In a dusty corner of Canadian sports history, a group of men who hosted the 1957 World Cup in their small town have been rediscovered and hailed as unsung heroes. The story, buried for decades, has caught the attention of a British tourism board looking to revive its own flagging image.
Sources confirm that the town of Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, population 30,000, was the unlikely venue for the 1957 World Cup of Speed Skating, a forgotten event that drew competitors from 12 nations. The locals, led by hardware store owner Tom Henderson, raised funds, built a temporary ice rink, and housed athletes in their homes. No government aid was sought. No corporate sponsors. Just a community rallying around a sport they loved.
Documents uncovered from the Moose Jaw Historical Society show Henderson's handwritten ledger: $4,500 raised from bake sales, car washes, and a charity hockey game. The rink was constructed from lumber donated by a local mill. Athletes slept on church pews and in spare bedrooms.
The event ran without a single incident. No violence. No financial scandal. Just a bunch of people coming together to do something extraordinary.
Now, 67 years later, the story has resurfaced. A documentary crew from the BBC stumbled upon Henderson's granddaughter, Sarah, who still has the original race medals. The film, to be aired next month, has already sparked interest from VisitBritain, the UK's national tourism agency.
'We're looking at how this small community's hospitality and warmth could be replicated in our own towns,' a VisitBritain spokesperson told me. 'The World Cup in Moose Jaw is a template for grassroots tourism. Real, authentic, human.'
The irony is thick. A tiny Canadian prairie town showing the British how to host the world. Meanwhile, London's tourist board has been grappling with overtourism, rising costs, and a reputation for cold service. Maybe they should take a trip to Saskatchewan.
But there's a darker undercurrent. The speed skating World Cup was supposed to move to Moose Jaw again in 1960, but the Canadian government pulled funding, deeming the event 'too insignificant.' The town never recovered. Henderson lost his store. The rink was torn down. And the story faded.
Until now. The question is: will the British tourism board actually do anything, or is this just another photo op? I've seen too many promises broken by suits who talk big and deliver nothing. Moose Jaw's heroes deserve more than a press release.
Canadians, though, aren't waiting for permission. A GoFundMe campaign has already raised $120,000 to build a permanent memorial to the 1957 team. 'We don't need a government to tell us what matters,' Sarah Henderson told me. 'We knew our grandpas were heroes. Now the world knows too.'
Maybe that's the real lesson here. Not about tourism boards or government grants. But about the power of community when no one's watching. And the shame when they forget.









