Edgeley, Saskatchewan
Edgeley is a hamlet in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan and formerly (until the rationalisation of operations by the major Canadian grain-buying companies) the location of some half-dozen grain elevators.
At the outset of settlement of this part of the Canadian prairies, Edgeley was a centre of the Methodist Church of Canada's Qu'Appelle-Edgeley Circuit which later, in 1925, was absorbed into the United Church of Canada.[1]
Once reached by road west of Highway 35 in the once densely populated Qu'Appelle-Fort Qu'Appelle hinterland as well as by rail, its significance has lapsed since the opening of Highway 10 from Balgonie to Fort Qu'Appelle and beyond to PTH 5 at the Manitoba border in the early 1960s, as it has been immediately adjacent to a major throughway.
Demographics
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Edgeley had a population of 41 living in 21 of its 21 total private dwellings, a change of -8.9% from its 2016 population of 45. With a land area of 0.16 km2 (0.062 sq mi), it had a population density of 256.3/km2 (663.7/sq mi) in 2021.[2]
References
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- Regina
- Balcarres
- Balgonie
- Cupar
- Fort Qu'Appelle
- Francis
- Grand Coulee
- Indian Head
- Lumsden
- Pilot Butte
- Qu'Appelle
- Regina Beach
- Rouleau
- Sintaluta
- Southey
- Strasbourg
- White City
communities
Organized hamlets | |
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Special service areas |
- Avonhurst
- Blackwood
- Corinne
- Cottonwood
- Diana
- Dreghorn
- Eastview
- Emerald Park
- Estlin
- Franksburg
- Frankslake
- Hearne
- Jameson
- Kalium
- Katepwa Beach
- Katepwa South
- Kathrintal Colony
- Kenlis
- Keystown
- Lajord
- Lakeview Beach
- Lorlie
- Madrid
- Milaty
- Pattee
- Pitman
- Poplar Park
- Richardson
- Sandy Beach
- Schulerville
- Seitzville
- Stelcam
- Stony Beach
- Zehner
50°38′18″N 103°59′46″W / 50.63833°N 103.99611°W / 50.63833; -103.99611
This article about a location in the Census Division No. 6 of Saskatchewan is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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