Churchill, Manitoba is known in one way by most people. Every fall, polar bears walk along frozen streets, and every summer, beluga whales come to the surface of the Churchill River. In the summer, tourists arrive by charter flight to see the northern lights dance across an unusually clear sky. Most people agree that it is one of the more interesting places in Canada to just be.
Fewer people know that Churchill has one of the stranger internet histories on the continent. It involves volunteer engineers, satellite dishes pointed at the sky over Hudson Bay, years of dial-up connections held together by kindness, and a reminder that in remote Canada, getting online has always been something you have to fight for, not something you should expect.
The town of Churchill is in northern Manitoba, on the southwest shore of Hudson Bay. It is home to about 1,000 people and has no road access to the south. Food, tools, visitors, and, for a long time, the raw materials needed to keep any kind of digital infrastructure running all come by rail or air. In the middle of the 1990s, the internet started to spread to rural Canada. Churchill didn’t wait for a phone company to show up. The town pretty much wired itself.
In Churchill, the Churchill Community Network, or CCNet, began in 1997 as an internet service run by the community. It was the kind of thing that never seemed easy at the time but sounds easy now. Volunteers took care of the infrastructure, found problems, replaced broken parts, and kept everything running on a budget that would make most telecom executives wince. The server was based at the nearby high school. The satellite connection sent the signal through southern Ontario and bounced it off of buildings before it got to the town. It didn’t work perfectly or quickly, but it did, and Churchill had broadband connectivity before many federal programs that were supposed to do the same thing had even started.
Something quietly interesting about that is hard not to notice. Most people in the country see this town as a place to see wildlife, be curious about, or as a historical footnote. However, the people who live there worked together to solve a problem with connectivity that bigger towns with roads were still waiting for government programs to fix. The fact that this is true shows a certain kind of northern independence.

There was always a risk, though. CCNet users were once without service for weeks after a system crash. Satellite bandwidth was limited and cost a lot. It was always hard to find local technicians who could keep the infrastructure running. When volunteers left, they took the institutional knowledge with them. Dial-up had made CCNet money for years, but the technology was getting old, and the difference between what Churchill had and what the rest of Canada was getting used to kept growing.
This part of the story is left out of the polar bear documentaries. It’s never been a given that people in Churchill could connect. There were always conditions attached to it, like whether or not the provincial government decided to include northern communities in its broadband investment rounds and whether the rail line was still working and shipments of supplies were still coming in. When flooding in 2017 destroyed the only rail link between Churchill and the south, the effects were immediate and terrible: food prices went through the roof, supplies ran out, and everyone who hadn’t thought about it before could see how weak the town’s connection to the rest of the world was.
The same vulnerability is present when you connect to the internet. The infrastructure that connects Churchill to the internet is not redundant in the way that people who live in cities think it is. It is a thin thread that runs over a very long and harsh distance, and when it breaks, there isn’t always a back-up.
Manitoba has put money into northern broadband over the years, and now there are commercial providers in Churchill. Satellite services, such as Starlink, have changed the rules a bit for communities across the province that are far away. It’s possible that Churchill’s internet connection looks more stable now than it did when CCNet was running on volunteer work and old hardware. But geography as a whole hasn’t changed. You can still only get to the town by plane or train. The same weather still hits the infrastructure, which is what freezes Hudson Bay solid every winter. It’s still important for remote communities to know that they can’t just count on getting online, as Churchill’s history of the internet shows.
Most of the time, when people talk about places like Churchill, they focus on what is missing. There are no roads. Years without cell service. Foods that cost a lot. Not many choices. That framing is correct, but it’s not complete. The real story behind Churchill’s internet story is what a community does when it stops waiting. It made something. It kept it going. It happened quietly, without much attention across the country, in a town that most Canadians think of when they think of bears, not broadband.
