Little Known Facts About Saskatchewan
About Saskatchewan: Did you know?
Tom Sukanen, a Finnish immigrant, built an ocean-going boat near Macrorie during
the middle of the dust-bowl years. He was 15 miles from the South Saskatchewan River. He intended to take a load of wheat back to Finland. He hand made every part, including
boiler and steam engine. He died before completion. The assembled ship can now been seen on Highway 2 south of Moose Jaw.
Wynyard is the chicken capital of Canada because they export the highest amount of chicken per capita. Every summer during the carnival days they host the 'chicken chariot race' where chickens are hooked up to a homemade chariot and they are raced down lanes to see which one is the fastest.
Regina is in the Guinness Book Of Records... It has the longest bridge (Albert Street Bridge ) over the shortest body of water (Wascana Lake).
The railway track from Regina to Stoughton used to be the longest stretch of perfectly straight track in the world.
Battleford was the capital of the Northwest Territories before Saskatchewan became a province. But lost out to Regina when the province was formed. The original Government House looked over the former battle grounds of the rebellion until it burned to the ground a few years ago.
The very first Dairy Queen was started in Melville in 1953. The original owner was Donald M. Patrick.
In Saskatchewan there are over 100,000 lakes, rivers, and bogs. The Province has three major river systems all of which empty into Hudson Bay; the Assiniboine, the North/South Saskatchewan and the Churchill.
Over one-half of the province, or approximately 3,450,000 km, is covered by forests. Of the total forest area, 2,165,000 km are classified as commercially productive forest land and contain both hardwood and softwood species.
Famed theorist/physicist Albert Einstein played goal for the Canwood Sask. Canucks one winter while sojourning north to Canada to 'find peace and silence' for his work on the Theory of Relativity. He had played hockey in his younger years in Germany.
Dr. Ballard of dog food fame was a veterinarian in Wolsely which, incidentally, was also the home of the very first Beaver Lumber.
Dad's Cookies were once made at the now unused roller skating rink in White City (east of Regina). This was the home of Dad's cookies before it became the roller rink.
Brett Hull lived in a little log house a few miles out of Whitewood.
Gordie Howe was born near Saskatoon.
Moose Jaw - The former Joyner department store was the western distributor of Levis jeans. The stock would sometimes exceed one million dollars. It had been reopened as a Gift/Craft/Souvenir store. Tragically, this store and several nearby historical buildings recently burned down. This store also owned the largest Cash Cable Car system (over 1000 feet in length) that was still operational. The only other one in working order is in Europeor China and is between 600 and 700 feet. Disney had offered the Joyner family $600,000 for the system so they could put it into their Euro-Disney complex, but the family honoured the wishes of the original store owner that the system remain in Moose Jaw.
In the 20's Moose Jaw's (AKA 'Little Chicago') River Street was the home of gambling, prostitutes and the bootleg centre of booze running into the States. The tunnels under the streets there connected the various businesses and were used by various gangsters, and rumour has it, including Al Capone. The tunnels were believed to have been dug years earlier by Chinese immigrants as a way to escape. (Canada had Chinese concentration camps although no one ever brags about that!)
W.O. Mitchell, who wrote Who Has Seen the Wind, and Jake and the Kid (both of which are regularly read in classrooms across Canada), grew up in Weyburn. In 1976 the town of Arcola was the site of the filming of Who Has Seen the Wind.
Estevan is the sunshine capital of Canada.
Saskatchewan has the largest kimberlite field, (diamond-bearing rock) in the world, located near Prince Albert, where DeBeers & other companies are working now.
Wilkie is home to the world's largest Grasshopper - which everyone hates because it's a farming community. Apparently you can fit eight people and three cases of beer comfortably on his back.
A small town called Saltcoats (16 miles south of Yorkton) has been titled the salamander capital of Canada. The town is nestled on the side of Anderson Lake which is where thousands and thousands (varies from year to year) of salamanders also call home. On rainy nights they can be seen making their
rek from the water to land. It is a crazy sight to see so many lizards running across the roads. I will not tell you what it sounds like as the cars drive by.
Manitou Lake is not in fact the 3rd 'saltiest' body of water - The others are The Dead Sea and The Great Salt Lake in Utah. There are many bodies of water in Saskatchewan that are saltier, but none have the mineral content of Manitou. No one knows for sure where Manitou gets the minerals from. In fact, in 1946, there wasa team of doctors commissioned by the Province to do a medical study on Manitou ('the lake of the healingwaters'). The doctors didn't complete their study however, because at the time, they felt the lake may dry up.
Danceland - at Lake Manitou near Watrous - world's only horse hair padded dance floor.
John Diefenbaker, former Prime Minister, lived in Wakaw and Prince Albert. Interestingly, Sir Wilfred Laurier, Mackenzie King and John Diefenbaker were all elected to the House of Commons from the Prince Albert constituency. Laurier had actually run in two seats--he ran in Prince Albert as it was a 'safe' Liberal seat, but gave that seat up and represented his seat won in Quebec; King represented Prince Albert from 1925 to 1944 (not a well known fact). Dief's story is well known.
That's why Prince Albert is known as the city of three Prime Ministers. But John Diefenbaker often called it "The city of Conviction" in reference to the fact that it has three penal institutions (federal, provincial men's, provincial women's)
So now you know! Cheers all!












































Monica, that is a bunch of interesting stuff! Really. But I'm not moving to Saskatchewan...it's still too darn cold there for me!
Ellen
Still knitting and spinning in Upstate NY
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If you have seen HBO's Sopranos, you know where I live. We are on the other side of the Hudson from Manhattan, just outside of the Lincoln Tunnel. We have lots of highways and wetlands, that were just, "the swamps" when I was little. First baseball game and Frank Sinatra/Hoboken, machine embroidery factory capital of the world/ Union City, which has more Cubans than Havana. We just put up the "You're not welcome" sign to KAdafi who wanted to set up his traveling tent show in Englewood, NJ. Now he's on land co-owned by Martha Stewart and Trump in Westchester, NY. We have the Empire State Building, The Statue of Liberty and the NJ Shore.
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