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Embark on an historic journey

Fort Smith Mission Territorial Park Day Use Area

General Information

The only Heritage Park in our system, the Fort Smith Mission Territorial Park is all that remains of the original 151-acre Oblate Catholic Mission in what is now the centre of Fort Smith. Take a self-guided tour of the park with extensive interpretive signage telling the history of the park or visit the large community garden.

Park Size

1.8 ha

Operating Date

Year round

Address

Corner of Mercredi and Breynat Street, Fort Smith

Phone

867-767-9206

Email

parks@gov.nt.ca

On this page

Amenities

Drinking Water
Greenhouse/Garden bed
Interpretive Displays
Picnic / Day Use Area
Staffed Information Centre
Washrooms

Nearest community

Town of Fort Smith. Fort Smith was for a brief period the capital of the Northwest Territories. Today, the Visitor Information Centre offers friendly staff, internet access, and programming throughout the summer.

Park Highlights

Between 1876 and the early 1980s, the Roman Catholic Church operated its mission to the entire Western Arctic from Fort Smith. In the absence of any government school system, the church opened and operated schools across the North, which at that time included all territory north of Edmonton.
The Oblate Mission maintained a Bishop's Residence, St. Isodore's Church, assorted sheds, repair shops, a hospital with associated nuns' residence, a residential school, large fields for the growing of crops, and even an airstrip. Nearby, the church operated docking facilities on the Slave River for their Mission boats, a farm, and sawmill.
The park provides an extensive self-guided tour of the historic mission sites, with interpretive displays describing various aspects of the history and activities of the mission. You can still see:
- The Bishop's residence, built in 1911
- The Cathedral
- The fields that were cultivated, some of which have been restored
- The storage shed
- The carpentry shop
- Vehicle repair shop
- Machine shop
- The hospital (built in 1952 to replace earlier structures)
- The Grotto
- The sites of several other buildings that have been removed

Activities

Trails
Day use only

Special Notes

Accessibility
Unfortunately, this park is not wheelchair accessible currently.

Nearby attractions
Only a 30-minute drive away, Wood Buffalo National Park is the largest national park in Canada and home to the largest herds of wood bison in the world as well as the world's largest beaver dam. 
The Dr. Roberta Bondar Northern Observatory in Fort Smith is the perfect place to view the Northern Lights year-round (although late August to mid-April has the best shows).

Safety information
For general information about safety resources while in the Northwest Territories, check our Safety resources page.

Weather information
See current weather conditions and forecasts from Environment Canada.