Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan 5.07

Fort Qu'Appelle, SK
Canada

About Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan

Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan is a well known place listed as City in Fort Qu'Appelle ,

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Fort Qu'Appelle is a town in Southern Saskatchewan, Canada "located in the Qu'Appelle Valley 70 km NE of Regina between Echo and Mission Lakes" and not to be confused with the once-significant nearby town of Qu'Appelle. It was originally established in 1864 as a Hudson's Bay Company trading post. Fort Qu'Appelle, with its 1,919 residents in 2006, is at the junction of Sk Hwy 35, Sk Hwy 10, Sk Hwy 22, Sk Hwy 22, Sk Hwy 35, Sk Hwy 56, and Sk Hwy 215. The 1897 Hudson’s Bay Company store, 1911 Grand Trunk Pacific Railway station, Fort Qu’Appelle Sanatorium (Fort San), and the Treaty 4 Governance Centre in the shape of a teepee are all landmarks of this community. Additionally, the Noel Pinay sculpture of a man praying commemorates a burial ground, is a life sized statue in a park beside Segwun Avenue.DemographicsThe Canada 2006 Census day was May 16, 2006, followed by the Canada 2011 Census day on May 10, 2011.These figures do not include the substantial population living along the shores of the Fishing Lakes.Origins and early historyThe current site is the third Fort Qu'Appelle. The first was a North West Company trading post (1801–05), also in the valley but near what is now the Saskatchewan-Manitoba border. The Hudson's Bay Company itself first used the name for a post north of present-day Whitewood (some 174 kilometres east of Regina on Number 1 Highway) from 1813 to 1819.