10 Mysterious Places in Canada No One Can Explain
Canada has a playbook for making places disappear. Let the land run down, tell the people it's for their own good, then demolish, contaminate, or flood it — and rewrite the story when someone asks questions. From a Quebec town of 950 turned into a museum with a zip line, to an Indigenous community given ten days to dig up their own dead before the water rose, these are the places the official record would rather you forget. In this video, we explore: → Val-Jalbert, the Quebec company town of 950 people locked up overnight in 1927 — now a heritage park where tourists pay admission to walk through the houses those families were forced to abandon → Bankhead, Alberta — the "20-year town" inside Banff National Park that the CPR physically dismantled, picked up, and moved, leaving only foundations sealed under National Park designation → Gaultois, Newfoundland, where 64% of residents voted to leave in 2023 — not enough to unlock the relocation money, so they stay stranded as the ferry schedule shrinks each year → The Mid-Canada Line: 98 radar stations abandoned in 1965 with PCBs and petroleum left in the ground near First Nations hunting territories — the cleanup wasn't finished until 2016 → Ocean Falls, BC — the rainforest fjord town the provincial government nationalized to save, then walked away from seven years later, leaving residents with no road out → Uranium City, Saskatchewan, where 5,000 federal workers got six weeks of notice in 1982 — population crashed to about 100 within months → Kitsault, BC — the brand-new town of 1,200 abandoned in 1982 with the lights still on, calendars frozen on the walls, food still on the shelves → The Cheslatta Carrier Nation, given ten days to dig up the graves of their ancestors before the Kenney Dam flooded 880 square kilometers of their homeland — they waited 67 years for a compensation agreement → Port Radium, NWT — the Crown corporation mine that supplied uranium for the Manhattan Project, where Sahtu Dene men carried radioactive ore in burlap sacks against their bodies and 14 of them died of cancer in a community now called the village of widows And at number one: a Black community that lived on the shores of Halifax for two hundred years before the city used the conditions it had created to justify tearing it down — moving residents in garbage trucks, paying some as little as $500, and putting a container terminal on the land. The apology took forty years. Subscribe for more of the Canadian history nobody wants to put in the textbook. #GhostCanada #CanadianHistory #GhostTowns #HiddenCanada #AbandonedCanada #Africville #ForgottenPlaces #IndigenousHistory #DarkHistory #WeirdCanada

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