Rosthern is a town at the juncture of Highway 11 and Highway 312 in the central area of Saskatchewan, Canada. It is located roughly halfway between the cities of Prince Albert and Saskatoon.
Mennonite settlers, led by Gerhard Ens, began arriving in the area around 1890, with the establishment of the Qu’Appelle, Long Lake & Saskatchewan Railway to Prince Albert.[6] The post office was established in 1893, and by 1898 the community achieved village status. In 1903, Rosthern was incorporated as a town.[7]
There are several apocryphal versions of the story about how the town got its name. One is that in the late 1880s when the railway ran through from Regina to Prince Albert a man by the name of Ross drowned in the creek that flows through the town. Terne is old English for tarn meaning a pool, and the name stuck.[8] In all likelihood, however, the town's name echoes an old world name brought over by a homesick worker on the railroad, in this case that of Rostherne, a village in the United Kingdom.[9]
Demographics
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Rosthern had a population of 1,602 living in 642 of its 694 total private dwellings, a change of -5.1% from its 2016 population of 1,688. With a land area of 4.14km2 (1.60sqmi), it had a population density of 387.0/km2 (1,002.2/sqmi) in 2021.[10]
Mennonite Heritage Museum (1910)Valley Regional ParkGrain elevator
The Seager Wheeler Farm, a National Historic Site of Canada, is 7km east of Rosthern. The Rosthern Mennonite Heritage Museum (c. 1909-10) is a Municipal Heritage Property on the Canadian Register of Historic Places.[16]
There is also a public library, many parks and walking trails.
Recreation
In addition to the nearby Valley Regional Park with an 18-hole grass green golf course, there are two ball-diamonds, two indoor hockey rinks, a curling rink, bowling alley, and three school gyms. A new outdoor swimming pool completed in 2005. Rosthern is also home to the Youth Farm Bible Camp.
Popular sporting activities include baseball, soccer, badminton, basketball, hockey, swimming, volleyball, floor hockey and Tae Kwon Do.
Churches
Rosthern is home to over ten churches including Mennonite, Ukrainian Orthodox, Swedenborgian, Pentecostal, Anglican, Roman Catholic, Ukrainian Catholic, Lutheran, Seventh-day Adventist, Christian & Missionary Alliance, and Baptist.
Notable people
Alan Joseph Adamson, politician
William Benjamin Bashford, politician
Bill Braden, politician
George Braden, 2nd Premier of Northwest Territories
Commissioner of Canada Elections, Chief Electoral Officer of Canada (2005), Elections Canada On-line, archived from the original on 2007-04-21, retrieved 2007-08-02
Rosthern (Saskatchewan, Canada). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia.
"Rosthern". Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina. 2006. Archived from the original on 2016-04-18. Retrieved 2016-05-13.
Russell, E. T. (1975), What's in a Name?, Saskatoon, Sk: Western Producer Prairie Books, p.276, ISBN1-894022-92-0
Barry, Bill (2003), People Places Contemporary Saskatchewan Placenames, Regina, Canada: Print West communications, p.230, ISBN1-894022-92-0
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