Nestled in a forgotten pasture west of Cochrane, Alberta, Mitford Cemetery stands as the final testament to a ghost town built with high hopes—and lost to the tangle of misfortune. Established in 1886, Mitford emerged from the industrious vision of Thomas B. H. Cochrane. A sawmill, backed by the Calgary Lumber Company, was the town’s beating heart. With it came a post office, bunkhouses, a drugstore, and eventually, other vital services like a school (initially held in the saloon), hotel, general store, and even a church and medical practice by the early 1890s.

Yet the town’s fate was sealed by its geography. Built on a narrow bench by the Bow River, flanked by steep hills and the Horse Creek Valley, Mitford made railway access difficult. Locomotives struggled with the incline; delivery of lumber to market was erratic, and tension between the Cochranes and the railway mounted.

By 1890, the sawmill and the coal mine both failed. In response, Cochrane pivoted to brickmaking using local clay. This too was short-lived and the brickyard shut down by 1893. With each enterprise collapsing, Mitford’s community dwindled.

The final blow came in 1898 when a fire swept through the nearly deserted settlement. The few remaining residents had little reason to stay. Two surviving buildings—the church and the saloon-turned-schoolhouse—were moved to Cochrane in 1899. What was once Mitford’s Anglican church now serves as a chapel at Bethany Care Centre; the old saloon has been transformed into the King Solomon Masonic Lodge, still standing as a silent witness to the town’s rise and fall.

Left behind, Mitford Cemetery clings quietly to memory. Enclosed by private land, the site is hard to access—an intimate final resting place for the early settlers. The graves few, punctuating the field like solitary echoes of a bygone era.

What remains of Mitford now are only these scattered headstones—the cemetery, and relocated buildings, a physical fragment of a once-ambitious community. As Cochrane expands, this lonely patch of land stands as both a tribute and a caution—an enduring monument to the challenges pioneers faced on the rugged Alberta frontier.

Deaths

Longevity

Address

W of Horse Creek Road, S of Highway 1A
Nearest Populated Centre: Cochrane,
Province: Alberta

Map Location

Latitude, Longitude
51.20055, -114.51691

Map Location

Search for:
RESET
Surname Given Name Born Died Age Photos Cemetery R Code

The 25 most common surnames found in this cemetery.

loader

The 25 most common given names found in this cemetery.

loader

Other Cemeteries

Maybutt Cemetery (Warner County)

Front St & First Ave , Maybutt , Alberta

Livingstone Cemetery (MD of Pincher Creek)

Range Rd 15, North of Cowley , Cowley , Alberta

Hartleyville Cemetery (Cardston County)

Township Road 52 W of Range Road 275 , Hartleyville , Alberta

Waterton Cemetery (Waterton Lakes National Park)

Highway 5, Waterton Park , Waterton , Alberta

Hainstock Cemetery (Mountain View County)

Highway 27; 5 km west of Olds , Olds , Alberta

Stockburger Cemetery (Cypress County)

Township Road 190 and Range Road 20 , Hilda , Alberta

Rainier Cemetery (Newell County)

Range Road 161 S of Rainier , Rainier , Alberta

Bunker Hill Cemetery (Wetaskiwin County)

463033 Range Road 33 S of Township Road 464 , Winfield , Alberta

Graburn United Church Cemetery (Cypress County)

Twp Rd 100 & Range Rd 12 (Graburn Road) , Walsh , Alberta

Granum Cemetery (MD of Willow Creek)

Highway 19 and Service Road 2 E; next to Highway 2 , Granum , Alberta

Discover Alberta Ancestors