations letter from the President and CEO in 2007 Elk Valley Coal embarked on a Sustainability includes being transparent process to ensure sustainability is a core about our corporate goals and challenges. value affecting everything we do. Our goal is Preventing injuries and maintaining a healthy for our grandchildren to be proud of us fifty workplace is front and centre. attraction and years from now, because of the manner in retention of quality people for all facets of which we do things today. the activities of our business is a key challenge. being more our Operations are already industry‑leading. proactive in our relationships with our many in February, we were honoured to receive stakeholders through community engagement the 2007 mining and Sustainability award programs is of increasing importance. Public from the mining association of british support through a continued social license to Columbia and the Citation for Excellence in operate and a license to grow is vital to our Coal mine reclamation from the ministry planned extensions of the Elkview, line Creek, of Energy mines and Petroleum resources Fording river and Coal mountain Operations. for the commitment to sustainability principles demonstrated by our Fording river to define our commitment to sustainability Operations. Our challenge is to ensure our as a core business value, we developed six mine Operations consistently perform to Vision and mission statements. Our Vision a uniform standard of excellence, and that is that “Elk Valley Coal will be a leader in we are recognized as a visionary corporate the steelmaking coal industry; trusted and citizen for how we conduct our business.
    [Show full text]
  • Mountain Ear MONTHLY NEWSLETTER of the ROCKY MOUNTAINEERS
    Mountain Ear MONTHLY NEWSLETTER OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINEERS wandMeetings are held on the second Wednesday of each month at 7:30 in the County Commissioner's meeting room on the second floor of the Armex (new portion) ofthe thesoula County Courthouse. Enter the building through the north door. 'Ihis month's meeting will be held on Wednesday, November 9, , i 111 Paul Jason will present a slide show entitled "Backcountry Skiing in Westem Montana, the Canadian Rockies, and the Tetons." Paul will show slides from the Bitterroots, Swans, and Mission Mountains as well as the Canadian Rockies and the Tetons, TRIPCATANTXR 11-13.. Wee day mmountainep-ing trip to 10,052-foot Mount Jackson in Glacier Park. The fmt day will be a pleasant hike/ski to Gunsight Lake where base camp will be made. ?he standard route up the peak is just a scramble, but with a heavy fresh snow cover, it should bi interesting, Other routes also exist. This will be an opportunity to experience some brisk weather in beautiful co~try.Depending on inmest and time ccmstraints,another location or a two-day trip may be substituted. Call Gerald Olbu at 549-4769 for more information, November Ski to 9351-foot St Mary's Peak in the Bitterroots near Florence, This will be a moderate ski trip, Most likely it will be possible to drive to the trailhead, so the trip will be about 4-5 miles and 2800 feet elevation gain to the peak. There is a lookout tower, open to the public, on the summit.
    [Show full text]
  • Getting Around Yoho National Park
    2016-2017 Getting Around Yoho National Park What’s Inside • Top 10 Things to Do • Suggested Itineraries • Maps Également offert en français • Where to Camp • Safety Information P. Zizka P. Connect With Nature K. Smtih K. Smtih OUR STORY During a celebrated expedition to explore the West, Dr. James Hector travelled ahead of the group, and became the rst European to discover a steep mountain pass in 1858. After the surgeon’s trusty steed knocked him over with a blow to the chest, the spectacular route was dubbed Kicking Horse Pass. Later, the Canadian Pacic Railway, whose transcontinental route travelled through the pass, set up restaurants at the base of Mount Stephen to avoid pushing heavy dining cars up the mountain. This laid the groundwork for creating the Mount Stephen Reserve, renamed in 1901 as Yoho National Park. Eight years later, a visiting scientist, Dr. Charles Doolittle Walcott, discovered the Burgess Shale fossils on Mount Wapta. These exquisitely preserved marine organisms offer a glimpse back more than 505 million years ago. With fossils designated as part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site, 36 peaks soaring above 3 000 m, the rambunctious Kicking Horse River and numerous breathtaking waterfalls, it is no surprise Yoho was named after a Cree expression meaning “awe and wonder.” A UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITE Four of the mountain national parks—Banff, Jasper, Yoho and Kootenay—are recognized by the United Nations Educational, Scientic and Cultural Organization as part of the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site, for the benet and enjoyment of all nations. Among the attributes that warranted this designation were vast wilderness, diversity of ora and fauna, outstanding natural beauty and features such as Lake Louise, Maligne Lake, the Columbia Iceeld and the Burgess Shale.
    [Show full text]
  • CP's North American Rail
    2020_CP_NetworkMap_Large_Front_1.6_Final_LowRes.pdf 1 6/5/2020 8:24:47 AM 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Lake CP Railway Mileage Between Cities Rail Industry Index Legend Athabasca AGR Alabama & Gulf Coast Railway ETR Essex Terminal Railway MNRR Minnesota Commercial Railway TCWR Twin Cities & Western Railroad CP Average scale y y y a AMTK Amtrak EXO EXO MRL Montana Rail Link Inc TPLC Toronto Port Lands Company t t y i i er e C on C r v APD Albany Port Railroad FEC Florida East Coast Railway NBR Northern & Bergen Railroad TPW Toledo, Peoria & Western Railway t oon y o ork éal t y t r 0 100 200 300 km r er Y a n t APM Montreal Port Authority FLR Fife Lake Railway NBSR New Brunswick Southern Railway TRR Torch River Rail CP trackage, haulage and commercial rights oit ago r k tland c ding on xico w r r r uébec innipeg Fort Nelson é APNC Appanoose County Community Railroad FMR Forty Mile Railroad NCR Nipissing Central Railway UP Union Pacic e ansas hi alga ancou egina as o dmon hunder B o o Q Det E F K M Minneapolis Mon Mont N Alba Buffalo C C P R Saint John S T T V W APR Alberta Prairie Railway Excursions GEXR Goderich-Exeter Railway NECR New England Central Railroad VAEX Vale Railway CP principal shortline connections Albany 689 2622 1092 792 2636 2702 1574 3518 1517 2965 234 147 3528 412 2150 691 2272 1373 552 3253 1792 BCR The British Columbia Railway Company GFR Grand Forks Railway NJT New Jersey Transit Rail Operations VIA Via Rail A BCRY Barrie-Collingwood Railway GJR Guelph Junction Railway NLR Northern Light Rail VTR
    [Show full text]
  • Summits on the Air – ARM for Canada (Alberta – VE6) Summits on the Air
    Summits on the Air – ARM for Canada (Alberta – VE6) Summits on the Air Canada (Alberta – VE6/VA6) Association Reference Manual (ARM) Document Reference S87.1 Issue number 2.2 Date of issue 1st August 2016 Participation start date 1st October 2012 Authorised Association Manager Walker McBryde VA6MCB Summits-on-the-Air an original concept by G3WGV and developed with G3CWI Notice “Summits on the Air” SOTA and the SOTA logo are trademarks of the Programme. This document is copyright of the Programme. All other trademarks and copyrights referenced herein are acknowledged Page 1 of 63 Document S87.1 v2.2 Summits on the Air – ARM for Canada (Alberta – VE6) 1 Change Control ............................................................................................................................. 4 2 Association Reference Data ..................................................................................................... 7 2.1 Programme derivation ..................................................................................................................... 8 2.2 General information .......................................................................................................................... 8 2.3 Rights of way and access issues ..................................................................................................... 9 2.4 Maps and navigation .......................................................................................................................... 9 2.5 Safety considerations ..................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections
    SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOLUME 53, NUMBER 6 CAMBRIAN GEOLOGY AND PALEONTOLOGY No. 6.-0LENELLUS AND OTHER GENERA OF THE MESONACID/E With Twenty-Two Plates CHARLES D. WALCOTT (Publication 1934) CITY OF WASHINGTON PUBLISHED BY THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION AUGUST 12, 1910 Zl^i £orb (gaitimovt (pnee BALTIMORE, MD., U. S. A. CAMBRIAN GEOLOGY AND PALEONTOLOGY No. 6.—OLENELLUS AND OTHER GENERA OF THE MESONACID^ By CHARLES D. WALCOTT (With Twenty-Two Plates) CONTENTS PAGE Introduction 233 Future work 234 Acknowledgments 234 Order Opisthoparia Beecher 235 Family Mesonacidas Walcott 236 Observations—Development 236 Cephalon 236 Eye 239 Facial sutures 242 Anterior glabellar lobe 242 Hypostoma 243 Thorax 244 Nevadia stage 244 Mesonacis stage 244 Elliptocephala stage 244 Holmia stage 244 Piedeumias stage 245 Olenellus stage 245 Peachella 245 Olenelloides ; 245 Pygidium 245 Delimitation of genera 246 Nevadia 246 Mesonacis 246 Elliptocephala 247 Callavia 247 Holmia 247 Wanneria 248 P.'edeumias 248 Olenellus 248 Peachella 248 Olenelloides 248 Development of Mesonacidas 249 Mesonacidas and Paradoxinas 250 Stratigraphic position of the genera and species 250 Abrupt appearance of the Mesonacidse 252 Geographic distribution 252 Transition from the Mesonacidse to the Paradoxinse 253 Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 53, No. 6 232 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 53 Description of genera and species 256 Nevadia, new genus 256 weeksi, new species 257 Mcsonacis Walcott 261 niickwitzi (Schmidt) 262 torelli (Moberg) 264 vermontana
    [Show full text]
  • 12 Day Spectacular British Columbia & Alberta
    Tour Code RRIP 12 Day Spectacular British Columbia & Alberta 12 days Created on: 2 Oct, 2021 Day 1: Arrive in Vancouver, BC Vancouver, located on Canada's Pacific coast is spectacular by nature! Surrounded by ocean and a backdrop of lush rainforest, snow-capped mountains and fjords, this "city of nature" is an ethnically diverse, modern and laid-back metropolis renowned for its mix of urban, outdoor and wildlife adventures. There is no easy way to describe Vancouver, rated as one of the world's topmost live-able cities; you'll just have to see for yourself. Overnight: Vancouver Included Meal(s): Dinner Day 2: Vancouver, BC Today we embark on a full day of sightseeing in Vancouver as we explore the culture, art and history that comes together to define the city. Our city tour includes the neighbourhoods of Gastown, Chinatown, English Bay, Robson Street and Stanley Park, a National Historic Site of Canada featuring 400 hectares of coastal rainforest in the heart of Vancouver.Capilano Suspension Park, most well known for the famed Capilano Suspension Bridge also features history and culture of the Salish First Nation. Take a walk across the famed Capilano Suspension Bridge, surrounded by towering forest hanging high above the Capilano River; the bridge was originally built in 1889.Next we take in Granville Island at the Granville Island Public Market featuring an incredible assortment of food and produce, unique gifts and handcrafted gifts that has all been locally sourced and produced.Enjoy the remainder of the evening at leisure to explore Vancouver how you choose.
    [Show full text]
  • Published Local Histories
    ALBERTA HISTORIES Published Local Histories assembled by the Friends of Geographical Names Society as part of a Local History Mapping Project (in 1995) May 1999 ALBERTA LOCAL HISTORIES Alphabetical Listing of Local Histories by Book Title 100 Years Between the Rivers: A History of Glenwood, includes: Acme, Ardlebank, Bancroft, Berkeley, Hartley & Standoff — May Archibald, Helen Bircham, Davis, Delft, Gobert, Greenacres, Kia Ora, Leavitt, and Brenda Ferris, e , published by: Lilydale, Lorne, Selkirk, Simcoe, Sterlingville, Glenwood Historical Society [1984] FGN#587, Acres and Empires: A History of the Municipal District of CPL-F, PAA-T Rocky View No. 44 — Tracey Read , published by: includes: Glenwood, Hartley, Hillspring, Lone Municipal District of Rocky View No. 44 [1989] Rock, Mountain View, Wood, FGN#394, CPL-T, PAA-T 49ers [The], Stories of the Early Settlers — Margaret V. includes: Airdrie, Balzac, Beiseker, Bottrell, Bragg Green , published by: Thomasville Community Club Creek, Chestermere Lake, Cochrane, Conrich, [1967] FGN#225, CPL-F, PAA-T Crossfield, Dalemead, Dalroy, Delacour, Glenbow, includes: Kinella, Kinnaird, Thomasville, Indus, Irricana, Kathyrn, Keoma, Langdon, Madden, 50 Golden Years— Bonnyville, Alta — Bonnyville Mitford, Sampsontown, Shepard, Tribune , published by: Bonnyville Tribune [1957] Across the Smoky — Winnie Moore & Fran Moore, ed. , FGN#102, CPL-F, PAA-T published by: Debolt & District Pioneer Museum includes: Bonnyville, Moose Lake, Onion Lake, Society [1978] FGN#10, CPL-T, PAA-T 60 Years: Hilda’s Heritage,
    [Show full text]