- CA BWGPL VS-1900-13173
- Item
- 1951-02-21
Part of Vital Statistics
Event Date : Sunday, February 11, 1951
Event Type : Birth
Description : At York County Hospital, Newmarket, a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Melville Peterman, of Bradford.
Bradford Witness
20 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Part of Vital Statistics
Event Date : Sunday, February 11, 1951
Event Type : Birth
Description : At York County Hospital, Newmarket, a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Melville Peterman, of Bradford.
Bradford Witness
Scanlon, Catherine Eunice Moore obituary
Part of Vital Statistics
Event Date : Friday, February 10, 1950
Event Type : Death
Description : At York County Hospital. Wife of Frederick Charles Wood of Bradford. Service at home on February 12 at 1:30 p.m. Interment in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery.
*Detailed obituary in February 22, 1950 (below in Related Descriptions)
Bradford Witness
Part of Local History Collection
"The G.T.R. has announced its intention of building a modern station in Aurora on the premises near the present site."
Bradford Witness
May postpone planned tour by Diefenbaker
Part of George Jackson fonds
"John Diefenbaker's scheduled October 15 tour of York Region may be temporarily postponed due to the sudden illness of Mrs. Diefenbaker, The Witness learned yesterday. Mr. Diefenbaker had been scheduled to address a dinner in Nobleton, and visit the Auld Kirk Cemetery in the Scotch Settlement. The visit will be re-scheduled for some future date if the former prime minister is unable to come to the area."
Bradford Witness
Communities - York County/Region
Part of Joe Saint fonds
Contains news clippings and articles on York County, later known as York Region
Joe Saint
Part of Local History Collection
A military training camp in Newmarket during the Second World War where recruits gathered for the first stage of their training before heading overseas.
Bradford West Gwillimbury Public Library
Stickwood homestead gets $300,000
Part of Local History Collection
"The Stickwood Walker heritage farmstead is about to salute the past. At a cost of about $300,000, Newmarket council has given the go-ahead to transform 3.5-acre homestead on Mulock Drive into a meeting place for quilting, embroidery and tea parties. While the plan includes major renovation and landscaping, the barn, destroyed by fire in April, will not be rebuilt. Instead, remaining footprint of the barn will be used for parking or returned to greenspace. Meanwhile, land just west of the homestead will be used for outdoor soccer pitches. Once complete, the main floor's restored interior will be home to new period programs, such as quilting, embroidery and community tea parties, the mayor said. Up to 50 per cent of the cost of the project, or $150,000, will come from funding through potential partnerships and other sources, said Crystal Moss of the town's communications department."
Era Banner