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In 1922, it was the year of the Big Bank Robbery. On May 24, thieves broke into the Bank of Hocheloga, blowing the safe but were unsuccessful in opening it. Constable Pete Whitelaw was shot in the thigh while trying to apprehend the culprits. As a result, he spent two months in a Moose Jaw hospital. In September robbers once again visited the ...
Moose Jaw Union Hospital, part of the Five Hills Health Region, was the primary health care provider for the city since 1948, [75] but closed in 2015 and was replaced by Dr. F.H. Wigmore Regional Hospital in the city's northeast end. The new location was partly picked for its proximity to the Trans-Canada Highway.
Weeneebayko General Hospital is the successor to Weeneebayko Health Ahtuskaywin/Moose Factory General Hospital (c. 1966) and Moose Factory Indian and Inuit Hospital (c. 1950). Weeneebayko Health Ahtuskaywin was a federal funded hospital under Health Canada, where as most hospitals in Ontario are provincially funded.
Heilman worked at Moose Jaw Union Hospital, a hospital in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, until 2010, when he began working at East Kootenay Regional Hospital, [1] [20] where, in October 2012, he was appointed head of the department of emergency medicine. [1]
Lewis Draper (b. 1935; full name: Charles Lewis Woodvine Draper) is a family physician, and author, who was a Canadian provincial politician.He was the NDP member of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan for the constituency of Assiniboia-Gravelbourg, from 1991 until 1995. [1]
In 1924, The Canadian Red Cross installed a nursing outpost at the Willow Bunch hospital, also known as the "Pasteur Hospital." [45] [46] The hospital was expanded to more than twice its length in 1925. [46] On September 14, 1927, the Sisters of Charity of St. Louis took over general operations but the Sisters left in 1929 due to the Depression ...
Avonlea Creek is a tributary of the Moose Jaw River and it joins the Moose Jaw River near Rouleau. About 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) south-east of Avonlea, is Avonlea Dam, which was built on Avonlea Creek between 1963 and 1964, creating the Reg Watson Reservoir. The reservoir is the village's only water source.
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Assiniboia had a population of 2,333 living in 1,070 of its 1,236 total private dwellings, a change of -3.8% from its 2016 population of 2,424. With a land area of 3.68 km 2 (1.42 sq mi), it had a population density of 634.0/km 2 (1,642.0/sq mi) in 2021. [13]