Jamestown, Ontario
Jamestown is a community in Ontario, Canada.
Jamestown is the name given to a small settlement, circa 1850, that sprang up along the boundary between Morris and Grey Townships, along the Maitland River in Southwestern Ontario, north of present-day Brussels. Apparently, James' Town derived its name from the number of men in the local community with the name of James - James Aitchison, James Lynn, James Strachan, James Simpson, James Forrest and James Moses. Because of all the James' living locally, James Aitchison, a reporter from Goderich, referred to the junction as James' Town. The name changed to Jamestown through the years.[1]
References
- ^ Marilyn Engel, Grey Township And Its People, 1982, Huron East, page 73 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
- Map of Jamestown, 1879
43°48′36″N 81°11′49″W / 43.810°N 81.197°W / 43.810; -81.197
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- Goderich
- Ashfield–Colborne–Wawanosh
- Bluewater
- Central Huron
- Howick
- Huron East
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communities
- Bayfield
- Benmiller
- Brussels
- Clinton
- Cranbrook
- Dashwood
- Donnybrook
- Egmondville
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- Exeter
- Hensall
- Holmesville
- Jamestown
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- Lochalsh
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- St. Augustine
- St. Joseph
- Sunshine
- Vanastra
- Walton
- Whitechurch
- Wingham
- Winthrop
- Wroxeter
- Zurich
- See also
- Communities in Huron County
- Census divisions of Ontario
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