Called the “first family of Saskatoon,” the Kusch family is considered to be the first couple with children to settle and make a life in the city. Karl (1840-1915) and Julia (1839-1923) Kusch emigrated from Neustadt, Germany, and despite being both a religious and linguistic minority in the Anglo-Methodist dominated settlement of the Temperance Colony, the family is considered to have made influential contributions to the history of Saskatoon’s agricultural, religious, and social life.
The Kusch family arrived in Saskatoon in 1883 along with other settlers of the Temperance Colonization Society. The Kusch family first traveled from Ontario to Moose Jaw by railway and then made the trip from Moose Jaw to Saskatoon by horse-drawn carts. Information presented to the Kusch family by the Temperance Colony showed Saskatoon in an idealized and aspirational form where the city looked like a burgeoning industrial centre, when in reality the city population was mostly bachelors living in tents. For instance, the family was told that there would be a store in the city where they could buy supplies, but when they arrived in Saskatoon there was not even one store, causing Karl Kusch to have to make the 15 day trip back to Moose Jaw to buy supplies. The Kusch family had 8 children and their family continued homesteading for over 100 years.