Train wreck of April 14, 1928. The CNR train crashed just past the Bradford station as it was heading southbound across the river. Engineer J.W Brooks died from this crash, and was found in his seat when the wreck was recovered. He died from the force and circumstances of the derailment. There was no known cause of the derailment.
The train was carrying a load of silk from Japan (via Vancouver) to New York, and a cargo of frozen fish from Vancouver.
Event Date : Wednesday, March 02, 1904
Event Type : Marriage
Description : Miss Minnie Ball, daughter of Rev. Mr. Ball, of Thornhill, to Dr. Cummings, of Bond Head. The wedding took place in Thornhill.
Bradford WitnessEvent Date : Friday, March 10, 1950
Event Type : Death
Description : At York County Hospital as a result of being stuck by a motor car. Husband of Helena Mildred Ball. Father of Kenneth, Harley, Victor, and Julian. Funeral March 14 in Trinity Church, Bond Head. Interment in St. John's Cemetery, Tecumseth.
Event Date : Sunday, October 15, 1967
Event Type : Death
Description : Died at the Stevenson Memorial Nursing Home, Alliston. Of Bond Head, wife of the late Dr. J. A. Cummings and mother of Kenneth of Plainfield, N.J., Harley of Ottawa, Victor of Bond Head and Julian of Oakville and survived by four grandchildren. Rested at the Lewis Funeral Home, 30 Simcoe St., Bradford, until noon Wednesday, then to Trinity Anglican Church, Bond Head, for service at 2 p.m. Interment St. John's Tecumseth Cemetery.
Bradford WitnessNewspaper write up about the accident that killed Dr. Cummings, a Bond Head doctor.
Description : Dr. James Cummings killed, wife injured in auto accident.
Bradford Witness"Had Come from Toronto Thursday - Went Bathing After Day's Work
Mushaelo (Michael) Bohoniuk, 25-year-old Ukrainian, of 70 Runnymede Rd., Toronto, was drowned in the Holland Marsh irrigation cala, at a point where the canal skirts the rear of Mr. J.W. Wilson's farm, late Saturday afternoon.
The drowned man, it appears, had come up from Toronto on Thursday and had secured work with Anglo del Zotto and F. Bollsanelo, market gardeners. Having finished work on Saturday afternoon, he had decided to bathe in the canal. Undressing and donning a pair of trunks, he left his clothes in his employer's shack, started out apparently for the canal, and nothing further was seen of him alive. ..."