Bay Trail, Saskatchewan
Bay Trail was an unincorporated community located at NE Sec.24, Twp.36, R.23, W2 from 1931 to 1974 on Highway 20 about south of Humboldt and north of Burr. At its zenith, it had a general store and post office; a Canadian Pacific Railway station and housing for repair workers; and Deer Lake School. Nearby were a few farmsteads.
Bay Trail shared a Roman Catholic church, St. Scholastica, with Burr.
History
The name "Bay Trail" was a shortened version of the nearby Carlton Trail which ran between Winnipeg, Manitoba and the Hudson's Bay Company trading post at Fort Carlton in the 1800s. In the late 1870s a telegraph line was strung alongside the trail from Winnipeg to Edmonton. About west of Bay Trail, the Carlton Trail and telegraph line crossed Wolverine Creek. On a farm about west is a site marker for a telegraph station. With the construction of the transcontinental railroad in the mid-1880s, both the trail and telegraph line were abandoned, but not before they had played a significant part during the North-West Rebellion of 1885.Bay Trail was established at the start of the Great Depression in Canada by first generation Canadian Paul V. Hiebert. He built his first general store in 1931, a very modest affair with the store at the front and a small living area at the back. P.V. located the Bay Trail store directly west across the highway completed in 1928 and the CPR railway station. The CPR had just built and completed their line between Lanigan and Prince Albert on September 16, 1930.
Between the one-roomed school and general store was a railway station, a "section house" for the railway repair crew supervisor, and a "shack" for his section hand—all the makings of an emerging rural village of the times. The only feature missing from a typical Canadian prairie settlement was the ionic wooden grain elevator. Over the years, local farmers tried to have one built by the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool but they were never successful.
The Bay Trail district was part of St. Peter's Colony, a Benedictine Abbey established in 1903 which encouraged Roman Catholic settlers, mainly of German heritage. Besides the Hiebert family, some other 1904-05 pioneer families who homesteaded in the Bay Trail district were Novecosky, Saretsky, Suchan, Loroff, Grunsky, Poelzer and Schedlosky — German-speaking families that emigrated from southern Russia.