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The Best Attractions In Beaverlodge

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The Best Attractions In Beaverlodge

  • 1. South Peace Centennial Museum Beaverlodge
    The South Peace Centennial Museum is an open-air museum in central Alberta, Canada. The museum's buildings include homesteaders' cabins, a trading post, church, school, grist mill, community hall, general store, blacksmith shop, barn, carriage house, and railway buildings. The museum also features an extensive collection of antique tractors, steam engine, stationary engines, horse-drawn wagons, carriages and antique automobiles.
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 3. Beaverlodge West County Pool Beaverlodge
    Beaverlodge is a town in northern Alberta, Canada. It is located on Highway 43, 43 km west of Grande Prairie and 48 km east of the British Columbia border.
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 5. Kiskatinaw Bridge Dawson Creek
    Kiskatinaw Provincial Park is a provincial park in British Columbia, Canada.
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 6. Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museum Wembley
    The Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museum is located in Wembley, Alberta. It was named for Canadian paleontologist Phillip J. Currie. The museum opened in September 2015, and its location was chosen, in part, due to the proximity of a creek known as the River of Death that has been the source of significant fossil finds. Among the museum's highlights is a skeleton of a Pachyrhinosaurus lakustai dinosaur, considered native to the area.It is part of a larger plan to make the town a stop for paleontology tourists who also visit the Tumbler Ridge Museum in British Columbia. The museum has a partnerhsip with National Geographic and drew more than 100,000 visitors in its first eleven months of operation, more than double the projections.In 2014, the museum's building, designed by Teeple Architects, w...
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 7. Alaska Highway House Dawson Creek
    Highway 97 is the longest continuously numbered route in the Canadian province of British Columbia , running 2,081 km from the Canada–United States border near Osoyoos in the south to the British Columbia/Yukon boundary in the north at Watson Lake, Yukon. The route takes its number from U.S. Route 97, with which it connects at the international border. The highway was initially designated '97' in 1953.
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 8. Dawson Creek Art Gallery Dawson Creek
    Dawson Creek is a city in northeastern British Columbia, Canada. The municipality of 24.37 square kilometres had a population of 11,583 in 2011. Dawson Creek derives its name from the creek of the same name that runs through the community. The creek was named after George Mercer Dawson by a member of his land survey team when they passed through the area in August 1879. Once a small farming community, Dawson Creek became a regional centre after the western terminus of the Northern Alberta Railways was extended there in 1932. The community grew rapidly in 1942 as the US Army used the rail terminus as a transshipment point during construction of the Alaska Highway. In the 1950s, the city was connected to the interior of British Columbia via a highway and railway through the Rocky Mountains. ...
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 9. Northern Alberta Railway Park ( NAR Park) Dawson Creek
    Northern Alberta Railways was a Canadian railway which served northern Alberta and northeastern British Columbia. Jointly owned by both Canadian National Railway and Canadian Pacific Railway, NAR existed as a separate company from 1929 until 1981.
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • 10. Historic Dunvegan Fairview Alberta
    Dunvegan Provincial Park and Historic Dunvegan are a provincial park and a provincial historic site of Alberta located together on one site. They are located in Dunvegan, at the crossing of Peace River and Highway 2, between Rycroft and Fairview. The site was the location of one of Alberta's earliest fur trade posts and missionary centres. The location of the original Fort Dunvegan is also a National Historic Site of Canada. It was built in 1805 by Archibald Norman McLeod and named for his family's ancestral home, Dunvegan Castle. The historic site consists of a visitor centre and four historic buildings manned seasonally by historic interpreters. The campground consists of 67 sites with electrical hook ups, a day use area and playground. Dunvegan Provincial Park is jointly managed by the ...
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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