The spookiest part of hiking into Lille isn’t the fact that your destination isย a ghost town…it’s that the trailhead keeps shifting around in a sinister manipulation of time and space.ย It’sย as ifย the place wants to protect all of its secrets and remain hidden in the dark,ย quiet* woods.
Either that, or my hubby and I are just terrible route finders.
We did as theย guide book said: we parked in the meadow that we easily located after passing by the Frank Slide Interpretive Centre in Frank, Alberta, in the heart of theย Crowsnest Pass.ย We thought we had it all down pat as we jogged up the cutline past the accoutrements of oil and gas activity and headedย towards Goat (also called Bluff) Mountain.ย Although we read in the book that we were to hang a left at “any obvious junction,” we thought the gravelย road that the people in theย SUV were driving downย couldn’t possiblyย be accurate (who hikes alongย a ROAD?), so we kept ploughing onward until we had to bushwack through a huge grove of wind-stunted aspens and we kinda sorta got the inkling that we might be going the wrong way.
We ended up climbing part of Goat Mountain that day.ย Afterย a fewย hours of being blasted by wind and scraped by trees, weย conceded defeat and went to the Interpretive Centre to ask for directions.ย (Yeah, I know what you’re thinking).
We made our second attempt to find the unfindable town of Lille the next morning.ย Guess which road it was on?ย Apparently, most people don’t hike all the way in – they drive in!ย If you have a 4×4 or an ATV, you can navigate the numerous creek crossings and not have to hoof any bit of it at all.ย We chose to park our truck (she of the delicate constitution) where the road degenerated into a goat path and walked the rest of the way.ย And althoughย ourย efforts wereย nearly thwarted by Theย Onlyย Slightly Wobbly Bridge of Doom,
The Swamp of Skeletal Trees,
The Red Herrings (I mean Red Crabapples)ย Designed to Throw Us Off the Trail,
and theย Devilishly Dangerousย Free Range Cattle,
we eventually found the No. 1 Mine Site at Lille, as well as the townsite.
Construction on the town began in 1901 by the British Columbia-basedย company Gold Fields Ltd..ย There had been hope for gold deposits in the clear-running creeks, but the lure of big coal was worth setting up camp for.ย One of the founders of the company, J.J. Fleutot, managed to secure funding from financiers in the city of Lille, France, and so formed the West Canadian Collieries Ltd. to manage the burgeoning mines.ย ย A railway was built, which you can still see the spectral impressions ofย today (unless I’m wrong, and these mounds are instead the work of some insanely large and industrious dew worms):
One of the interpretive signs indicated that the railway had a mind-bogglingย 23 trestles over the distance ofย only 11 kilometres (the area sitsย near theย confluence of three generously sized creeks).ย A good chunk of the railroad was damaged duringย the Frank Slide in 1903, whichย cut off the town of Lille and crippled its industry until it was rebuilt.
By 1906, Lille was a proper town, with a hotel, a school, and a hospital.ย The population peaked somewhere aroundย 400 in its heyday, but by 1912, it was all over when the coke market went intoย decline.ย The mine was closed and everyone living in the town moved on.
Now, Lille is just bits and pieces in a cow pasture, but you can walk (or, apparently, roar* your ATV or dirt bike) among the foundations and wonder about the past.
Theย Seriously Scaryย Windowย (Chute?)ย in the Wall at the No. 1 Mine site.
The Gutsย of the Formerly Three Storey Hotel.
The Really Creepyย Fire Hydrant Out in the Middle of Nowhere.
And, most impressively, the Decaying Coke Ovens, which were built of bricks manufacturedย in Belgium.ย The bricks were numbered and shipped to Lille, where they were reassembled in what I imagine was sort of likeย anย IKEA build on a massive scale, only without theย hex-key wrenches.
Oh yeah, and because it’s Hallowe’en andย this is a story about a ghost town, hereย is a photo ofย theย bones of something that obviously couldn’t find the trailhead to Lille, either.ย ย Yikesย – sure glad we asked for directions!ย ย ๐
Happy Hallowe’en!ย Have you ever spent any time in a ghost town?
Link:ย The History of Hallowe’en in Alberta – Trick or Treatย (Retroactive)










