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Kamsack
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Kamsack, Saskatchewan, Canada, is a town in the Assiniboine River Valley, where the Whitesand River joins the Assiniboine River. It is 56 kilometres (35 mi) northeast of Yorkton. Highway 8 and Highway 5 intersect in the town.
Key Information
Coté First Nation is 8 kilometres (5 mi) north and Keeseekoose First Nation is 18 kilometres (11 mi) north of Kamsack on Highway 8.
History
[edit]In 1904, land was surrendered from the Coté First Nation for the Canadian Northern Railway station and the town site of Kamsack.[4] Between 1905 and 1907 additional land was allocated, the northern sections of which were returned to Indian reserve status. In 1913 a further two-mile strip of land on the southern boundary was given, but returned in 1915 when it was identified the Coté people had lost too much of their best agricultural land. In 1963, further acres surrendered in 1905 were also reconstituted as reserve land. The interest in and surrender of land from the reserve's southern boundary—nearest the Kamsack town site—resulted partly from speculation of its value for settlement.
The lands around what is now Kamsack were settled in the 1880s by a handful of agricultural settlers. The farming area around Kamsack was well settled by 1905. These farms consisted of a variety of ethnic groups which are still present to this day: Independent Doukhobors, Ukrainians, Europeans, Americans and Eastern Canadians were all among the early settlers to the area.
In 1903 the Canadian Northern Railway and Kamsack railway station were built which literally forced the birth of Kamsack. The town is served today by Via Rail's Winnipeg–Churchill train.
The name Kamsack came from an early post office of the same name, which was in one of the early settlers' homes. The name is derived from kamesak kîkway (Cree for 'large, something large')[5] – compare the name of the Manitoba electoral district The Pas-Kameesak. In the 1900s, the Doukhobor village called Nadezhda (Russian: Надежда, 'Hope'), some 15 km to the northwest of Kamsack, was the site of the annual general meetings of the Doukhobor community of Saskatchewan. By around 1910, the meeting site has shifted to the village of Veregin, some 10 km west of Kamsack, where a permanent Doukhobor central office was established.[6]
The first buildings were constructed in 1904 along the north side of the Canadian Northern Railway. These included a general store, drug store, pool room, hotel and post office. In the spring of 1905 the first school was opened in the Hallson building (named after a local businessman and town councillor). The village grew rapidly and by 1911 it had a population of over 500 people and was declared a town. The town continued to expand and by 1913 its property assessment totalled $1.2 million. In the summer of 1914 construction was started on the waterworks, sewage system and electric light plant. By 1921 the population was in excess of 2,000 people and the expansion of services continued to take place.[6]
During the depression years Kamsack suffered, as did all communities during the period, and as a result the town's population dropped to 1,800 people. This exodus of people was small compared to many other communities and Kamsack survived. During the summer of 1944 Kamsack once again faced adversity when it was hit by a tornado that is now referred to as the "Kamsack Cyclone". The devastation involved 400 homes and 100 businesses and caused over $2 million damage. The rebuilding process began again with the help of the veterans returning from World War II. As it turned out, this period turned into the biggest building boom in the town's history.[6]
This building period included business, public and residential sections of the town. Water and sewer systems were extended, streets were paved and cement sidewalks were built. The building boom continued right up to 1961 when the census showed 2,941 residents in the town. In the 1970s Kamsack saw its business district continue to grow with the arrival of the Royal Bank, the construction of the "Kamplex" (a dual purpose hockey and curling rink) and construction began on the new hospital.[6]
Demographics
[edit]In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Kamsack had a population of 1,779 living in 792 of its 903 total private dwellings, a change of -6.3% from its 2016 population of 1,898. With a land area of 5.67 km2 (2.19 sq mi), it had a population density of 313.8/km2 (812.6/sq mi) in 2021.[7]
| 2021 | 2016 | 2011 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population | 1,779 (-6.3% from 2016) | 1,898 (+4.0% from 2011) | 1,825 (+6.5% from 2006) |
| Land area | 5.67 km2 (2.19 sq mi) | 5.83 km2 (2.25 sq mi) | 5.85 km2 (2.26 sq mi) |
| Population density | 313.5/km2 (812/sq mi) | 325.3/km2 (843/sq mi) | 311.8/km2 (808/sq mi) |
| Median age | 47.6 (M: 45.6, F: 50.0) | 47.8 (M: 44.6, F: 49.7) | 48.9 (M: 46.9, F: 50.1) |
| Private dwellings | 903 (total) 792 (occupied) | 976 (total) | 949 (total) |
| Median household income | $58,400 | $46,112 |
Attractions
[edit]- Kamsack Culture Days[11]
- Kamsack Powerhouse Museum
- National Doukhobor Heritage Village is located 10 km (6 mi) west of Kamsack at Veregin
- Duck Mountain Provincial Park
- Shellmouth Reservoir
- Madge Lake
Education
[edit]The public schools in Kamsack are part of Good Spirit School Division. Victoria School offers Pre-Kindergarten to Grade 4 and Kamsack Comprehensive Institute offers grades 5 to 12.[6]
Parkland Regional College offers post-secondary education, SIAST and general interest classes.[6]
Notable people
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ National Archives, Archivia Net. "Post Offices and Postmasters". Archived from the original on 6 October 2006. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- ^ Government of Saskatchewan, MRD Home. "Municipal Directory System". Archived from the original on 15 January 2016. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- ^ Commissioner of Canada Elections, Chief Electoral Officer of Canada (2005). "Elections Canada On-line". Archived from the original on 21 April 2007. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- ^ "Cote First Nation, Land Issues". www.sicc.sk.ca. Archived from the original on 14 May 2016.
- ^ "Search results". www.creedictionary.com. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f "Town of Kamsack website". Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- ^ "Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories, census divisions and census subdivisions (municipalities), Saskatchewan". Statistics Canada. 9 February 2022. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
- ^ "2021 Community Profiles". 2021 Canadian census. Statistics Canada. 4 February 2022. Retrieved 19 October 2023.
- ^ "2016 Community Profiles". 2016 Canadian census. Statistics Canada. 12 August 2021. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
- ^ "2011 Community Profiles". 2011 Canadian census. Statistics Canada. 21 March 2019. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- ^ "Kamsack Culture Days 2013".
External links
[edit]Kamsack
View on GrokipediaGeography
Location and Topography
Kamsack is located in east-central Saskatchewan, Canada, at coordinates 51°33′54″N 101°53′41″W.[7] The town lies approximately 86 km northeast of Yorkton by road, within Division No. 9 of the province.[8] Saskatchewan Highways 5 and 8 intersect in Kamsack, facilitating regional connectivity.[7] The town occupies a position at the confluence of the Whitesand River and the Assiniboine River, defining its placement in the Assiniboine River Valley.[6] This riverine setting contributes to the surrounding topography of river valleys amid the broader prairie landscape.[2] Kamsack's terrain features rolling hills, interspersed forested areas, and extensive farmlands, with an average elevation of about 450 meters above sea level.[9][6] These natural elements shape the local environment, distinguishing it from flatter prairie expanses elsewhere in Saskatchewan.[6] The valley's contours provide varied panoramas, influencing the town's visual and ecological character.[2]Climate and Environment
Kamsack lies within the humid continental climate zone, featuring pronounced seasonal variations with long, cold winters and short, warm summers. Average January temperatures reach highs of around -10°C and lows of -20°C or below, while July averages include highs near 25°C and lows of 12°C.[10][11] Annual precipitation totals approximately 500 mm, with high interannual variability that influences local agriculture through periods of excess moisture leading to potential flooding or deficits causing drought stress on crops.[12] The local environment is shaped by the Whitesand River, a tributary originating northwest of Yorkton that joins the Assiniboine River near Kamsack, forming riparian zones that support diverse wetland and grassland habitats amid the surrounding aspen parkland and mixed grassland ecoregions. These riverine ecosystems sustain fish populations, waterfowl, and native vegetation adapted to prairie conditions, though agricultural land use dominates the landscape, with over 80% of the area in crop production or pasture. Risks include seasonal flooding from spring snowmelt along the Assiniboine and periodic low flows exacerbating soil erosion or habitat fragmentation.[13][14] Climate change projections for the region indicate warmer temperatures increasing evapotranspiration and agricultural water demand, potentially rising from current levels to double by mid-century, alongside more frequent droughts and altered precipitation patterns that could reduce streamflows and intensify pressure on groundwater resources critical for irrigation and livestock. These shifts pose challenges to grain and oilseed farming prevalent in Kamsack, with historical data showing crop yields vulnerable to extended dry spells, as evidenced by provincial declines during recent drought events.[15][16][17]History
Indigenous Presence and Early European Contact
The region encompassing present-day Kamsack, situated in the Assiniboine River Valley of east-central Saskatchewan, was part of the traditional territories of the Cree and Saulteaux (Anishinaabe) peoples prior to sustained European contact.[18] These groups, along with the Assiniboine, formed the Iron Confederacy in the late 18th century, an alliance that facilitated control over fur trade networks extending into the Assiniboine Valley by the early 1800s, emphasizing resource extraction and inter-tribal competition for bison hunting grounds and trade goods.[19] Archaeological evidence of pre-contact habitation in the broader Saskatchewan plains includes stone tools and bison kill sites dating back millennia, though specific artifacts tied directly to Kamsack remain limited to oral traditions of seasonal migrations along the river for hunting and fishing.[20] Initial European interactions occurred through the fur trade, with French explorers like Pierre Gaultier de La Vérendrye establishing indirect contacts via Assiniboine and Cree intermediaries as early as the 1730s along the Assiniboine River, where trade focused on beaver pelts and provisions amid rivalries between Indigenous middlemen and European companies like the Hudson's Bay Company.[21] By the early 19th century, competition intensified as Cree and Saulteaux bands leveraged their positions to monopolize exchanges, trading furs obtained from western sources for European metal goods, guns, and textiles, often leading to overhunting of beaver populations and shifts in local economies toward provisioning posts with pemmican from bison.[22] These encounters were pragmatic and conflict-prone, marked by alliances that dissolved under pressures from disease introduction and resource depletion rather than cooperative exploration. Following Treaty 4's signing in 1874, which ceded lands including the Assiniboine Valley to the Crown in exchange for reserves and annuities, the Cote First Nation—a Saulteaux band—established a reserve adjacent to Kamsack, formalizing European administrative presence through government surveys and missionary activities.[23] In 1889, the Presbyterian Church opened the Crowstand Indian Residential School on the Cote Reserve near Kamsack, operating until 1915 as an assimilation-focused institution that separated children from families to enforce English-language instruction and agricultural labor, reflecting broader Canadian policies of cultural suppression amid ongoing land pressures from settler expansion.[23] Records indicate the school housed up to 50 students under inadequate conditions, including poor ventilation and nutrition, underscoring the coercive nature of these early institutional contacts.[24]Settlement and Incorporation (Late 19th to Early 20th Century)
The arrival of the Canadian Northern Railway in 1903 spurred significant settlement in the Kamsack area, as construction crews, including over a thousand Doukhobor laborers annually, extended the line from Gladstone to Kamsack and beyond to Canora.[25] In 1904, 242 acres were surrendered from the Coté First Nation to establish the railway station and townsite, facilitating homesteading on surrounding fertile prairie lands.[26] Kamsack was incorporated as a village in 1905 amid a homesteading boom that drew European immigrants, including Doukhobors, Ukrainians, Germans, Scandinavians, and English Canadians, who cleared land for mixed farming operations focused on grain and livestock.[27] The post office opened on January 1, 1905, marking formal administrative presence.[28] By 1911, rapid expansion led to town incorporation, with foundational industries centered on agriculture and grain processing to serve local producers.[27] Population surged with these developments, reaching over 2,000 by 1921 as milling and farming infrastructure supported economic stability in the Assiniboine River valley.[29] Early municipal investments, including an electric plant, waterworks, and sewage systems completed in 1914, addressed urban needs amid this growth, positioning Kamsack as a regional service hub.Mid-20th Century Development
During the 1920s, Kamsack benefited from a wheat production boom that supported local prosperity, as evidenced by the expansion of grain handling infrastructure with the addition of the Saskatchewan Pool elevator in 1926 and a total of seven elevators operational by 1928–1929, including facilities from Bawlf, National, and other operators.[30] This growth aligned with broader Saskatchewan agricultural output, where favorable weather and markets enabled strong harvests prior to economic downturns.[31] The onset of the Great Depression in 1929, compounded by prolonged drought from 1929 to 1937—termed the Dust Bowl in Saskatchewan—imposed severe strains on farming communities through crop failures, soil erosion, and plummeting wheat prices that fell to historic lows.[32][33] Although eastern Saskatchewan districts, including Kamsack's parkland region, experienced less intense arid conditions than the southwest's four hardest-hit crop districts, local farmers adapted via practices like summerfallowing to restore soil moisture and mitigate wind erosion.[34] These measures preserved some agricultural viability amid regional relief efforts and out-migration from drier areas.[35] Post-World War II recovery in the 1940s and 1950s brought mechanization advances to Kamsack's grain and mixed farming operations, with widespread adoption of tractors—peaking at over 12,000 units sold province-wide in 1940—and combines, which enhanced harvest efficiency despite wartime production constraints.[36][37] Farm net income stabilized and rose due to wartime demand, supporting infrastructural upgrades like provincial road enhancements under joint municipal-provincial programs, which improved access via highways such as No. 8 through Kamsack.[31][38] Community expansions included school consolidations to address rural enrollment shifts from mechanization-driven farm enlargement, alongside church constructions to serve persistent ethnic farming populations.[39][40]Late 20th to 21st Century
During the late 20th and early 21st centuries, Kamsack's population stabilized at approximately 1,700 to 1,800 residents, reflecting broader rural depopulation patterns in Saskatchewan driven by outmigration to urban centers for employment opportunities. The 2006 census recorded 1,713 inhabitants, increasing modestly to 1,825 by 2011 before declining to 1,779 in 2021, a -6.3% change from 2016 amid provincial urbanization trends that saw rural areas lose population share.[1][41] Economic adaptations emphasized road transport over historical rail dependencies, supporting agriculture and local services without significant industrial expansion. This shift aligned with Saskatchewan's rural economies transitioning from branch lines to highways for grain and commodity movement, though short-line rail persisted for some exports. No major booms materialized, with steady reliance on farming and small-scale commerce preserving the town's agrarian profile.[42] Local efforts countered outmigration through tourism promotion, highlighting the Assiniboine River Valley's rolling hills, forests, and farmland for scenic appeal. Initiatives focused on natural panoramas and regional heritage, fostering minor revivals in visitor services without transforming the economy. Kamsack retained its incorporation as a town since 1911, maintaining municipal stability amid these demographic pressures.[6][1]Demographics
Population Trends
Kamsack's population expanded rapidly during the early settlement period of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, surpassing 500 residents by 1911 as agricultural development drew settlers to the region.[43] Growth continued through the mid-20th century, peaking at approximately 3,000 inhabitants by the early 1960s amid post-war economic expansion in rural Saskatchewan.[3] Thereafter, the town entered a phase of gradual decline, mirroring long-term depopulation trends in rural Saskatchewan that have persisted since the 1930s, with absolute rural population decreases in most decades except brief upticks such as 2006–2011.[44][45] Recent census data underscores this downward trajectory. According to Statistics Canada, Kamsack's population stood at 1,779 in the 2021 Census, reflecting a 6.3% decrease from 1,898 in 2016.[46] This contrasts with Saskatchewan's overall population growth of 3.1% over the same period, highlighting the divergence between urban and rural areas where small towns like Kamsack face sustained net losses.[46]| Census Year | Population | Percentage Change from Previous Census |
|---|---|---|
| 2016 | 1,898 | +4.0% (from 2011) |
| 2021 | 1,779 | -6.3% |
