Estlin, Saskatchewan
Estlin, Saskatchewan is located in Saskatchewan
Estlin, Saskatchewan
Location of Estlin in Saskatchewan
Coordinates: 50°15′00″N 104°32′04″W / 50.250076605°N 104.534393312°W / 50.250076605; -104.534393312
CountryCanada
ProvinceSaskatchewan
RegionSouthwest Saskatchewan
Rural MunicipalityBratt's Lake No. 129
Post office established1913-06-01
Post office closed1969-12-31
Postal code
NA
Area code306
HighwaysHighway 306
[1]

Estlin is a hamlet in Saskatchewan, Canada 22 km south of Regina. Little remains of the former village, except for some private residences and the rail lines near the town. The town once contained an elevator.[2]

The Buck Lake Cemetery is located at the site, dating from 1890.[3]

The hamlet is also the site for an Alliance Pipeline pumping station with a heat-recovery 6 MW power generating unit operated by NRGreen Power.[4]

History

Estlin was founded in 1912 when the Grand Trunk Railway laid a railroad line through the area. The first settlers lived just south of the town beginning in the 1880s. The town peaked in the 1920s. It boasted a school, church, post office, general store, livery, blacksmith, stockyards, lumber yard, tinsmith, cafe, elevators, pool house, slaughterhouse and a machinery warehouse. The United Church was constructed in 1906 and moved to Estlin in 1913. During the 1920s, fires destroyed several buildings, but most were rebuilt. In 1947 the lumber yard was converted into a curling and skating rink. In 1969 the train station closed. The school operated from 1926 to 1973 and had a baseball team. The school was demolished in the 2010s. The town's population was never greater than 50.

See also

References

  1. National Archives, Archivia Net, Post Offices and Postmasters, archived from the original on October 6, 2006, retrieved March 5, 2011
  2. "The Changing Face of the Saskatchewan Prairie - Image Gallery: E 50. Estlin". University of Saskatchewan - Archives. Retrieved March 5, 2011.
  3. "Buck Lake Cemetery". ancestry.com. Retrieved March 5, 2011.
  4. "NRGreen Waste Heat Units" (PDF). NRGreen Power. Retrieved March 5, 2011.

50°15′00″N 104°32′04″W / 50.250076605°N 104.534393312°W / 50.250076605; -104.534393312


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.