
‘Some places are sacred’: Opposition to highway twinning affecting Frank Slide site
FRANK SLIDE, AB – Some residents of Crowsnest Pass say a planned twinning of Highway 3 through the community in southwestern Alberta will amount to a “desecration” of the site of Canada’s deadliest rock slide.
It was 120 years ago that 82 million tonnes of rock fell from the summit of Turtle Mountain into the Crowsnest River valley below.
The slide lasted a mere 90 seconds, but in that short time, at least 92 people were killed and the southeastern corner of the coal mining town of Frank, Alta., disappeared.
Highway 3, which connects Alberta with southeastern B.C., weaves its way through the giant grey limestone boulders — some as big as school buses, others the size of small houses.