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Grenfell, Saskatchewan

Coordinates: 50°25′N 102°55′W / 50.417°N 102.917°W / 50.417; -102.917 (Grenfell, Saskatchewan)
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Town of Grenfell
Town
Community Hall
Community Hall
CountryCanada
ProvinceSaskatchewan
RegionSaskatchewan
Rural MunicipalityRM of Elcapo # 154
Post office Founded1883
Incorporated (Village)1894
Incorporated (Town)1911
Government
 • MayorLloyd Gwilliam
Area
 • Total3.17 km2 (1.22 sq mi)
Population
 (2006)
 • Total947
 • Density300/km2 (770/sq mi)
Time zoneCST
Postal code
S0G 2B0
Area code306
HighwaysTransCanada Highway, Highway 47
WebsiteTown of Grenfell
[1][2][3][4][5]

Grenfell (Canada 2011 Census population 1,049) is a town in Southern Saskatchewan, Canada. It is situated at the junction of Highway 47 and the Trans Canada Highway 80 miles (130 km) east of Regina, the provincial capital. It is 15 miles (24 km) south of the Qu'Appelle Valley where Crooked Lake Provincial Park (at Crooked Lake) and Bird's Point Resort (at Round Lake) are popular beach destinations in summer and are accessed by Highway 47.

European settlement from Ontario and the British Isles began in 1882 before the Canadian Pacific Railway reached the site of the town.[6] The post office was established in 1883; "the town’s name honours Pasco du Pre Grenfell, a railway company official."[7]

History

The settlement was the result of the westward expansion of the Canadian Pacific Railway and the town is named after Pasco du P. Grenfell, an early shareholder of the railway company and a prominent railwayman.[8] Initial settlement was from eastern Canada and the British Isles, followed shortly thereafter by Germans.[8]

The Grenfell cricket team, c. 1890. With many English immigrants it was cricket that was the more popular pastime, rather than baseball. While popular in the early days, its influence did not last.

Grenfell was incorporated as a town in 1911. It has a stable economic base and reasonable land prices. [citation needed]

The community sent men to war in both the First and Second World Wars. They are remembered at the local cenotaph.[9]

As in many other prairie towns, Chinese railworkers from the building of the CPR in the 1880s settled down and established local businesses: as late as the 1960s there were two Chinese cafés on Main Street.

Grenfell is close enough to the provincial commercial and political metropole of Regina that its residents do not feel impossibly remote and can repair there when occasion demands; it is far enough away that a lively local community persists. The town has long been known for cultural vitality; in 1974 the University of Saskatchewan, Regina Campus choir gave a concert in the Community Hall with the audience filling the hall, students accommodated by town and farm families. Eminent provincial academics, lawyers, medical doctors, lieutenant-governors, musicians and artists either came from or spent time working in Grenfell.

Geography

Grenfell is located in the Indian Head Plain of the Aspen Parkland ecoregion on the parkland of the Qu'Appelle flood plain. Grenfell is within the topographical area of Weed Hills. The bedrock geology belongs to that of the Mannville Group, a stratigraphical unit of Cretaceous age in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin formed during the lower Cretaceous period.[10] The area is characterised by lush rolling grasslands, interspersed with poplar bluffs (in prairie Canadian terminology poplar groves surrounding sloughs) and open sloughs.[11] Sakimay First Nation consists of 11,295.2 ha located 12 kilometers (7.5 mi) northeast of Grenfell and includes 1,340 people on the Sakimay, Shesheep, Little Bone and Minoachuk reserves.[12] Grenfell Beach is located within the Sakimay Reserve area on Crooked Lake.[13]

Climate

Grenfell has a humid continental climate, with extreme seasonal temperatures. It has warm summers and cold winters, with the average daily temperatures ranging from −16 °C (3.2 °F) in January to 18 °C (64.4 °F) in July. Annually, temperatures exceed 30 °C (86 °F) on an average in late July Typically, summer lasts from late June until late August, and the humidity is seldom uncomfortably high. Winter lasts from November to March, and varies greatly in length and severity. Spring and autumn are both short and highly variable.[14]

Demographics

Historical Population
YearPop.±%
1901 452—    
1906 677+49.8%
1910 709+4.7%
1916873+23.1%
1996 1,106+26.7%
20011,067−3.5%
2006947−11.2%
20111,049+10.8%
[15][16][17]

The 2006 Statistics Canada data estimates the town's population at 947 residents, continuing a slight trend of population decline in the town since the 2001 Census, although unusual for prairie towns, Grenfell's population today is larger than in 1916.[15] Of the current adult population, 43.7 per cent were male and 55.8 per cent were female. Children under five accounted for approximately 1.6 per cent of the resident population of Grenfell.[15]

Between 2001 and 2006, Grenfell's population decreased by 11.2 percent. During the same time period, the population of Saskatchewan decreased by 1.1 percent, while that of Canada grew by 5.4 percent. A recent economic boom in Saskatchewan and an atypical persistence of prosperity during the 2008 worldwide slump will have altered this trend. The population density of Grenfell averaged 3.5/km2 (9.1/sq mi), compared with an average of 1.6/km2 (4.1/sq mi) for the province.[15] According to data from 2001 (although with so small a population percentages are not especially informative) more than 12.1% of the town's residents identify themselves as Catholic; 37.5% of residents are Protestant, 4.2% are Christian and 3.2% of residents do not practise a religion.[16]

Whereas, the first settlers were from the British Isles and eastern Canada, later immigrants from Germany would also settle here.[1]


Canada census – Grenfell, Saskatchewan community profile
2011
Population1,049 (+10.8% from 2006)
Land area3.17 km2 (1.22 sq mi)
Population density331.2/km2 (858/sq mi)
Median age54.4 (M: 51.3, F: 56.1)
Private dwellings528 (total) 
Median household income
References: 2011[18] earlier[19][20]

Government

The town of Grenfell has a mayor as the highest ranking government official. The town also elects aldermen or councillors to form the municipal council. Currently the mayor is Lloyd Gwilliam, and is serving with councillors Rodney Wolfe, Gary Cole, Phillip Peter, Jeremie Taylor, Gilbert Heinemann, and Kevin Speidelsbach. The Chief Administrative Officer is currently a vacant position.[21]

Provincially, Grenfell is within the constituency of Moosomin served by their Member of legislative assembly, the honourable Don Toth.[4]

Federally, the Souris—Moose Mountain riding is represented by their Member of Parliament, Ed Komarnicki.[5]

Commerce

By 1915, Grenfell hosted a flour mill company, one of 37 across the province.[22]

The CPR employed hundreds of Chinese labourers on its incremental westward growth from Ontario to British Columbia throughout the 1880s. Once the railroad was complete many Chinese returned to railroad towns like Grenfell to establish cafés and groceries which persisted until the latter part of the twentieth century. Well into that time Grenfell was served by two such Chinese cafés and groceries which considerably contributed to the amenity of its business district. Grenfell also had a women's clothing store on Main Street and the provisions of a bakeshop and movie theatre on Front Street well into the 1960s.

A cinema on Front Avenue opposite the railway line continued in business until the 1960s, much beyond the time when such facilities had lapsed in other, larger prairie towns which were closer to urban metropoles. No doubt this was in part because television transmission remained poor, Grenfell being a good 75 miles (121 km) east of the broadcast locus in Regina. However they might have regretted the lack of choice, community life was assuredly enhanced by first-release films being available only in the town cinema.

Access to both Regina and somewhat less quickly Winnipeg became vastly more convenient and fast with the great improvement in quality of the Trans-Canada Highway, even substantially eliminating the demand for train passenger transport. This constituted both an improvement in town and farm dwellers' overall quality of life but decline in its nature within the town without a lengthy drive. As in virtually all prairie Canadian towns, the centre of commerce was from the beginning until very recently the grain elevators: assorted grain-buying companies maintained large depots to which farmers regularly brought wheat and other crops for sale whenever the centralised grain-buying board announced a quota.

Infrastructure

Grenfell's hospital was first established in 1915, followed by a maternity home in 1933.[10] The hospital in Grenfell was one of 52 hospital closures announced April 15, 1993, by Health Minister Louise Simard.[23] Grenfell belongs to the Regina Qu'Appelle Health Region, and a hospital is within a 10-minute drive. The Grenfell Medical Centre is staffed with a doctor, emergency room, lab and x-ray department. As well Grenfell is home to the Grefell and District Pioneer Home providing health care for senior citizens of the area.[24]

Transportation

Grenfell is situated at the junction of Highway #47 and Trans Canada Highway #1 80 miles (130 km) east of Regina, the provincial capital. By 2004, the Saskatchewan Highway 1, the Trans-Canada Highway had been “twinned” from Alberta all the way eastward to Grenfell. The entire highway was divided by 2007.[25]

The Canadian Pacific Railway came through in October 1882. Shacks and tents appeared the following spring allowing the village to incorporate on April 12, 1894, with over 100 residents. It was reorganised in 1967 becoming the Grenfell Branch of the South East Regional Library.[26] Grenfell was located on the CPR West line between Regina and Winnipeg, Manitoba. The line ran through Indian Head, Sintaluta, Wolseley, Summerberry then Grenfell and continues west through Oakshela, Broadview. It is here that in 1925, the time zone changed from Central Standard Time to Mountain Standard Time.[27]

Education

Grenfell High School circa 1925.
MacPherson School, north of town, circa 1925.

Grenfell is home to the Mechanic's Library Institute which was established in 1882 being one of the province's oldest libraries.[28]

Grenfell Elementary Community School offers pre-school to grade 6 with an enrolment near 160 pupils.[29] Grenfell High Community School offers Grade 7 to Grade 12 to an enrolment of about 134 students.[30] Both a part of the Prairie Valley School Division #208.[28]

Historically several one-room school houses served Grenfell and area. Faulkner School District #53 was one of the first established in 1886 followed by Rillington #62, and Prospect #65. Grenfell #150 was located south of the town site. Le Cain #224, Tetlock #289, Brown Hill #353, Arlington #429, Sims #432, Wolf Hills #823, Gettel #1904, and Oakshela #2458 came next serving the community until the 1950s. By the 1960s only two of every former one-room schoolhouses were still in use.[31]

Churches

Grenfell United Church 2011.
St. Michael's and All Angels Anglican.

The Presbyterians, Methodists and Church of England all held services in the CPR depot beginning in 1883 and townspeople of all denominations attended regardless of affiliation.[32] By 1884 the Presbyterians had built the town’s first church[32] and in 1885 the Anglicans the town’s second, St Michael and All Angels’.[32] The Methodists built their first church in 1890 and, soon outgrowing it, a second in 1906, the first building being destroyed by fire concurrently with the opening of the new church.[33] The second Methodist church building remains that of the United Church of Canada congregation which came into existence as Grenfell United Church upon the unification of Canadian Presbyterians, Methodists and Congregationalists in 1925, the old Presbyterian church building being sold to the Independent Order of Odd Fellows as a lodge room.[34] It is reported that "[i]n publications of the day, clergy recounted their experiences. There were the monotonous, if not exhausting, trips in the heat of summer or the cold of winter made by the Rector of Grenfell, Frank V. Baker, arriving disappointed to find “… only a handful of people gathered” for a service."[35]

The Lutherans built their first Peace Lutheran Church in 1905 [36] and a second, larger building in 1951, the old building being sold to the Ukrainian Orthodox congregation.[37] The Roman Catholics, originally of substantially Irish stock, built St Columbkill Church in 1903[38] and, with an influx of Polish and Ruthenian families found their numbers considerably increased[38][39] and by 1944 moved and extended the church building;[40] in 1979 they opened a second, completely modern church building.[40] Protestant Austrians organised the St John’s Evangelical and Reformed congregation in 1888 and built two churches in succession in 1894 and 1903[40] before amalgamating with the United Church in 1964.[41] The Baptists purchased the town’s disused first schoolhouse in 1895 for use as their church; their congregation dwindled over time and in the mid-1960s the Apostolic Church purchased the building; they subsequently built a new church and the Masons acquired the old Baptist church for use as a lodge.[41] The Grenfell Revival Centre opened in a disused Lutheran church building in 1960.[42] The Ukrainian Catholics initially affiliated themselves with the Roman Catholics and worshipped jointly with them; in 1921 they were able to build their own church and in 1957 acquired the Lutherans’ old and now disused church building.[43] In 1991 a re-constituted Presbyterian congregation was established in Grenfell as Trinity Presbyterian Church.[44]

Museums and other prominent points of interest

Grenfell's Adare Museum has "a wide collection of artifacts" and a "military display, historical map of the area and [a] 1949 Fargo fire truck." It was a "Queen Anne revival style home" built in 1904 by Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fitz-Gerald, he "the editor and publisher of the first local newspaper in Grenfell in 1894," the purchaser of which house divided it into suites and "bequeathed [it] to the Town for senior citizens housing." Ultimately "the Grenfell Museum Association became curator and opened it as a museum on July 6, 1973."[45] A reputation for unusual community interest in culture was demonstrated in 1974 when the choir of the then-University of Saskatchewan, Regina Campus chose to perform in Grenfell's Community Hall among its destinations on a provincial tour.

Grenfell Regional Park located on the west side of Grenfell features picnic, playground area, showers, food services, and a nine-hole sand greens golf course.[46]

Military

Grenfell was home to one of the seven chapters of the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire (IODE) established in 1909 after the Boer War, for women's aid to the war effort.[47] The Royal Northwest Mounted Police force detachment was established in Grenfell in 1915.[10] Following World War II the militia was reorganised in 1961, the 10th Field Regiment consisted of several batteries including 65th Battery Grenfell.[48]

Sports and recreation

Before 1900, Grenfell, Battleford, Saltcoats and Moosomin all hosted soccer teams.[49] In 1905 the Saskatchewan Soccer Association was first established in Grenfell.[28] In the 19th century, Grenfell boasted one of the dozen or so “town bands” or “citizens’ bands” of the North-West Territories.[50] The early English settlers had a flair for sporting activities, kept hounds and horses and also established a run similar to that of fox hunting runs in Britain in the 1800s.[51] One of Canada's first polo clubs started in Grenfell.[28] Currently, the town features an active snowmobiling club, the Grenfell Snowdrifters, and the Grenfell Spitfire Hockey club plays in the Qu'Appelle Valley Hockey League. The Flames are the recreational hockey club, and the Titans are the seniors ball club.[52]

The Community Centre on Main Street has a substantial hall which has been used for presentation of university choir concerts with full audience indicating enthusiastic appreciation.

Prominent Grenfell natives and residents

  • James Dill, Member of Council of the North-West Territories 1891-98.
William John Patterson, Premier and Lieutenant-Governor of Saskatchewan.
  • William J. Patterson, provincial premier from 1935 to 1944 and Lieutenant-Governor from 1951 to 1958 was born in Grenfell[1][8] as was Lorne MacPherson, the Canadian entertainment lawyer, founder of the Alberta Motion Picture Development Corporation and independent film producer.[53]
  • Frederick W. Johnson taught school in Grenfell before serving in the Second World War and then practising law for many years in Regina, being appointed to the Court of Queens Bench, serving as its Chief Justice from 1977 to 1983 and ultimately becoming the sixteenth Lieutenant-Governor of Saskatchewan between 1983 to 1988. Johnson was also first chancellor of the Saskatchewan Order of Merit.[28]
Canadian prairie pioneer Benjamin Parkyn Richardson.
  • Benjamin Parkyn Richardson, MLA 1888-1891, as also the first president of the Grenfell Agricultural Society which was established in 1884.[28] "In the death of Benjamin Parkyn Richardson, the district of Grenfell has lost one of its early pioneers and the town one of its most prominent and active citizens. Coming to what was then Grenfell in the spring of 1884, he at once identified himself with the interests of the West, at that time still uncertain, its future success- doubtful. The difficulties and discouragement of those early years, is still fresh and green in the memories of some who are still with us, but who, like him whose loss we now deplore, have lived to see the full dawn of a brighter day, and a truer knowledge of the land we live in." was reported in the Grenfell Sun, 1910.[55] He was also the director of the Hospital Board, chairman of the Public School Board, and editor of the Grenfell Sun, of which he was a founder.
  • Dennis A. FitzGerald born January 1, 1903, in Grenfell and graduated Grenfell High School in 1919.[56] FitzGerald became director of the United States Department of Agriculture's Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, as chief of ECA's food division. Paul Hoffman, his superior in the division, said of him on his appointment, "He's probably the greatest authority on food procurement and distribution in the world."[57]
  • John Hubbard of Grenfell became the first president of the Saskatchewan Beekeepers Association in 1923. He organised the first meeting at his apiary in Grenfell in 1920[58]
  • R.J. Staples, born 1904 in Grenfell, was a prominent educater in the field of music. After receiving his education at the University of Saskatchewan he taught at several schools in Saskatchewan followed by serving as advisor on school music courses and provincial supervisor. He introduced workshops in school music methods and was instrumental in the introduction of the recorder in Canadian schools.[59]
James Thomas Milton Anderson.
  • Dr. Cal Bricker, a Grenfell dentist, competed in the Olympics. In the London 1908 Summer Olympics he gained a bronze medal in the men's long jump, and during the 1912 Summer Olympics held in Stockholm he won the silver medal, again for men's long jump.[61] Bricker was inducted into the University of Toronto, Saskatchewan and Canadian Sports Hall of Fame.[62] Canadian athletes who excel in jumping activities are awarded the Cal D. Bricker Memorial trophy.[28]

References

  1. ^ a b c McLennan, David (2006). "Grenfell". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre. Retrieved 2009-05-18. Cite error: The named reference "EofS" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ National Archives, Archivia Net. "Post Offices and Postmasters". Retrieved 2009-05-08.
  3. ^ Government of Saskatchewan, MRD Home. "Municipal Directory System". Retrieved 2009-05-08. Archived 2008-11-21 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b Canadian Textiles Institute. (2005). "CTI Determine your provincial constituency". Retrieved 2009-05-08. Archived 2007-10-10 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Commissioner of Canada Elections, Chief Electoral Officer of Canada (2005). "Elections Canada On-line". Retrieved 2009-05-08.
  6. ^ David McLennan, "Gremfell," The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/grenfell.html (retrieved March 23, 2014)
  7. ^ David McLennon, "Grenfell," Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 19 November 2007.
  8. ^ a b c McLennon.
  9. ^ Grenfell Cenotaph. Retrieved 18 November 2007. Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ a b c Thorpe, J. (1999). Kai-iu Fung, Bill Barry, Wilson, Michael (ed.). Natural Vegetation (Millennium ed.). Saskatchewan: University of Saskatchewan. pp. 46, 63, 76, 91, 160. ISBN 0-88880-387-7. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |encyclopedia= ignored (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  11. ^ Coupland, R.T. (1969). "Natural Vegetation of Saskatchewan". In J.H. Richards, K.I. Fung (ed.). Atlas of Saskatchewan. J.S. Rowe. Saskatoon, SK, CA: University of Saskatchewan. pp. 72–78.
  12. ^ Thompson, Christian (2006). "Sakimay First Nation". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  13. ^ Barry, Bill (2005). Geographic Names of Saskatchewan. Regina, Saskatchewan: People Places Publishing Ltd. p. 172. ISBN 1-897010-19-2.
  14. ^ "Canadian Climate Normals 1971-2000". Environment Canada. Retrieved 2009. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  15. ^ a b c d "2006 Community Profiles". Statistics Canada. Government of Canada. 2008-07-24. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011. Retrieved 2008-09-28. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  16. ^ a b "2001 Community Profiles". Statistics Canada. Government of Canada. 02/01/2007. Retrieved 2008-09-28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  17. ^ Taché, J. de Labroquerie (print version); Adamson, Julia (online version) (1918 republished to the internet 17-Oct-2000). Census of Prairie Provinces Population and Agriculture Manitoba Saskatchewan Alberta. Ottawa: Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty. Table 3 Towns page 121 Alameda, Sk to Watson, Sk. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help); Unknown parameter |nopp= ignored (|no-pp= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: year (link)
  18. ^ "2011 Community Profiles". 2011 Canadian census. Statistics Canada. March 21, 2019. Retrieved 2014-07-15.
  19. ^ "2006 Community Profiles". 2006 Canadian census. Statistics Canada. August 20, 2019.
  20. ^ "2001 Community Profiles". 2001 Canadian census. Statistics Canada. July 18, 2021.
  21. ^ "Grenfell, Saskatchewan". Municipal Directory System. Government of Saskatchewan. December 9, 2008 3:. Retrieved 2009-05-08. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  22. ^ Ambrosi, Raymond (2006). "Milling". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  23. ^ Houston, C. Stuart (2006). "Hospitals". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  24. ^ "Health Services". Town of Grenfell. iCompass Technologies Inc. 2007. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  25. ^ Cousins, Brian (2006). "Transportation". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  26. ^ "History". Town of Grenfell. iCompass Technologies Inc. 2007. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  27. ^ Adamson, Julia (1925). "Canadian Maps: January 1925 Waghorn's Guide. Post Offices in Man. Sask. Alta. and West Ontario" (Published online January 5, 2005). Online Historical Map Digitization Project. Waghorn. Retrieved 2009-05-15.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g "Grenfell". Sask Biz. Government of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  29. ^ "Grenfell Elementary Community School". Prairie Valley School Division. Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved 2009-05-17. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  30. ^ "Grenfell High Community School". Prairie Valley School Division. Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved 2009-05-17. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  31. ^ Adamson, Julia (15 Mar 2006). "Saskatchewan One Room Schoolhouse Project". Saskatchewan Gen Web. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  32. ^ a b c Yule, p.151
  33. ^ Yule, pp.154-55.
  34. ^ Yule, p.157.
  35. ^ Trevor Powell, "The Challenge of the Frontier," in Diocese of Qu'Appelle. http://quappelle.anglican.ca/index.php/history/63-challenge-frontier Retrieved February 10, 2013.
  36. ^ Yule, p.161
  37. ^ Yule, p.163.
  38. ^ a b Yule, p.163
  39. ^ Kasperski, Lindy (2006). "Polish Settlements". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  40. ^ a b c Yule, p.164.
  41. ^ a b Yule, p.165.
  42. ^ Yule, pp.165-66.
  43. ^ Yule, pp.167-68.
  44. ^ Trinity Presbyterian Church website. Retrieved 17 October 2011.
  45. ^ "Attractions," in Town of Grenfell, http://www.grenfell.ca/recreation-tourism/attractions/ Retrieved February 2, 2013. name="SaskBiz"
  46. ^ "Saskatchewan Regional Prks Association Zone 4 south east". Saskatchewan Regional Parks Association. Retrieved 2009-05-17. Archived 2009-04-16 at the Wayback Machine
  47. ^ Charabin, Nadine (2006). "Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire (IODE)". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  48. ^ Chaput, John (2006). "10th Field Regiment". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  49. ^ Chaput, John (2006). "Soccer". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  50. ^ Wasiak, Edwin B. (2006). "Soccer". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  51. ^ Grade 7 class at Hnery Kelsey Public School (1973). E.T. Russell (ed.). What's In a Name?. Saskatoon: Western Producer Prairie Books. p. 136. ISBN 0-919306-39-X.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  52. ^ "Organisations". Town of Grenfell. iCompass Technologies Inc. 2007. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  53. ^ "Billington Award to Lorne MacPherson," MediaMag.ca, September 2007. Retrieved 19 November 2007. Archived 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine
  54. ^ Mohr, Jeremy (2006). "Lake, Sir Richard Stuart (1860–1950)". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  55. ^ Benjamin Parkyn Richardson
  56. ^ "Papers of Dennis A. FitzGerald, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library" (PDF). March 1992. Retrieved 2009-05-17. Archived 2009-01-14 at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ "Quick Steps". Time Magazine. Apr 26, 1948. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  58. ^ Gruszka, John; Ray Ambrosi (2006). "Beekeeping". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  59. ^ Saunders, Gail (2006). "Staples, Rj (1904–72)". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  60. ^ Kyba, Patrick (2006). "Anderson, James Thomas Milton (1878–1946)". Encyclopaedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Centre University of Regina. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  61. ^ "Cal Bricker Biography and Statistics - Olympics at Sports - Reference.com". Sports Reference LLC. 200–2009. Retrieved 2009-05-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  62. ^ "Calvin David (Cal) Bricker's Hall of Fame Bio". University of Toronto. Retrieved 009-05-18. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  • Annie I. Yule. Grit and growth: the story of Grenfell. (1980) Grenfell, Saskatchewan: Grenfell Historical Committee. [1] Retrieved 7 March 2009.

Location

[1]

50°25′N 102°55′W / 50.417°N 102.917°W / 50.417; -102.917 (Grenfell, Saskatchewan)

  1. ^ Adamson, Julia (1925). "Saskatchewan, Canada, Rand McNally 1924 Indexed Pocket Map Tourists' and Shippers' Guide" (Published online 11-Nov-2003). Online Historical Map Digitization Project. Waghorn. Retrieved 2009-05-15.