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Milk River is a town of 800 people (2021) in Southern Alberta.

Understand[edit]

Grain elevator

The Milk River area was first settled around the beginning of the 20th century. Milk River was incorporated as a village on July 31, 1916, and then a town on March 15, 1956.

Milk River's town motto is "Under Eight Flags" and refers to the area having been under the eight flags of seven governments: the Hudson's Bay Company's flag (1818–1869), the eight flags are France (1682–1762), the Spanish Empire (1762–1800), the French Republic (1800–1803), the United States (1803–1818), the British Empire (1869–1945), the Canadian Red Ensign (1945–1965), and the current Canadian Maple Leaf (1965–present).

Tourist information[edit]

  • 1 Travel Alberta Milk River Visitor Information Centre (Hwy 4 and south Milk River access), +1 403-647-3938. This Visitor Information Centre is a great place to stop and get great information on the local area and on the province of Alberta. Offers a free WiFi lounge, interpretive centre and plenty of parking.

Get in[edit]

Map
Map of Milk River

The town is connected to two highways: Highway 4, which heads south to Interstate 15 and north to Lethbridge, and Highway 501, which heads west to Cardston and east to Saskatchewan.

  • 1 Milk River Airport (3 km SW of town). No commercial service. Milk River Airport (Q3566123) on Wikidata Milk River Airport on Wikipedia

Get around[edit]

There are many roads, so you can drive, but since it is a small town, you can walk around too.

See[edit]

  • 1 Devil's Coulee Dinosaur Heritage Museum, 300A County Road, Warner (18 km north of Milk River on Hwy 4), +1 403-642-2118. A key historic site. In 1997, ten fossilized dinosaur eggs, believed to have come from a Hadrosaur, specifically a Hypacrosaurus, were found at Devil's Coulee site. Devil's Coulee Dinosaur Heritage Museum (Q5267096) on Wikidata Devil's Coulee Dinosaur Heritage Museum on Wikipedia
  • 2 Warner's Elevator Row, Warner (18 km north of Milk River on Hwy 4). A group of four historic wood-cribbed grain elevators standing in a row from south to north alongside the Canadian Pacific Railway line. Warner elevator row (Q7969787) on Wikidata Warner elevator row on Wikipedia

Do[edit]

Recreation venues in Milk River include a nine-hole golf course, curling rink, swimming pool, and skateboard park.

  • Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park (42 km east of the town on Route 500 and 501), + 403-647-2364. Range Road 130A. Take the trail through the many hoodoos (tall, thin spires of rock that protrude from the bottom of an arid drainage basin or badland). A 2-hour guided tour takes you to the protected and enclosed archaeological preserve featuring remarkable petroglyphs. There is also a campground.
  • Milk River Golf Course, 208 1st Avenue South East, +1 403-647-2502. A 9-hole course at the south end of town.

Buy[edit]

Eat[edit]

Drink[edit]

Sleep[edit]

  • 8 Flags Campground, 213, 205 Railway St (just off Highway 4), +1 403-647-4488. While camping at the 8 Flags Campground, you can golf for $1 per hole. Open year round with new (as of 2019) showers and washroom facility. Free Wi-fi. May-Sep: full service sites $30, water/power sites $25, tenting/dry sites $20; Oct-Apr: site (power only) $25, site (no service) $20.
  • There are campsites available at Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park (see "Do" above.)
  • Sandstone Motel, 212 8th Ave NW, +1 403-647-2211. Kitchenettes and breakfast available. From $119.

Connect[edit]

Stay safe[edit]

Go next[edit]

Routes through Milk River
Calgary via Lethbridge ← Jct N   N  S  → becomes Sweet GrassGreat Falls
Ends at Cardston  W  E  → Jct S → becomes Shaunavon


This city travel guide to Milk River is a usable article. It has information on how to get there and on restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.