Boissevain, Manitoba
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Boissevain is a town in Manitoba near the North Dakota border. It is notable for its proximity to the International Peace Garden, a short drive south on Highway 10. The town also displays a number of wall murals as a tourist attraction. The town was named after Adolphe Boissevain who helped finance the Canadian Pacific Railway.
Boissevain, not far from Turtle Mountain and Turtle Mountain Provincial Park, also formerly hosted the "International Turtle Derby" each summer. "Tommy the Turtle" is a 28-foot-tall, 10,000-lb statue that serves as an icon for both the Turtle Derby and the town as a whole.
Boissevain School was nominated one of Canada's 30 best schools by Maclean's Magazine.
Boissevain is a small town of about 1,500 people and it is between Killarney and Deloraine on the east and west with Brandon in the north. The population of the surrounding area, within a 50 kilometre radius of the town, is about 15,000.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ Boissevain Population (accessed December 7, 2007)
[edit] External links
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