It has two schools, Dr. Isman Elementary School and Wolseley High School. The recently rebuilt "swinging bridge" has been a feature of Wolseley since 1905. It has a twelve-bed hospital, an eighty-bed nursing home, and two resident doctors. The town is served by three weekly newspapers:
The Wolseley Bulletin,
The Indian Head-Wolseley News and
The Grenfell Sun. A
tourist information radio station, CISE-FM, is based out of Wolseley. Wolseley has a modern artificial ice arena, a curling rink, a nine-hole golf course, and a public swimming beach which is located on the shore of Fairly Lake, the town's most distinguishing feature. This body of water was formed when the Canadian Pacific Railway dammed Aldair Creek in 1902 to obtain a water supply for its steam engines. Fairly Lake gives the town its nickname (Town By The Lake). The town was named one of Canada's prettiest, most historic towns by
Harrowsmith Country Life in 2000. Wolseley is home to a thriving arts community, and in the downtown area, there is an art gallery which is the meeting place of the Wolseley Writers Group, the Wolseley Photography Club, and the Ellisboro Artisans Guild. The Twilite Drive-In Theatre in Wolseley is one of the few left in Saskatchewan. The others include the Jubilee Drive-In Theatre in
Manitou Beach, the Clearwater Drive-In in
Kyle, the Moonlight Movies Drive-in in
Pilot Butte, and the Prairie Dog Drive-in Theatre in
Carlyle. == Demographics ==