Canora | ||
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Town | ||
The "Welcome to Canora" statue, "Lesia"
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Motto: "Heart of Good Spirit Country" | ||
Coordinates: 51°38′02″N 102°26′13″W / 51.63394°N 102.43691°W | ||
Country | Canada | |
Province | Saskatchewan | |
Region | East Central | |
Census division | No. 9 | |
Rural Municipality | Good Lake | |
Post Office Founded | 1904 | |
Incorporated (Village) | 1905 | |
Incorporated (Town) | 1910 | |
Government | ||
• Town Manager | Michael Mykytyshyn | |
• Governing body | Canora Town Council | |
• M.P., Yorkton—Melville | Cathay Wagantall (2015) | |
• M.L.A., Canora-Pelly | Terry Dennis (2016) | |
Area | ||
• Total | 7.31 km2 (2.82 sq mi) | |
Elevation | 487 m (1,598 ft) | |
Population (2011) | ||
• Total | 2,219 | |
• Density | 303.7/km2 (787/sq mi) | |
Time zone | CST (UTC-6) | |
• Summer (DST) | CST (UTC-6) | |
Postal code | S0A 0L0 | |
Area code(s) | 306/639 | |
Highways | Hwy 5 / Hwy 9 | |
Railways |
Canadian National (freight), Via Rail (passenger) |
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Waterways | Whitesand River Assiniboine River | |
Website | Canora.com | |
Canora is located at the junction of highways No. 5 and 9 in East Central Saskatchewan.
Centrally located on the corners of four adjacent rural municipalities, the community is home to approximately 2,200 residents and draws upon a substantial trading area. Canora's name comes from the first two letters of the words "Canadian Northern Railway", as the original village was incorporated in 1905 around a station of the Canadian Northern Railway (CNoR). (A school in the village of West Jasper Place, Alberta, was named in the same way in 1948, with that name adopted by the surrounding neighbourhood of Canora, Edmonton.)
The CNoR was one of the companies that evolved into the Canadian National Railway Company (CN), and the CN freight line still runs through Canora. The Canora railway station, on the CN line, is served by Via Rail on its passenger service from Winnipeg to Churchill, Manitoba.
Canora became a village in 1905 and was incorporated as a town in 1910.
Canora is known as the "Heart of Good Spirit Country" as a result of its proximity to several lakes and parks, including Crystal Lake, Good Spirit Lake and Duck Mountain Provincial Park. The area is home to Saskatchewan’s greatest number of golf courses per capita and boasts one of the highest tee traffic counts in the province.
The town was judged to have the best-tasting municipal water in Canada at the 13th annual international water tasting competition held in 2003 in Bath (Berkeley Springs), West Virginia, USA. Canora’s water, supplied by several ground wells northeast of the community, also placed fourth internationally at the competition that received entries from eight countries and 23 states. Free samples of this great-tasting water are available at the CN Station House Museum during the summer months.