Provincial Trunk Highway 21 marker

Provincial Trunk Highway 21

Route information
Maintained by Department of Infrastructure
Length189 km (117 mi)
Major junctions
South end ND 14 (Carbury–Goodlands Border Crossing)
Major intersections
North end PTH 45 / PR 577 at Oakburn
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceManitoba
Rural municipalities
Highway system
PTH 20A PTH 22

Provincial Trunk Highway 21 (PTH 21) is a provincial highway in the Canadian province of Manitoba. It runs from the U.S. border (where it meets with ND 14) to PTH 45 and PR 577 in the village of Oakburn.

PTH 21 is two lanes and runs north–south in the southwestern region of the province. It is the main highway for the towns of Deloraine (where it meets PTH 3), Hartney, Hamiota, and Shoal Lake.

The speed limit is 90 km/h (55 mph).

In 2012, PTH 21 was given the dubious distinction of being named the second-worst road in the province that year.[1]

Route description

PTH 21 begins in the Rural Municipality of Deloraine - Winchester at the North Dakota border, with the road continuing south towards Carbury and Bottineau as North Dakota Highway 14 (ND 14). Traveling along the western edge of Turtle Mountain, the highway heads north, running along the border with the Rural Municipality of Brenda - Waskada, to have a junction with PR 251 before bypassing the town of Deloraine along its western side, where it has a short concurrency (overlap) with PTH 3 (Boundary Commission Trail), crossing a small creek. It travels through the community of Dand before entering the Rural Municipality of Grassland.

PTH 21 continues north, having intersections with PR 345 and PTH 23, before passage through the town of Hartney, where it crosses the Souris River. The highway enters the Rural Municipality of Sifton and has a short concurrency with PTH 2 (Red Coat Trail) near Deleau before traveling along the borders of the Rural Municipality of Souris - Glenwood and Rural Municipality of Whitehead, having an intersection with PR 543 and crossing a causeway over some wetlands and a small lake before traveling along the eastern side of Griswold, where it junctions with PTH 1 (Trans-Canada Highway).

The highway has a junction with PR 455 and crosses the Assiniboine River into the Rural Municipality of Wallace - Woodworth, immediately making a sharp curve to the west, junctioning with PR 564 and passing through the Sioux Valley Dakota Nation. PTH 21 makes another sharp curve back to the north at an intersection with PR 463, and travels through Kenton, where it has an intersection with PR 259. The highway enters the Rural Municipality of Hamiota, passing by Oakner on its way to Parks Corner, where it junctions with PTH 24. PTH 21 now travels through the town of Hamiota, where it has an intersection with PR 469, as it heads northward past several ponds and small lakes, having a short concurrency with PR 355 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) west of McConnell, before entering the Rural Municipality of Yellowhead.

PTH 21 winds its way along Shoal Lake for a few kilometers to enter the town of Shoal Lake, traveling through neighborhoods before making a sharp right in downtown at an intersection with The Drive, which leads to PTH 42. The highway curves back northward as it crosses a railroad line, passing through more neighborhoods before having a junction with PTH 16 (Yellowhead Highway). PTH 21 leaves Shoal Lake and heads north for several kilometers to enter Oakburn. It passes through neighborhoods, as well as the eastern edge of downtown at the intersection with Main Street, before crossing a former railroad line and coming to an intersection with PTH 45 (Russell Subdivision Trail), where PTH 21 ends and the road continues north as PR 577 towards Olha.[2][3]

The entire length of Manitoba Highway 21 is a rural, paved, two-lane highway.

History

The northern terminus for PTH 21 was originally located at PTH 2 in Deleau. In 1947, it extended north to PTH 1 in Griswold. In 1949, it extended north to PTH 4 in Shoal Lake, replacing part of PTH 1 and all of PTH 28. In 1960, PTH 21 extended north to its present terminus.[4]

Major intersections

DivisionLocationkmmiDestinationsNotes
Deloraine – Winchester00.0
ND 14 south Bottineau
Continuation into North Dakota
Canada–United States border at the Carbury–Goodlands Border Crossing
127.5 PR 251 west Waskada
Deloraine2214 PTH 3 east (Boundary Commission Trail) KillarneySouth end of PTH 3 concurrency
3019 PTH 3 west (Boundary Commission Trail) Melita, MedoraNorth end of PTH 3 concurrency
4025Dand-Regent-Croll Road (Road 23 North)Former PR 343 east
Grassland4629 PR 345 west Lauder
5132 PTH 23 east Elgin
HartneyRiver AvenueFormer PR 347 east
6037 PR 541 west Grande-ClairièreFormer PR 347 west
Sifton6943 PTH 2 west (Red Coat Trail) PipestoneSouth end of PTH 2 concurrency
Sifton / Souris – Glenwood7748 PTH 2 east (Red Coat Trail) SourisNorth end of PTH 2 concurrency
8251 PR 543 west Oak Lake Beach
Sifton / Whitehead9056Road 50 NorthFormer PR 349 east
Griswold9559 PTH 1 (TCH) Virden, Brandon
Wallace – Woodworth / Whitehead10263 PR 455 east Alexander
10364Crosses over Assiniboine River
Wallace – Woodworth10465 PR 564 north Bradwardine, RiversFormer PR 354 north
11370 PR 463 west Virden
12678 PR 259 Kenton, Harding, Rivers
Hamiota14288 PTH 24 Miniota, Oak River, Rapid City
Hamiota14791 PR 469 west
15496 PR 355 east MinnedosaSouth end of PR 355 concurrency
15798 PR 355 west DeckerNorth end of PR 355 concurrency
Yellowhead167104South end Road (Road 93 North)Former PR 477 west
Shoal Lake The Drive to PTH 42
175109 PTH 16 (TCH) / YH Russell, Minnedosa
Oakburn189117 PTH 45 (Russell Subdivision Trail) / PR 577 north Olha, Rossburn, ElphinstoneFormer PR 566 north
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

Template:Attached KML/Manitoba Highway 21
KML is from Wikidata
  1. "Highway 21 the second-worst road in the province". Brandon Sun. 2012-05-04. Retrieved 2012-05-04.
  2. Google (September 23, 2022). "Map of Manitoba Highway 21" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
  3. Government of Manitoba. "Official Highway map of Manitoba section #1" (PDF). Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  4. "The Province of Manitoba Official Highway Map 1956". Infrastructure and Transportation, Province of Manitoba.
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