Athabasca Landing Trail

The Athabasca Landing Trail was a long-distance portage route that linked Fort Edmonton (modern day Edmonton, Alberta) on the North Saskatchewan River with Athabasca Landing (modern day Athabasca, Alberta) on the Athabasca River.[1] The distance of the trail between Fort Edmonton and Athabasca Landing was 100 miles, giving the trail the nickname "The 100 Mile Portage."[2]

The Saskatchewan flows east and joins the Nelson River which then drains into Hudson Bay.[3] The Athabasca flows north and joins the Slave River, which itself joins the Mackenzie River which drains into the Arctic Ocean.[4] The portage, therefore, had local economic significance but was also part of a wider trade network that linked the Arctic and sub-arctic to the rest of North America.[1]

Various portage routes between the two rivers had been used by the indigenous peoples of the region for centuries before the arrival of British and Canadian fur traders in region in the late eighteenth century. Once fur trading posts were established in the region, the same simple trails were also used to move freight between the posts. They linked Edmonton House (in all of its various incarnations of the years), the centre of the Saskatchewan District, to posts in the Athabasca District (including the Peace River Country) such as Dunvegan, Fort St. Mary's, Fort Chipewyan, and Fort Vermilion. The main packroute northwards from Edmonton from 1824 to 1876 was that to Fort Assiniboine, well to the west of the later Athabasca Landing Trail. It was due to HBC scouts seeking an alternative to the Fort Assiniboine route that Athabasca Landing was founded in 1876

In 2010, a conceptual master plan for the modern version of the Athabasca Landing Trail was completed. The plan is to build a 150 km non-motorized recreational trail, which runs between Fort Saskatchewan and Athabasca, and highlights the region's historic and natural features. The route is also designated as part of the Trans Canada Trail; it links to the River Valley Alliance Trail in the south and to both the land and water routes north to the Arctic Ocean.[5]

See also

References

  1. Czypionka, J.B. (7 March 2006). "Athabasca Landing Trail". The Canadian Encyclopedia (online ed.). Historica Canada. Retrieved 2015-10-03.
  2. "History". Athabasca Landing Trail. Alberta TrailNet Society. Retrieved 2015-10-03.
  3. Marsh, James H. (18 February 2009). "Saskatchewan River". The Canadian Encyclopedia (online ed.). Historica Canada. Retrieved 2015-10-03.
  4. "Geography of the Athabasca River Basin". Regional Aquatics Monitoring Program. Retrieved 2015-10-03.
  5. "ALT Master Plan". Athabasca Landing Trail. Alberta TrailNet Society. Retrieved 2015-10-03.
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