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Duck Lake, Saskatchewan

Town of Duck Lake
Town
Duck Lake Town Office
Duck Lake Town Office
Duck Lake, Saskatchewan is located in Saskatchewan
Duck Lake, Saskatchewan
Duck Lake, Saskatchewan is located in Canada
Duck Lake, Saskatchewan
Location of Duck Lake in Saskatchewan
Coordinates: 52°49′N 106°14′W / 52.82°N 106.23°W / 52.82; -106.23
Country Canada
Province Saskatchewan
Region Saskatchewan
Post office established 1879
Village Incorporated 1898
Town Incorporated 1911
Government
 • Mayor Denis Poirier
 • Town Administrator Betty Fiolleau
 • Governing body Duck Lake Town Council
Area
 • Land 2.86 km2 (1.10 sq mi)
Population (2006)
 • Total 610
 • Density 213.5/km2 (553/sq mi)
Time zone CST
Postal code S0K 1J0
Area code(s) 306
Highways Highway 11
Highway 212
Website Official Site

Duck Lake is a town in the boreal forest of central Saskatchewan, Canada. Its location is eighty-eight kilometres north of Saskatoon and forty-four kilometres south of Prince Albert on highway 11, in the rural municipality of Duck Lake. Immediately to the north of Duck Lake is the south block of the Nisbet Provincial Forest.

It is also the administrative centre of the Beardy's and Okemasis Cree First Nations band government.

Duck Lake was home to one of the last operating Residential Schools in Canada, St. Michael’s Indian Residential School (Duck Lake Indian Residential School), which closed in 1996.

Duck Lake was one of the 5 Southbranch settlements settled by French speaking Métis from Manitoba in the 1860s and 1870s. A Roman Catholic Mission was established in Duck Lake in 1874 by Father André O.M.I. and by 1888 the village had a school, a post office (called Stobart), a flour mill (gristmill) and a trading post. From 1882 to 1905 Duck Lake was within the District of Saskatchewan of the North-West Territories.

In 1885, Duck Lake was the site of the Battle of Duck Lake, a conflict between Métis warriors and the Government of Canada, at the start of the Northwest Rebellion. At Duck Lake, the Prince Albert Trail, which ran from Regina to Prince Albert, crossed the Carlton Trail and it marked the halfway point between the Métis headquarters at and the North-West Mounted Police at Fort Carlton.


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