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Trivia
- located in the central prairie region of Canada
- Alberta is west, Manitoba is east
- U.S. to the south and Northwest Territories to the north
- Regina, the capital city, is often called “The Queen City”.
- Regina is the home of the RCMP Training Academy.
- flower – Western Red Lily, tree – White Birch, bird – Sharp-tailed Grouse
- motto: “From many peoples strength”
- “Saskatchewan” comes from a Cree word “Kisiskatchewani Sipi” meaning “swift flowing river”, which referred to the Saskatchewan River.
LAND AND WATER
- one half is forest, one third is farmland
- over 100,000 lakes, rivers, streams
- northern Saskatchewan : forests, marshes, lakes, rivers
- southern region is mainly flat prairie with some rolling hills and valleys
- sand dunes 30 m. high at Athabasca Provincial Park in northwest Saskatchewan
- “Great Sand Hills” region in southwest Saskatchewan
- main rivers: Assiniboine, North and South Saskatchewan and Churchill
THE PEOPLE
- First people : Chipewyan (north) , Assiniboine (east), Blackfoot (west) and Cree
- Métis (of mixed European and Aboriginal descent) were among the first settlers.
- majority of Saskatchewanians are of British origin, followed by Germans and Austrians, native people, Ukrainians, Scandinavians, and French
- population just over a million (2008)
- largest cities – Regina and Saskatoon
- population of (2006 census metropolitan area): Regina (194,971), Saskatoon (234,000)
HISTORY
- The earliest explorer was Henry Kelsey (1690).
- Samuel Hearne built trading posts for the Hudson’s Bay Company.
- English and French trappers and fur traders arrived.
- Forts were built to maintain law and order.
- In 1874 North West Mounted Police arrived to establish law and order.
- Settlers were encouraged to come for free land for homesteads.
- The railroad was built across the southern part of the province in 1882-83.
- Settlers came from eastern Canada, British Isles, the US, and continental Europe.
- Immigrants arrived in large groups and settled in different regions.
- Settlers included Barr colonists from England, Doukhobors from Russia, Hutterites, Mennonites, Hungarians, Ukrainians, French, Germans and Scandinavians.
- Saskatchewan became a province in 1905 with Regina as the capital.
CLIMATE
- long, cold winters and hot, dry summers
- polar air masses bring winter storms with nasty wind chills and blowing snow
- windy both winter and summer
ECONOMY
- grow over 54 percent of Canada’s wheat crop
- crops include canola, rye, oats, barley, flaxseeds, wheat, lentils
- raising hogs, cattle and poultry on farms
- forestry in northern Saskatchewan
- rich in minerals (potash, uranium, coal, oil and natural gas)
- world leader in the production of uranium
- leading exporter of potash ( fertilizer )
- Canada’s second largest producer of oil (after Alberta)
- third largest producer of natural gas in Canada
PEOPLE AND PLACES
- W.O. MITCHELL (born in Weyburn) wrote about prairie life in his book “Who Has Seen the Wind”.
- JEANNE SAUVE (born in Prud’homme) was the first woman to become Governor General of Canada.
- GORDIE HOWE, one of the greatest hockey player of the NHL was born in Floral, Sask.
- ALLAN SAPP, a world-renowned Plains-Cree artist was born on the Red Pheasant Reserve.
- BUFFY SAINTE-MARIE, a well-known singer/songwriter, was born on the Piapot Reserve in the Qu’Appelle Valley -Tunnels of Moose Jaw : underground passageways used by the Chinese, gangsters and bootleggers.
- Big Muddy Badlands : unusual land formations and petroglyphs
- Wanuskewin Heritage Park: archaeological digs provide information about the Indians of the Northern Plains
- RCMP Heritage Centre and Training Academy in Regina
- Grasslands National Park: original shortgrass prairie, herds of pronghorn, rattlesnakes, endangered black-tailed prairie dogs, burrowing owls and peregrine falcon
- Prince Albert National Park: only protected white pelican nesting colony in Canada, cabin of Grey Owl, herd of plains bison