Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Spruce Home is a small farming community north of Saskatchewan's third largest city, Prince Albert. The first post office opened in 1908 at Sec.32, Twp.50, R.26, W2 surviving in this location for 9 years. This unincorporated area had post offices come and go over the years.
This article is a list of historic places in Regina, Saskatchewan entered on the Canadian Register of Historic Places, whether they are federal, provincial, or municipal. List of historic places [ edit ]
Doukhobors at Veregin is a National Historic Site of Canada [1] located in the village of Veregin, Saskatchewan, and designated so in 2006. The site is also known as National Doukhobor Heritage Village. [2]
Prince Albert SK 53°11′58″N 105°49′01″W / 53.1994°N 105.817°W / 53.1994; -105.817 ( Prince Albert Penitentiary, Northern Tower Federal ( 9905 )
Source: Statistics Canada via Saskatchewan Bureau of Statistics [11] [12] In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada , the RM of Leask No. 464 had a population of 857 living in 333 of its 764 total private dwellings, a change of 25.8% from its 2016 population of 681 .
Highway 4 is a major provincial highway in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It runs from U.S. Route 191 at the United States border near Monchy to Highway 224 / Highway 904 in Meadow Lake Provincial Park . [ 2 ]
'at pine house') is a northern village located in the boreal forest of Saskatchewan on the western shore of Pinehouse Lake within the Canadian Shield. Travelling by road from Pinehouse, the Key Lake mine is 223 kilometres (139 mi) north, Prince Albert is 346 kilometres (215 mi) south, La Ronge is 214 kilometres (133 mi) east and Beauval , the ...
The Cote First Nation (Western Ojibwa: Ininī-otōškanink, "Man's Elbow") [2] [3] is a Saulteaux First Nations band government in Kamsack, Saskatchewan.This Saulteaux reserve is connected to the Keeseekoose First Nation and only a couple of miles from the Key First Nation.