Biggar is a small town in Saskatchewan, Canada with a population of around 2100 (2011).
Understand
The town is known for its slogan "New York is big, but this is Biggar." It was created in 1914 by a survey crew who painted it onto a town sign as a drunken prank. According to the Biggar Museum and Gallery, the graffiti remained unchanged until 1954 when the slogan was officially adopted.
Biggar was incorporated as a village in 1909. It was named after William Hodgins Biggar, general counsel of the Grand Trunk Pacific (GTP) railway which had come through the area in 1908. The GTP made Biggar a divisional point on its line, building a large station and roundhouse. The population grew as Biggar became a home terminal where train crews were changed.
Biggar's prosperity was directly tied to the railway for many years. Up to 500 local people were at one time employed by Canadian National Railway (CN), which took over the GTP. That number has now dropped to under 200. As the railway industry has decreased, Biggar has shifted its economy to agriculture and related industries.
Biggar is home to Prairie Malt Limited, a large barley processing plant. The malthouse has an annual capacity of 220,000 metric tonnes. Malt is a primary ingredient in beer and whisky. Prairie Malt employs approximately 70 full-time employees. It creates significant spin-off employment among local trucking firms such as Biggar Transport, with a fleet of over 50 trucks.
The Town of Biggar's businesses include a manufacturer of petroleum and hazardous material containment tanks, a sodium sulphate plant, a large greenhouse and a variety of financial, farm and health services.
Get in
By car
Biggar is located on Highway 14, 93 km (58 mi) west of Saskatoon at the junction of Highways 4, 14, and 51.
By rail
The Canadian is a train operated by VIA Rail twice weekly between Vancouver and Toronto, serving passengers from Edmonton and Winnipeg. Trains stop at the 1 Biggar railway station.
Get around
See
- 1 Biggar Museum & Gallery, 105 3rd Avenue W, ☏ +1 306-948-3451, biggarmuseum@sasktel.net.
- 2 Majestic Theatre, 322 Main Street. A local landmark since it was built in 1911. The original building was enlarged substantially in 1916 and was again enlarged and renovated to its present size and appearance in 1929.
- 3 Sandra Schmirler Olympic Gold Park, 702 Dominion Street. in honour of Canadian, World and Olympic Curling Champion Sandra Schmirler and celebrate the accomplishments of Team Schmirler; houses a gazebo, playground, memorial and wall of fame.
Do
- 1 Biggar Golf Course, Highway 4 (2 km north of Biggar), ☏ +1 306-948-5488. A nine-hole, grass green course with two tees on every hole. Lunch available.
Buy
Eat
- 1 Hannigan's Restaurant, 706 Main Street, ☏ +1 306-948-3335. Daily 11AM-9PM. Burgers, pizza, fried chicken.
- 2 Snow White Family Restaurant, 111 Main Street, ☏ +1 306-948-2861. Daily 11AM-8PM. Chinese restaurant.
- 3 Town & Country Restaurant, 110 Main Street, ☏ +1 306-948-5300. Tu-Su 11AM-8PM. Chinese restaurant.
- 4 Pizzeria Adria, 212 Main St, ☏ +1 306-948-4800. Daily 11AM-7PM. Pizza, salads.
Drink
- 1 Biggar Bar, 101 1st Avenue W, ☏ +1 306-948-3373. F Sa 9:30AM-2AM, Su 11AM-6PM, M 10AM-6PM, Tu-Th 9:30AM-1AM. Breakfast, sandwiches, burgers, steaks.
Sleep
- 1 Westwinds Motor Hotel, 902 Main Street, ☏ +1 306-948-3301, toll-free: +1-844-948-3301. Restaurant on site.
Connect
Go next
- Drive east for 1 hour on Highway 14 to Saskatoon.
Routes through Biggar |
Edmonton ← Wainwright ← | W E | → Saskatoon → Winnipeg |
Meadow Lake ← North Battleford ← | N S | → Rosetown → Swift Current |
Wetaskiwin ← Camrose ← becomes ← | W E | → Saskatoon → END |
Lacombe ← Stettler ← becomes ← | W E | → END |