
Last modified: 2018-05-11 by rob raeside
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by Ivan Sache, 21 April 2018
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The City of Humboldt is named after Baron Alexander von Humboldt (1769 - 
1859), a world famous German scientist and naturalist, who traveled extensively 
in Central and South America.
The name “Humboldt” was approved in 1875 
for the site in the Northwest Territories along the Canadian Pacific Telegraph 
Line at which a repair station was built (8 km south west of the present city 
site). The only permanent inhabitants of the area were the telegraph operators, 
linemen and their families and members of the North West Mounted Police. The 
station played an integral part in communications for the developing west and in 
the Métis Resistance of 1885 at Batoche.
Humboldt secured its 
significance in Canadian history in 1885. With the Métis Resistance led by Louis 
Riel taking place at Batoche just 100 km north west, Humboldt became the 
important communication link between Prime Minister John A. Macdonald and his 
forces in the west. It was also a site of strategic importance. General 
Middleton arrived in April 1885 with 950 soldiers, established a garrison at the 
station and used it as his base for scouting operations. At that time, the 
telegraph line further west was periodically cut, so the Humboldt Station was 
crucial as the last secure link to the east. On May 1, 1885, Humboldt became the 
site of a large supply depot under Maj. Lt.-Colonel G.T. Denison, of the 
Governor Generals Body Guard. A combined force of approximately 460 men built an 
elaborate series of entrenchments, which converted the station into a fortified 
military encampment to protect the supplies. The troops left Humboldt in July 
1885.
With the increasing development of western Canada, settlers were 
arriving in the area at the turn of the century. The history of Humboldt was 
influenced by the establishment of St. Peter’s Colony by the 
Benedictine 
monks. In search of suitable land to establish a new colony, Father Bruno 
Doerfler, O.S.B. and businessmen from Minnesota arrived in Winnipeg in 1902 – 
traveling as far west as Calgary, up to Wetaskiwin, east to Battleford, and 
arrived in Saskatoon on August 27, after 400 miles by team and wagon. The 
businessmen formed the German American Land Company in 1903 and purchased 
100,000 acres of the railroad land in the district to sell to settlers who 
wanted more land than a quarter section. The company enticed German Catholics 
living in the United States to homestead in St. Peter’s Colony by boasting that 
there were “churches and schools and German neighbors in the district, which 
also offers [sic] the best in material matters, the spiritual advice and 
activity lies in the hands of the Benedictine fathers.”
The Canadian Northern 
railway provided an essential route to the new community upon its arrival in 
September 1904. By May 1905, the first of the passenger trains arrived and the 
district flourished. The name Humboldt was transferred to the village in 1905 
and it became a town in 1907. Humboldt became Saskatchewan’s thirteenth city in 
November 2000.
http://www.humboldtmuseum.ca/content/humboldt-history: City website
Humboldt was named, way back in 1918, as the heart of the sure crop district.
https://www.discoverhumboldt.com/local/museum-featuring-a-new-display: 
Discover Humboldt website
Ivan Sache, 21 April 2018
 
image
by David Fowler, 8 April 2018
The flags of Canada and Humboldt, Saskatchewan, were lowered to half-staff 
following a tragic crash that killed 15 members of the Humboldt Broncos hockey 
team. A photograph, also visible on the website of
The Star, was posted on
https://www.facebook.com/groups/flagsoftheworld/permalink/2068771173137594/, 
and shows the flag with just the city name. 
Peter Hans van den 
Muijzenberg, 17 April 2018