Midland Provincial Park, Alberta

Midland Provincial Park is located in Alberta’s Badlands and was established in 1979 to help conserve some of Alberta’s coal mining history.  The park was once the site of the Midland Coal Mine and the land was donated to the province after the mine closed.  The park is home to one of my favorite museums, the Royal Tyrrell, and adjoins the Red Deer River. 

01 Midland Provincial Park (1)

14 Midland Provincial Park (29)

Today’s post focuses on exploring the Midland Coal Interpretive Trail located roughly midway between the city of Drumheller and the Royal Tyrrell Museum.  This trail has a series of educational interpretive signs providing information about coal-mining in the area and to help you understand the artifacts on the grounds, A former mining office survives (top photo).

02 Midland Provincial Park (3)

02a Midland Provincial Park (54)

A rich seam of coal permeates the area and coal was king of this region for the first half of the 20th century, with some 137 coal mining operations flourishing in the Red Deer River Valley.   A large mine was located on the grounds of the park, although it has been closed for some time and and is largely dismantled. 

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13 Midland Provincial Park (4)

There are scattered remnants and foundations of old structures at the site, and the rugged beauty of the Badlands surrounds you. 

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10 Midland Provincial Park (18)

11 Midland Provincial Park (32)

One of the more striking grouping of artefacts along the trail are these gigantic orange coal cutters that have blades which resemble a chain saw’s.   This provided last weekend’s One Clue mystery photo, which was recognized by our talented travel sleuth, George G — good work, George!

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07 Midland Provincial Park (5)

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06 Midland Provincial Park (43)

A few weathered coal mine cars are also on display.  I thought these would look good in my yard, but left them alone.

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08 Midland Provincial Park (35)

There’s a large collection of the signage from the trail found in the thumbnails below.  For example, it discusses the lamphouse (where miners got their charged headlamps), the mine shaft, coal bins, and much more.  The interested reader is invited to click on the thumbnails and read the details if interested.

The coal trail is an interesting and easy add-on to any visit to Drumheller region.  I think it would be especially fun for families to experience.

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5 years ago

My Grand Father worked in UK Coalmines around the 1900s . Stories he could tell were both amazing and scarey. Miners were exempt from War Service during WW1 as they supplied an “Essential Service”.  Women were employed at the Mines but never went below ground. Mules were used below ground – pulling bogeys – and never came back to the surface during their lives. 

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