Lille Ghost town

Guided historical easy to moderate hike

3-4 hours

Lille is a ghost town in the North of the Crowsnest Pass. An area in southwest Alberta, Canada. It was a company-built coal mining community that, between 1901 and 1912, hosted a population that grew to over 400. The mines at Lille closed in 1912, due primarily to weak coal prices, increasing production costs, and the increasingly poor quality (high ash content) of the coal. The community was then dismantled and most of its structures were moved elsewhere. Today the site is an Alberta Provincial Historic Resource and is known for the elegant ruins of a set of Bernard-style coke ovens that were imported from Belgium.

Approximately 3 to 4 hours with beautiful creek crossings, waterfalls, an old cemetery and old remnants of life in the early 1900’s.

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Plane Crash