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Carlton Trail

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The Carlton Trail was the primary land transportation route connecting the various parts of the Canadian Northwest for most of the 19th Century. It stretched from Red River, Manitoba up to what is today Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan. From here the trail ran north and crossed the South Saskatchewan River near Batoche, Saskatchewan until it reached Fort Carlton on the North Saskatchewan River. After this point the trail ran due west along the river to Fort Edmonton at what is now Edmonton, Alberta. Many smaller trails jutted off from the main trail, such as the Fort a la Corne Trail in the Saskatchewan Valley.

Connecting the west, the trail was of great import during the 19th century as a highway for the inhabitants.

The main mode of transport along the trail was by Red River Cart. It was an integral route for Metis freighters, and Hudson's Bay Company employees as well as the earliest white settlers. With the coming of the Canadian Pacific Railway in the late 1880s, and the numerous branch lines that followed the trail assumed less and less importance. By the early 1900s many portions were fenced off, although local sections of the trail remained in use as late as the 1930s.

 


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