Saskatchewan Highway 21
Highway 21 is a highway in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It runs from Montana Secondary Highway 233 at the United States border near Willow Creek to Highway 950/Highway 919 within the Meadow Lake Provincial Park. Highway 21 is about 715 km (444 mi) long.[1]
Route information | ||||
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Length | 714.6 km[1] (444.0 mi) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | ||||
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North end | ||||
Location | ||||
Rural municipalities | Reno, Big Stick, Fox Valley, Happyland, Chesterfield, Newcombe, Kindersley, Oakdale, Progress, Mariposa, Grass Lake, Tramping Lake, Round Valley, Cut Knife, Hillsdale, Eldon, Frenchman Butte, Loon Lake, Beaver River | |||
Towns | Maple Creek, Leader, Eatonia, Kindersley, Kerrobert, Unity, Maidstone | |||
Highway system | ||||
Provincial highways in Saskatchewan
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Highway 21 passes through the major communities of Maple Creek, Kindersley, Kerrobert, and Unity. Highway 21 intersects three major western Saskatchewan highways: Highway 1, Highway 7, and Highway 16.
Highway 21 has average annual daily traffic (AADT) of 500 vehicles a day and truck traffic is 30% of this total. Unity has two inland grain terminals. The oil and gas industry is also active in this area.[2]
History
The original Provincial Highway 21 is between Highway 13 west of Robsart and Leader.[3] It originally continued west from Leader to Estuary and Empress, Alberta, before it turned north and followed Range Road 3293, adjacent to the Alberta-Saskatchewan border. It followed a series of country roads through Loverna, Macklin, and Lloydminster to Onion Lake.[3] In the 1930s, the Leader-Empress section was renumbered to Highway 32 while the Empress-Onion Lake was renumbered to Highway 17 (the section south of Macklin was later decommissioned).[4][5]
At the same time, Provincial Highway 30 ran from Lemsford, through Glidden and Kindersley, to Kerrobert; the section between Lemsford and Glidden was decommissioned in the 1940s.[3][4][5] In the 1960s, Highway 330 was commissioned between Kerrobert, through Unity, to Highway 40 west of Cut Knife. Provincial Highway 48 ran between Grovenlock and Willow Creek; however in the 1960s, it was renumbered to Highway 348.[4][6]
In 1971, the Chesterfield Bridge across the South Saskatchewan River was opened, extending Highway 21 to Eatonia.[6][7] Bridges were opened across the Battle and North Saskatchewan Rivers were opened later in the decade, and along with the renumbering Highways 348, 30, and 330, Highway 21 assumed its present length.[8]
Major intersections
From south to north:[9]
Rural municipality | Location | km[1] | mi | Destinations | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reno No. 51 | | 0.0 | 0.0 | Continues into Montana | ||||
Canada–United States border at Willow Creek Border Crossing | ||||||||
Govenlock | 29.2 | 18.1 | Hwy 21 branches east; south end of Hwy 13 concurrency | |||||
Senate | 43.8 | 27.2 | ||||||
Consul | 56.8 | 35.3 | Range Road 3271 | |||||
| 73.1 | 45.4 | Hwy 21 branches north; north end of Hwy 13 concurrency | |||||
Maple Creek No. 111 | | 94.9 | 59.0 | |||||
| 107.5 | 66.8 | ||||||
Maple Creek | 134.1 | 83.3 | ||||||
| 144.4 | 89.7 | ||||||
Big Stick No. 141 | | 171.2 | 106.4 | South end of Hwy 728 concurrency | ||||
| 177.7 | 110.4 | North end of Hwy 728 concurrency | |||||
Fox Valley No. 141 | Fox Valley | 198.0 | 123.0 | |||||
Happyland No. 231 | Liebenthal | 221.9 | 137.9 | |||||
| 234.9 | 146.0 | Mendham access road | |||||
Leader | 247.0 | 153.5 | ||||||
247.8 | 154.0 | |||||||
↑ / ↓ | | 256.6 | 159.4 | Crosses the South Saskatchewan River | ||||
Chesterfield No. 261 | Eatonia | 288.0 | 179.0 | South end of Hwy 44 concurrency | ||||
Newcombe No. 260 | Glidden | 307.2 | 190.9 | Hwy 21 branches north; north end of Hwy 44 concurrency | ||||
Kindersley No. 290 | Kindersley | 333.3 | 207.1 | |||||
Oakdale No. 320 | | 359.1 | 223.1 | |||||
| 369.3 | 229.5 | South end of Hwy 31 concurrency | |||||
Progress No. 351 | Kerrobert | 382.9 | 237.9 | Hwy 21 / Hwy 31 concurrency branches northwest; south end of Hwy 51 concurrency | ||||
385.3 | 239.4 | Hwy 21 concurrency branches north; north end of Hwy 31 / Hwy 51 concurrency | ||||||
Progress No. 351[lower-alpha 1] Mariposa No. 350[lower-alpha 2] | | 402.6 | 250.2 | |||||
↑ / ↓[lower-alpha 3] | | 409.1 | 254.2 | |||||
Grass Lake No. 381[lower-alpha 1] Tramping Lake No. 380[lower-alpha 2] |
No major junctions | |||||||
Round Valley No. 410 | Unity | 443.2 | 275.4 | |||||
| 462.7 | 287.5 | ||||||
Cut Knife No. 439 | | 478.8 | 297.5 | Hwy 21 branches west; south end of Hwy 40 concurrency | ||||
Hillsdale No. 440 | | 489.0 | 303.9 | Baldwinton access road | ||||
| 494.3 | 307.1 | Hwy 21 branches north; north end of Hwy 40 concurrency | |||||
↑ / ↓ | | 510.8 | 317.4 | Crosses the Battle River | ||||
Eldon No. 471 | | 525.2 | 326.3 | Hwy 21 branches east; south end of Hwy 16 concurrency | ||||
Maidstone | 528.4 | 328.3 | Hwy 21 branches north; north end of Hwy 16 concurrency | |||||
| 548.1 | 340.6 | South end of Hwy 303 concurrency | |||||
↑ / ↓ | | 561.2 | 348.7 | Crosses the North Saskatchewan River | ||||
Frenchman Butte No. 501 | | 563.0 | 349.8 | North end of Hwy 303 concurrency | ||||
| 580.3 | 360.6 | Hwy 21 branches west; south end of Hwy 3 concurrency | |||||
Paradise Hill | 591.0 | 367.2 | Hwy 21 branches north; north end of Hwy 3 concurrency | |||||
Loon Lake No. 561 | | 648.5 | 403.0 | |||||
↑ / ↓ | | 684.5 | 425.3 | Crosses the Beaver River | ||||
Beaver River No. 622 | Pierceland | 691.9 | 429.9 | |||||
Meadow Lake Provincial Park | 714.6 | 444.0 | ||||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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Footnotes
- West of Hwy 21
- East of Hwy 21
- Four corners of the Rural Municipalities of Progress No. 351, Mariposa No. 350, Grass Lake No. 381, and Tramping Lake No. 380.
References
- Google (February 13, 2018). "Highway 21 in Saskatchewan" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
- Safronetz, Joshua Devon (February 2003). "Project Level Highway Management Framework" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-03-24.
- Province of Saskatchewan (1926). Highway Map (Map). Department of Highways. Archived from the original on August 29, 2017.
- Rand McNally (1940). Road map of Western and Central Canada (Map). Rand McNally and Company.
- The H.M. Gousha Company (1956). "Saskatchewan & Manitoba" (Map). Shell Map of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. The Shell Oil Company.
- Department of Highways and Transportation (1972). Saskatchewan Official Highway Map (Map). Queen's Printer.
- "A History of the Rural Municipality of Chesterfield". Winning The Prairie Gamble History Album. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
The Chesterfield Bridge, north of Leader, did not open for traffic until 1971.
- Saskatchewan Department of Highways and Transportation (1980). Official Highway Map (Map). Queen's Printer.
- MapArt (2007). Saskatchewan Road Atlas (Map) (2007 ed.). 1:540,000. Oshawa, ON: Peter Heiler Ltd. pp. 16, 22, 30, 38, 46. ISBN 1-55368-020-0.