05/15/2026
🇨🇦 Canada once built one of the most remote military highways on Earth — and most people have never heard how impossible it seemed at the time.
In 1942, during World War II, the United States and Canada feared Japan could move deeper into the Pacific after attacking Pearl Harbor.
There was one huge problem:
There was no reliable land route connecting Alaska to the rest of North America. ❄️
So Canada and the U.S. launched one of the most ambitious construction projects in modern history:
The Alaska Highway.
💛 What most people don’t realize:
🔹 The highway stretches over 2,400 kilometres through some of the harshest wilderness on the continent.
🔹 More than 11,000 American soldiers and thousands of Canadian civilians helped carve the road through mountains, forests, muskeg, rivers, and frozen terrain.
🔹 Workers battled temperatures below -40°C, swarms of mosquitoes, landslides, floods, and complete isolation.
🔹 Entire sections had to be built without existing roads, heavy infrastructure, or nearby towns.
🔹 In some remote areas, supplies were delivered only by air because nothing else could reach the crews.
🔹 The project was completed in just 8 months — an engineering achievement many experts thought was impossible.
But here’s the part many people forget:
A massive portion of the route crossed through northern British Columbia and the Yukon, where Canadian workers, Indigenous guides, engineers, mechanics, and local communities played a critical role in helping make the highway possible.
Today, the Alaska Highway remains one of the greatest infrastructure achievements in North American history — and a powerful reminder of the resilience, determination, and northern spirit that helped shape Canada. 🍁
It wasn’t just a road.
It was proof that even in the harshest conditions on Earth, Canadians could help build something extraordinary.
💬 Would you ever road trip the Alaska Highway?
👇 Tell us where you’d start from.