Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 2 Nov 2007, LB01

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Car + Home = Big Savings See me for Car and Home Insurance Savings Lora Greene, Agent 211 Guelph Street, Georgetown, ON L7G 5B5 Bus: 905-873-1615 lora@loragreene.ca LIKE A GOOD NEIGHBOUR, STATE FARM IS THERE. PD58007CN 05/05 State Farm Home Offices: Aurora, Ontario Statefarm.ca Special pullout section Friday, November 2, 2007 8 Pages www.independentfreepress.com Hurricane Hazel ravaged Norval Page 6 Georgetown High hits milestone Page 4 LOOKING BACK Halton Hills Community Newspaper Build it and they will come seemed to be the mantra that builders and developers of Halton Hills have followed for more than a century, and while there were boom and bust times, there was always growth. In 1913, The Georgetown Herald described Georgetown, a community of 1,885 as particularly attractive as a place of residence. It is most pic- turesquely situated on the rising ground on both sides of the stream that flows like a ribbon through the village. ...The number of handsome residences is very noteworthy, and new homes are being continually added. Yet there is room for hun- dreds of other homes sites that are attractive and reasonable in cost. Meanwhile, in the early years of the 20th century, Acton builder J.B. Mackenzie added to or remodeled almost every building on the main streets of both Acton and George- town as well as additions to most schools, wrote historian John Mc- Donald in Halton Sketches Revisited. Mackenzies first contract in Georgetown was to remodel the liv- ery stables in the downtown now the home of the Legion. He was also the first builder in the area to use reinforced concrete at the Georgetown Coated Paper Mills on Rosetta St. McDonald writes: A colorful example of his determination is depicted when the sub-contractors responsible for the placing of the large post office clock in Acton were having difficulties. J.B. came on the scene and offered to do the job. He was able to raise and set the new clock into position by using a series of pulleys and ropes hitched onto his Model T Ford. In 1937, Georgetown celebrated the 100th birthday of its incorpora- tion, and The Georgetown Heralds editorial read in part: The develop- ment of Georgetown was due, in a very large degree, to the calibre and character of the worthy men who directed its affairs. The growth of the town, from the first, was along broad and stable lines. These men were giants in their day, and they built better than they knew. They not only built the strong foundations of busi- ness and industrial progress, but being men of versatile gifts, they gave their time and energy to the develop- Above: An aerial photo from the early 1960s shows the Georgetown Market Centre (lower right), now the Georgetown Marketp Pace and Rex Heslops subdivi- sion property in east Georgetown. Photo courtesy John McDonalds Halton Sketches Revisted Below: The historic Beaumont House in Glen Williams. A growing community Above: The former Georgetown Dominion Gardens Seed House property where Christ the King Secondary school and a subdivision now stand. Below: The former Beardmore Tannery in Acton. CYNTHIA GAMBLE Staff Writer See ARROW, pg. 3

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