Earl Grey, Saskatchewan
Earl Grey is a small village in central Saskatchewan, Canada, about 67 kilometres north of Regina. It sits in the Rural Municipality of Longlaketon No. 219 in Census Division No. 6. The area was first settled in 1901 by Paul Henderson, and the village was incorporated in 1906. It was named after Albert Grey, the 4th Earl Grey, who was Canada’s Governor General at the time.
Today, Earl Grey has two churches (Christ Lutheran and United Church), a Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses, several old-age homes, a hotel, a curling rink, and a veterinary clinic. A grain-elevator statue in downtown reflects the village’s history as a grain-trading town. The local public school was reduced to a Kindergarten–Grade 8 in 2003–04 and closed in 2007.
Highways 22 and 641 connect the village, and the Canadian Pacific Railway used to run through Earl Grey but is now abandoned. According to the 2021 Census, Earl Grey had a population of 229 living in 120 of its 134 private dwellings, on a land area of 1.35 square kilometres, for a population density of about 169.6 people per square kilometre. The postal code is S0G 1J0 and the area code is 306. The time zone is Central Standard Time (UTC−6).
This page was last edited on 2 February 2026, at 14:12 (CET).