Tucked within the Rural Municipality of Grayson No. 184 in Census Division No. 5, the small village of Waldron sits on roughly 1.38 square kilometres of Saskatchewan prairie. With a population that has held steady at 15 residents across both the 2016 and 2021 federal censuses, Waldron is one of the province’s quieter communities, recording a population density of approximately 10.9 people per square kilometre. That consistency followed a modest decline from 20 residents counted in the 2011 census, a drop of about one-third over those five years. The 2021 count found all 15 residents living across 8 occupied private dwellings.
Waldron has a modest but meaningful place in Saskatchewan’s municipal history, having incorporated as a village on July 17, 1909. That formal status has remained unchanged in the more than a century since, placing Waldron among the many small villages that took shape during the early settlement era of the Canadian prairies. Though compact in both area and population, it continues to hold its place on the map as a recognised community within the province of Saskatchewan.