Paddockwood, Saskatchewan

Paddockwood (2016 population: ) is a village in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan within the Rural Municipality of Paddockwood No. 520 and Census Division No. 15. It was named after the town Paddock Wood in Kent, England.

In the early 1900s, Fred Pitts immigrated to the lumberland of Canada. From a log cabin he built there as a home, he set up a post office, collecting letters and parcels on horseback for residents of the settlement. He named the settlement Paddockwood after the village he had left in England.

Paddockwood was the home of the first Red Cross hospital in the British Empire, and was set up after the First World War.

Paddockwood is served by the Paddockwood Public Library as well as a nine-hole golf course, the Helbig's Forest Course. Paddockwood belongs to the Saskatchewan Provincial Constituency of Saskatchewan Rivers and the Federal Electoral District of Prince Albert.

History
Paddockwood incorporated as a village on January 1, 1949.

Demographics
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Paddockwood had a population of $118$ living in $51$ of its $68$ total private dwellings, a change of NaN% from its 2016 population of $154$. With a land area of 0.65 km2, it had a population density of in 2021.

In the 2016 Census of Population, the Village of Paddockwood recorded a population of living in  of its  total private dwellings, a NaN% change from its 2011 population of. With a land area of 0.65 km2, it had a population density of in 2016.