On the Northern Range
Hat Creek is a town where the time between
the going down of the sun & the coming of sleep belongs to the tellers of
stories and lies.

Looking west from Hat Creek
Hat Creek is a place
that time has truly forgotten.
Hat
Creek is incorporated under Alberta Provincial Laws but somehow was omitted from
maps as a result of errors made by the first surveyors through the northern
range. It was the Simon
Coleman Survey of 1907 that completely omitted a 50 square mile area
on the northern range. This included Hat Creek. And, then in 1933, the Alberta
Legislature proposed that the province try to recover the lost area. However,
it never actually happened.
Since
that time, Hat Creek's main industry appears to be speculation and hope of
things to come. Even the railroad bypassed the town of
The
town of

Looking east from Hat Creek
From
the south, the gravel road winds along the river and bends hard left and over
the old wooden bridge into town. The gravel road brings travellers
into Hat Creek on 50th Street
towards the town's one and only traffic light, which is almost always green.
What
is it about Hat Creek? It looks pretty much like any other prairie town? Yet,
there is something about Hat Creek that makes it very different. It is a quiet
town. It is a town that time has truly forgotten. In fact, you could stand in
the middle of 50th Street
all day and not ever be in anyone's way. Like lots of prairie towns,
Like
most prairie towns in
Hat Creek is the home of the
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