Bradford West Gwillimbury

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        Bradford West Gwillimbury

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          Bradford West Gwillimbury

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            Bradford West Gwillimbury

              3 Description archivistique résultats pour Bradford West Gwillimbury

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              CA BWGPL LHC-2023-10-30/10 · Pièce · June 2001
              Fait partie de Local History Collection

              One binder of handwritten transcripts of land registry data for Concessions 1-8, compiled by Marcia Lee in June, 2001. Mostly ballpoint pen on lined paper, with some notes and drawings in pencil and/or highlighted with various colours of highlighter.

              Sans titre
              CA BWGPL LHC-2023-10-30/11 · Pièce · June 2001
              Fait partie de Local History Collection

              One binder of handwritten transcripts of land registry data for Concessions 9-15, compiled by Marcia Lee in June, 2001. Mostly ballpoint pen on lined paper, with some notes and drawings in pencil and/or highlighted with various colours of highlighter.

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              History of the Gwillimburys
              CA BWGPL LHC-Newsp-Arti-PH26704 · Pièce · 2000s
              Fait partie de Local History Collection

              "When Jean Keffer asked me to sign her petition to keep Gwillimbury in the Town name, I did so with the following in mind...Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Gwillim was an aide-de-camp of General Wolfe. He was with Wolfe when the General died on the Plains of Abraham in 1759. His daughter Elizabeth married John Graves Simcoe; the rest is history. My own connection to the "Gwillburys" began in 1803, when my 5G-Grandfather, John Eves, a Quaker from Pennsylvania, built one of the first settler dwellings, after he was patented with Lot 108 in West Gwillimbury. He is credited with the first industry in the "Gwillimburys", when he built a sawmill on the Holland River soon after. I even found reference to North Gwillimbury in the 1881 census where my Great-Great grandparents Thomas Lamb and Rachel Eves briefly lived. When I wrote on the Millenium Clock Monument, with assistance from George Jackson, I tried to balance the story of the Town and Township, so that one can see the relationship that existed, where we were intertwined socially, economically and emotionally. My wife Julie and I both spent our formative years in West Gwillimbury, and our two sons are the 9th generation in Ontario as descended from those original settlers on Lot 108. The name Bradford West Gwillimbury may be long and unwieldy, but historically and emotionally it is ours alone."

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