Berlin : Street Directory (PDF)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Berlin : Street Directory (PDF) Not the Only Good One, but None one of the Better. ~'\!l<l~ - -n"" n Best. ~ ENDORSED BY HER EXCELLENCY THE COUNTESS OF ABERDEEN And used with pleasure and satisfac- " tion in thousands of Canadian homes of culture and refinement. The " .Morris " is good enough for Vice­ Royalty, and surely good ~nough for you. Investigate. Morris, Feild, Roger Oo, F. C. GARDINER, MA~IJF.U: 1'1J RER!ol, LJ~u ·nm ~•• OeALER IN Al.L KfND~ Ol• Listowel, Ont.t Musical Goods, Canada. BERLIN, ONT. Life Assurance Sun Company of Canada. HEAD OFFICE, MONTREAL Protect yo urself and family in the SUN LIFE ASSURANCE Co. OF CANADA. Premiums ranging from $1.90 per year up on all ages between 1 and 70. ]NO. H. WILDFONG, Ass't Supt. for County of Waterloo Thrift Department, Office: KING ST. WEST, BERLIN. EVERYTHING NEWEST, LATEST, BEST IN MANDOLINS, o GUITARS. o BANJOS. o VIOLINS AND ALL OTHER KINDI' OF ~ll'SIL\L INSTRUMENTS. ~ PIANOS ~ ORGANS --=--===' WHC~~~~~~:::~~ :: SEWING MACHINES G. A. WANLESSf 7° KI~~.N~~NT~EST, -,: '-"--'""""' v<./L,..... I /.t<_/~~~ ~PAUL PEQUEGNAT< -FOR- GREAT BARGAINS YOU W ILL FINO T H E LA RGEST ASSORTMENT OF GOLD~~u SILVER WATCHES I N THE COUNTRY ALSO RINGS, PINS, PRECIOUS S T O~ES, REMARKABL Y CHEAP. Clocks, Silverware, Etc. IN ENDL ESS VARIETY. FIRST QUALITY. LOWEST PRICES. / ~ Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repairing a Specialty. b=- SPECTACLES AND EYECLASSES TO F IT ANY SIGHT. 9" 25 per cenl. discount on Ear-rings, Brooches, Nec kla c~s • nd I.ocke ls . C' all on · me when you want to have g ood value for your mon~y '. Remember I have heeri in business twenty years. PAUL PEQUEGNAT, / 48 KING STREET £A8T, NEXT DOOR6~1". OF COMMERCE, BERLIN. / ~GENERAL INDEX. -A ~·~ Advertisers' Index, opp. last page J County Officials.. .. I r I Berlin Alphabetical Directory 51 Dominion Gov'r'ment Offices 109 Berlin Street Directory.. 9 I Educati(Jnal .. .. 109 Berlin and Waterloo Classi- Fraternal and Bene\"'lent fied Directories ... end of book Societie10 . I I 1 Berlin Miscellaneous Direc- Waterloo Alphab~ti ca l Dir't'y 129 tory . ..... .. ......... .. Io9 Waterloo Street Directory .. ''3 Berlin Town Officials. 109 Waterloo Miscellaneous Dir. I 28 Churches.. I ro Waterloo Town Officials .... 128 WOLLARD & CO., LEADERS IN LOW Bats, CaDs, Gents' Furnisnings PRICES. WALPER BLOCK. B:J[JE.LIN, ONTARIO. F. C. BRANDT, DI!ALI!Il IN "\tA:oi t'P'ACTUJt.E:k OP' CELEBRATED EXPORT Fine Old English SALVADOR BEER. GINGER BEER. FOUNDRY ST. NORTH, next Merchants Bank, BERLIN, ONT. WE DYE TO LIVE. r .....- ......... GENlNlELL'S STEAM DYE AND CLEANING WORKS 29 King Street East, South Side, Berlin. Equipped with the very best machinery procurable for Cleaning, Dyeing, Scouring a nd Finishing. The finest fabric can be colored without the slightest injury. FRRNCH AND DRY CLEANING - Made-up Dresses, Cloaks and Jackets, Gentlemen's Suits and Fancy Article~ can be beautifully cleaned by this process, if not too much soiled. Gents' Suits and Overcoats Cleaned, Dyed ,md Pressed ; Repaired if required. Ladies' Dresses beautifully cleaned and Dyed in all Shades. Ladies· Jackets, Ulsters, Shawls, Silks, Satins and Velvets; Damask, Repp and Lace Curtains, Table and Piano Covers; Blankets, Ca•·pets, Sheep­ skins and Mats Cleaned and Dyed. Ostrich Plumes beautifully Cleaned, Dyed and Curled. Feather Beds and Pillows Renovated. All work finished on t he s hortest notice. Satisfaction guaranteed. HEAD OFFICE : GUELPH, ONT. \VILLIAM FLEISCH F:R, j R. jACOB C. HEYD, }R. PEARL STEAM LAUNDRY 52 KING STREET WEST, TE L EPHONE 1 H~ . If you give u& y our Parcel on :\londay we will return it to you again Wednesday Morning . Tuesday " Thursday Morning. \Vednesday " " Friday Morning. Thursday Saturday Morning. F riday Saturday Evening. CALL UP 'PHONE 11 6, and we w ill s end fo r your Parcel. FLEISCHER HEYD, 52 King Street West, Berlin, Ont. VERNON'S BERLIN ?-~u WATERLOO STREET, ALPHABETICAL, BUSINESS AND MISCELLANEOUS DIRECTORY FOR THE YEARS 189~ to 1899 f, Corrected to Sept. Jst, J897. I PRICE, $2.00. FIRST EDITION. HENRY VERNON, Publisher, Head Office, Hamilton, Ont. ORJFFJl'l & l{IDNER, PRINTERs, sB KING W lLLJ.-\)1 sr., ll,HII~r(ll'l, PREFACE. ~~ ~HE PUBLISHER, in presenting his first edition of the BERLIN \J.; AND WATERLOO DIRECTORY, thanks the people for the liberal support he has received, and hopes that the Directory will prove a useful and convenient guide. Of course,' in a book of this kind (the first ever published of Berlin and Waterloo), it is utterly impossible to avoid errors, and although local men were employed to gather the information, the absence of house numbers and street names, together with the different languages used by the citizens, made the work extremely difficult. The work will be published by me every two years, and I hope that the business men who want the very best in this line will reserve their orders till they see me. Wishing them and the two towns every prosperity, I remain, HENRY VERNON, Head Office, Hamilton, DIRECTORY PUBLISHER. Sept. 1st, 1897. ~THE~ Waterloo Mutual Fire Insurance Company ESTABLISHED IN J863. Insures non-hazardous .Mercantile and .Manufacturing Properties. Has paid in losses alone in the past ten years,. __ending 3lst December, 1896, over $900,000.00. Assets, over $330,000.00. ', WATERLOO, 'ONTARIO.\ L .. cJ . All forms of leg itimate DOMINION LIFE Life Assurance OF WATERLOO, ONT. on equitable rerms. BERLll'< DIRECTORY. 9 TOWN OF BERLIN STREET DIRECTOR Y . ,. ,s:,~!S:.§~<Z< ,..,~~'<:S·~"" HENRY VERNON, Publish er. Ahrens st east, north T A Gale Ahrens st we ~ •t, south side, from Queen to Rev W C Henderson I side Frederick IJ S Smith j Geo Philip 6 0 S Clarke A Kuehner Geo Potter u 8 Mrs M Boultbee 1 Barber Mrs A Bowman S J Wi lliams ,. Emil Hell er 17 H Rittinger Mrs C Master Yonge st intersects James Potter •0 ~ 0• Isaac Master ;\lrs Annie Stephan Mrs ~ I etcalf Maynard st intersects John Dessler George Giller Chas Miller ~1rs R Simonds P Ilymmen Victoria sf intersects S Groff L A Mehlenbacher Geo Scharlach Jacob Affholder Ahrens st e, s'th side G T R T rack Frank Heiman \ Vm :'\leinke J H Boinonh e Yonge st intnsecls C T Hoffman Breithaupt st intersects 13 F Stump! C E Randall D l> elweiler John Stecho David Gros~ Wellington and Styx College, Wata and Ahrens st west, north sts intersect Victoria sts int~rsecl side, from Queen n John Schall horn G T R track Vacant J(aiser Wm st intersects Geo Ziegler Breithaupt st inlrrsects Geo H arrison I Chas Reuel MUnger A. WESELOH, we do Repairing THE SHOE MAN, ____ STORE NEAR THE P. 0 . ~ Neatly. 2 0 pER~h~~t., :~~~ ~~,v ~h eS c~ tt~ s h . C ~ m.pa ~ie~, CALEDONIAN INSURANCE CO. A~~ets, $18,000,000. \\'HY? Because 9f its loss·pa)"ing power and record tor fa ir and ho norable ct deali ng. CARL KRANfZ. 38 K:lr1K St. Ea.st. 0 u IO VERNON's DIRECTORY UJ Welling-ton and Styx sts Alex Dushinski Thos Westram intersect Mrs J Hechler H A Brubacher ~ G T R track AS Heller II John Nebb Frank Klugman N B Detv..· eiler __________ Albert st south, west E Heller en C Miehm Albert st north, east side side, from King to Aug Totzke Andrew st,from King ~ Weber 16 H Schutz to Braun UJ Elg-in st intersects 22 John Albert Adam Treusch Mrs M Pommer Henry Wolfhard Geo Allendorf Andrew Plantz z G C J Klie N Boehmer Wm Schleier Mrs E Janke Alvin Wittig Benton st, east side, Ernst Stecho from King to Mill Vacant Albert st north, west 1 C Adeloff Grand Central Hotel side W Gottfried I 1 Mrs Maria Weber A \Veckelman Adam Herres 13 L Steubing Fred Krus~ 15 Vacant 19 Geo Oakley Courtland ave intersects Albert st south, east 23 Mrs E Weaver side, from King to Jacob W eiest 2- E P Clement Mill :J Christian Hopp Church st intersects 9 Adam Sippel Carl Schaefer 31 Chas Dunke Allen st east, north 35 C Bitzer Jacob Seibert side, from Queen to M Lindner 15 Carl Warnecl~ Frederick 17 Chas Johns Mary st intersects August Becking M Scherer H Aletter Jacob Steppler S Fischer Hallman 29 Conrad Weber W Utley 0 Ludwig Luning 49 Mrs Rebecca Kolb Mansion st intersects Isaiah Hallman Jacob Gottsleben 51 Michael Adeloff G Harlock 53 J Appel Wm Kenapin F Vetter 55 Mrs Mary Oswald G Smolinski Wm Becking Arthur Paul G Lienang Mrs M Erb Courtland ave intersects John Riedl 65 John Bionofski 61 ME Eby 67 Fred Treger Peter Saugel 69 N Kadel Martin st intersects Allen st, south side Courtland ave intersects · L Schwoob 71 J B Oberholtzer 73 John Peter 73 Adam Heddrich H Dotzenrod I 75 J Wiegand HOLLAND A. WHITE, Cb~ Sun [if~ di~~ t~eo~~~ ~:~ae- Mangr. Hamilton District an absolutely unconditional policy. HAMILTON, ONT. I The first Cot11pany in Canada to introduce OMINION LIFE the Extension System, by which after three , Premiums are paid the Policy holds good ta Df Waterloo, Ont. till the Reserve iil' exhausted. tM - ------------------ ·- . --- , ~~ OF THE TOWN OF BERLIN. II ~t-4 1------~------------ [i~ N Dettweiler THINK OF IT. h.~ Benj Dettweiler I" C4 8 John Schaefer Out of the many hundreds of Gtatluates Q 7 placed in good posztions we have not had ___ one complaint of inability to perform ,. 0 what was expected of them. Circulars q ~ I 1 Benton st, west side will be mailed free.
Recommended publications
  • Sir Edmund Walker
    SIR EDMUND WALKER C. W. COLBY BORN in 1848, Sir Edmund Walker belonged to the generation which was just coming to manhood when the Dominion of Canada took the place of British North America. As he joined the staff of the Canadian Bank of Commerce less than thirteen months after Confederation, it may be said that his career coincided exactly with the period which has elapsed since Canada undertook to become a nation of the modem world. This fact has more meaning than could be attached to a mere chronological coincidence. It may be associated with the central motive of his life. Starting out at a moment when patriotism was in the air, he became a patriot in the fullest sense. There seems never to have been a time when public spirit did not inspire his aspirations and impel his acts. Through­ out fifty-six years of incessant effort he continued to plan and give and build for the benefit of Canada. Lord Milner has said that when he thinks of the British Empire he does not feel impelled to wave a flag, but rather to go off by him­ self in a corner and pray. Sir Edmund Walker's patriotism was of the same character. At least it lacked wholly the flamboyant quality which one associates with fervid rhetoric and boisterous flag-waving. Moreover with him, as with the Benedictine monk. to labour was to pray. He built up a great bank, and had every possible opportunity to secure information, by the most legitimate means, which through thought and planning could be made to yield large personal profits in cash.
    [Show full text]
  • REVISED HAMILTON MUNICIPAL HERITAGE COMMITTEE REPORT 14-009(A) 12:00 P.M
    REVISED HAMILTON MUNICIPAL HERITAGE COMMITTEE REPORT 14-009(a) 12:00 p.m. Thursday, August 21, 2014 Council Chambers 71 Main Street West Present: A. Denham-Robinson (Chair), Councillor M. Pearson, M. Adkins, W. Arndt, P. Wilson, W. Furlan, S. Nowak Absent: Councillor B. McHattie – City Business Councillor L. Ferguson – City Business K. Wakeman, W. Rosart, R. Sinclair THE HAMILTON MUNICIPAL HERITAGE COMMITTEE PRESENTS REPORT 14- 009(a) AND RESPECTFULLY RECOMMENDS: 1. Implementation of the Recommendations of the Downtown Built Heritage Inventory Project (PED14191) (a) That the properties listed in Schedule 1 of Appendix “A” attached hereto to the Hamilton Municipal Heritage Committee Report 14-009(a) be included in the Register of Property of Cultural Heritage Value or Interest as non- designated properties; (b) That staff be directed to add the properties listed in Schedule 2 of Appendix “A” attached hereto to the Hamilton Municipal Heritage Committee Report 14-009(a) to the staff’s work program for designation; (c) That Schedule 3 of Appendix “A” attached hereto to the Hamilton Municipal Heritage Committee Report 14-009(a) be approved as amended to include the Candidates for Designation; PLANNING COMMITTEE – September 16, 2014 Hamilton Municipal Heritage Committee August 21, 2014 Report 14-009(a) Page 2 of 2 (d) That staff be directed to prepare a Capital Budget Submission to be brought forward in the 2015 Budget Deliberations to address the work program for designation, as per Schedule 3 of Appendix “A” attached hereto to the Municipal
    [Show full text]
  • Private Bankers in Ontario Hayseed Capitalists: Private Bankers in Ontario
    HAYSEED CAPITALISTS: PRIVATE BANKERS IN ONTARIO HAYSEED CAPITALISTS: PRIVATE BANKERS IN ONTARIO by STEPHEN EDWARD mORNING, B.A., M.A. A Thesis Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy McMaster University August, 1994 -- -- --- - --------------- DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (1994) McMASTER UNIVERSITY (History) Hamilton, Ontario TITLE: Hayseed Capitalists: Private Bankers in Ontario AUTHOR: Stephen Edward Thorning, B.A. (University of Guelph) M.A. (McMaster University) SUPERVJSOR: Professor John C. Weaver NUMBER OF PAGES: viii, 502 ii ABSTRACT The structure of the Canadian banking system, and the establishment of strong chartered banks at a relatively early stage, have overshadowed banking institutions that operated outside the chartered system. The non-chartered or private banks can be categorized into three groups: the joint stock banks of the 1830s, the urban private bankers who appeared in the 1850s and after, and the small-town private banks of the post-1868 period. AJI three types of private banks were established to fill perceived niches in the chartered bank system. Those of the 1830s possessed an anti-establishment, hinterland bias. The urban private bankers specialized in savings and foreign exchange transactions, and often branched out into insurance, debentures, and ultimately stocks and bonds. The small town private banks began and prospered when the needs of small hinterland communities outpaced the inclination and ability of chartered banks to provide them with banking facilities. Unlike the urban private bankers, those in small towns offered a full range of banking services, and they often acted as insurance and real estate agencies as well.
    [Show full text]
  • 64 Canadian Banks and Their Branches
    64 Canadian Banks and their Branches. Location. Bank. Manager or Agent. Halifax People's Bank of Halifax, head office . Peter Jack, cashr. Bank of British North America Jeffry Penfold. Bank of Montreal F. Gundry. Hamilton . Canadian Bank of Commerce John C. Kemp. Bank of Hamilton H.C. HammondjCshr. Bank of Montreal T. R. Christian. Merchants'Bank of Canada A. M. Crombie. Bank of British North America Thomas Corsan. Consolidated Bank of Canada J. M. Burns. Exchange Bank of Canada C. M. Counsell. Ingersoll., The Molsons Bank W. Dempster. Merchants' Bank of Canada D. Miller. Imperial C. S. Hoare. Joliette . Hochelaga Bank N. Boire. Exchange Bank of Canada R. Terroux, jnr. Kingston . Bank of British North America G. Durnford. Bank of Montreal K. M. Moore. Merchants' Bank of Canada D. Fraser. Kincardine Merchants' Bank of Canada T. B. P. Trew. Kentville, N. S.. Bank of Nova Scotia L. O. V. Chipman. Liverpool, N. S.. Bank of Liverpool R, S. Sternes, cshr. Lockport People's Bank of Halifax Austin Locke. Lunenburg Merchants' Bank of Halifax Austin Locke. Listowell Hamilton Bank W. Corbould Levis Merchants' Bank I. Wells. London Merchants'Bank of Canada W. F. Harper. Bank of Montreal F. A. Despard. Canadian Bank of Commerce H. W. Smylie. Bank of British North America Oswald Weir. The Molsons Bank. Joseph Jeffrey. Federal Bank of Canada Charles Murray. Standard Bank A. H. Ireland. Lindsay. Bankol Montreal , C. M. Porteous. Ontario Bank S. A. McMurtry. Lucan Canada Bank of Commerce J. E. Thomas. Maitland, N. S. Merchants' Bank of Halifax David Frieze. Markliam Standard Bank F.
    [Show full text]
  • Ryerson United Church Ancaster, Ontario Heritage Book
    RYERSON UNITED CHURCH ANCASTER, ONTARIO HERITAGE BOOK 200 YEARS OF SERVICE 1808 TO 2008 RYERSON’S HERITAGE A HISTORY OF RYERSON UNITED CHURCH ANCASTER, ONTARIO 200 YEARS OF SERVICE 1808-2008 PUBLISHED BY RYERSON UNITED CHURCH ANCASTER, ONTARIO Original Book written by Norma Sheldrick, published April 2008 Updated by Norma Sheldrick, published April 2018 Reprinted by Staples April 2018 iii DEDICATED TO DR. CECIL WALKER 1915 - 2002 A MEMBER OF THE ARCHIVES COMMITTEE OF RYERSON UNITED CHURCH, ANCASTER, ONTARIO DR. WALKER WAS A WELL-RESPECTED LOCAL DOCTOR IN ANCASTER. HE WAS ALSO A RESEARCHER, ARCHIVIST AND HISTORIAN. HE WAS VERY INTERESTED IN WRITING A BOOK ABOUT RYERSON’S HISTORY, BUT BECAUSE OF ILL HEALTH THIS BECAME IMPOSSIBLE. HE GATHERED INFORMATION ABOUT OUR MINISTERS, ORGANISTS AND OUR HISTORY AND PUT TOGETHER SEVERAL ARTICLES FOR THE PERSON TAKING ON THE TASK OF WRITING A BOOK ABOUT RYERSON. OUR THANKS GO TO DR. WALKER FOR HIS LOVE AND CONCERN FOR RYERSON AND FOR HIS ENCOURAGEMENT OVER THE YEARS. THIS BOOK IS ALSO DEDICATED TO ALLAN HOLDER 1911 - 1987 ALLAN HOLDER WAS THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BUILDING COMMITTEE OF THE PRESENT CHURCH BUILDING. HE ALSO WAS THE FIRST PERSON TO RESEARCH RYERSON’S HISTORY AND PUT IT IN BOOK FORM. WE OWE MUCH TO ALLAN HOLDER FOR THE RESEARCH AND BOOK HE WROTE FOR RYERSON. IT IS INTERESTING READING AND MUCH OF THIS BOOK WAS TAKEN FROM HIS WRITINGS. iv Except from a prayer in Covenanters’ Church, Grand Pré, N.B.; Reprinted in 100 Years of Presbyterian Witness in Fort Erie 1889-1989, St.
    [Show full text]
  • Recommendation to Designate 281 Herkimer Street, Hamilton, Under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act (PED05194) (Ward 1)
    AFFECTS WARD 1 CITY OF HAMILTON PLANNING AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT Development and Real Estate Division Report to: Chair and Members Submitted by: Lee Ann Coveyduck Planning & Economic General Manager Development Committee Planning and Economic Development Department Date: November 18, 2005 Prepared by: Sharon Vattay (905) 546-2424, Ext 1220 SUBJECT: Recommendation to Designate 281 Herkimer Street, Hamilton, Under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act (PED05194) (Ward 1) RECOMMENDATION: (a) That the designation of 281 Herkimer Street, as a property of cultural heritage value pursuant to the provisions of Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act, 1990, be approved. (b) That the Statement of Cultural Heritage Value and Description of the Heritage Attributes, attached as Appendix A to Report PED05194, be approved. (c) That Corporate Counsel be directed to take appropriate action to designate 281 Herkimer Street under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act, in accordance with the Notice of Intention to Designate, attached as Appendix B to Report PED05194. Lee Ann Coveyduck General Manager Planning and Economic Development Department EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The Hamilton LACAC (Municipal Heritage Committee) directed staff to prepare a Cultural Heritage Assessment for the building at 281 Herkimer Street, formerly the Bank of Hamilton, and later, the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. It has been determined that the property possesses cultural heritage value due to its association with the financial growth of the City of Hamilton and its well-preserved architectural integrity. Although currently owned by the City of Hamilton, the property has been SUBJECT: Recommendation to Designate 281 Herkimer Street, Hamilton, Under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act (PED05194) (Ward 1) - Page 2 of 4 declared surplus and the heritage designation will provide some assurance that the new owners will maintain the heritage structure.
    [Show full text]
  • Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto, Friday, August 23Rd to Saturday
    IOCUE 4 PR ldudincj SPORTS Activitie* T c £<fAUG.23toSEPT 7, 1935 t JfcO^V*57 INCLUSIVE »">'jnIW l'17' '.vir^diii IBITION TORONTO The EDITH and LORNE PIERCE COLLECTION o/CANADIANA TORONTO MONTREAL REGIXA HALIFAX PLAN OF GROUNDS AND BUILDINGS CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION "Be Foot Happy" World's Famous Hot Pavements Athletes Use Long Walks Hard Floors are unkind to Your Feet OLYMPEME Not an the Antiseptic Lihimekt Olympene is kind Ordinary Liniment An Antiseptic Liniment Recommended Especia lly OSCAR ROETTGER, Player Manager, Montreal Royal Baseball. for Athlete's Foot. The Athlete's Liniment. JIM WEAVER, Pitcher, Newark Bears Baseball. For Soreness, Stiffness of Muscles and Joints- . ' W. J " Bill ' O'BRIEN, Montreal Maroons, Montreal. Strains and Sprains- RUTH DOWNING, Toronto. Abscesses, Boils, Pimples and Sores. "Torchy" Vancouver, Six Day Bicycle Cuts and Bruises. PEDEN, Rider. Nervousness and Sleeplessness. BERNARD STUBECKE, Germany, Six Day Bicycle Head Colds, Catarrh and Hay Fever- Rider. RUTH DOWNING Corns, Bunions, Sore or Swollen Feet- FRED BULLIVENT, Head Trainer, Six Day Bicycle Toronto's Sweetheart of the Swim Riders. Sunburn, Poison Ivy, Insect Bites Says Use JIM McMILLEN, Wrestler, Vice-President, Chicago Dandruff. Bears. GEORGE "Todger" ANDERSON, Hamilton, Manufactured by OLYMPENE Assoc. -Coach, Hamilton Olympic Club. NORTHROP & LYMAN CO., LIMITED OLYMPEME Trainer, Bert Pearson, Sprinter. TORONTO ONTARIO the Antiseptic Liniment Established 1854 the Antiseptic Lininent Canadian "National Exhibition :@#^: Fifty-Seventh Annual
    [Show full text]
  • Manufacturers and Industrial Development Policy in Hamilton, 1890-1910 Diana J
    Document generated on 09/27/2021 1:09 a.m. Urban History Review Revue d'histoire urbaine Manufacturers and Industrial Development Policy in Hamilton, 1890-1910 Diana J. Middleton and David F. Walker Volume 8, Number 3, February 1980 Article abstract After failing to establish Hamilton as a major wholesaling centre, businessmen URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1019361ar in the city concentrated their attentions increasingly on the manufacturing DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1019361ar sector. City Council policies were extremely supportive of this focus, particularly in the period from 1890 to 1910, which is examined in this paper. See table of contents Manufacturers themselves, however, are shown to have played a minor role in Council's activities. None of the key figures in promoting pro-development policies in Hamilton were manufacturers, despite the fact that those policies Publisher(s) were designed primarily to stimulate manufacturing. At the forefront, rather, were professional men with business interests, supported mainly by Urban History Review / Revue d'histoire urbaine merchants. ISSN 0703-0428 (print) 1918-5138 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article Middleton, D. J. & Walker, D. F. (1980). Manufacturers and Industrial Development Policy in Hamilton, 1890-1910. Urban History Review / Revue d'histoire urbaine, 8(3), 20–46. https://doi.org/10.7202/1019361ar All Rights Reserved © Urban History Review / Revue d'histoire urbaine, 1980 This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit.
    [Show full text]
  • Arts in the City: Visions of James Street North, 2005-2011
    PhD Thesis – V. E. Sage McMaster University – Dept. of Anthropology VISIONS OF JAMES STREET NORTH PhD Thesis – V. E. Sage McMaster University – Dept. of Anthropology Title Page ARTS IN THE CITY: VISIONS OF JAMES STREET NORTH, 2005-2011 By VANESSSA E. SAGE, B.A., M.A. A Thesis Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy McMaster University © Copyright by Vanessa E. Sage, September 2013 PhD Thesis – V. E. Sage McMaster University – Dept. of Anthropology Descriptive Note McMaster University DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (2011) Hamilton, Ontario (Anthropology) TITLE: Arts in the City: Visions of James Street North, 2005-2011 AUTHOR: Vanessa E. Sage, B.A. (Waterloo University), B.A. (Cape Breton University), M.A. (Memorial University of Newfoundland) SUPERVISOR: Dr. Ellen Badone NUMBER OF PAGES: xii, 231 ii PhD Thesis – V. E. Sage McMaster University – Dept. of Anthropology Abstract I argue in this dissertation that aestheticizing urban landscapes represents an effort to create humane public environments in disenfranchised inner-city spaces, and turns these environments into culturally valued sites of pilgrimage. Specifically, I focus on James Street North, a neighbourhood undergoing artistic renewal in the post-industrial city of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Based on two years of ethnographic fieldwork in the arts scene on James Street North, my thesis claims that artistic activities serve as an ordinary, everyday material response to the perceived and real challenges of poverty, crime and decay in downtown Hamilton. Aesthetic elaboration is a generative and tangible expression by arts stakeholders of their intangible hopes, desires, and dreams for the city.
    [Show full text]
  • 25372 CIBC Book 150 Years of Innovation Book
    Strong MODERN Client Focused INNOVATIVE 150 YEARS Relationship-Oriented – A short story – BANK of the FUTURE Indigenous Peoples As we look back on the stories of our company, we must first honour Canada’s Indigenous Peoples, and acknowledge that Canada would not be the country it is today, flourishing from coast to coast to coast, without them. We must honour their languages, their spiritual traditions, their knowledge, and the dignity with which they have borne witness to the suffering they have experienced. The legacy of our collective past is now more fully understood, and we must respect and reimagine the sense of hope and possibility on which our country was founded. We look forward to writing the next chapter of our history together. 4 CIBC 150 Years • A short story CIBC 150 Years • A short story 5 150 Years Strong! Our bank has a rich history of helping people, businesses and communities in Canada and around the world grow and prosper. We are extraordinarily proud to mark this major milestone and build the bank of the future. 6 CIBC 150 Years • A short story CIBC 150 Years • A short story 7 Our Founders 1875 THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE IMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA Head office, Toronto 1867 Head office, Toronto 1875 HENRY STARK HOWLAND The Imperial Bank of Canada (Imperial) Having a different philosophy than opened in Toronto on March 18, 1875. McMaster, Howland had resigned from 1867 Its original premises were located at The Commerce because he believed the 18 Toronto Street, not far from The Commerce. rapid expansion of capital and branches Henry Stark Howland, originally from was too risky.
    [Show full text]
  • Gordon Christian Eby Diary
    ‘of course I was only an onlooker for I can’t dance’ ‘of course I was only an onlooker for I can’t dance’: the 1911-1919 diary of Gordon Christian Eby, Mennonite farmer Edited by Paul Tiessen and Anne Eby Millar Based on a transcript of the diary by Anne Eby Millar Introduction and notes by Paul Tiessen l MLR Editions Canada 2007 ‘of course I was only an onlooker for I can’t dance’: the 1911-1919 diary of Gordon Christian Eby, Mennonite farmer ISBN 0-9681676-2-4 Diary copyright © 2007 The Estate of Gordon Christian Eby Introduction and notes copyright © 2007 Paul Tiessen Drawings copyright © 2007 Matthew Tiessen All rights reserved Printed and bound in Canada by Pandora Press Special thanks to Friends of Joseph Schneider Haus and to Susan Burke, Manager and Curator, Joseph Schneider Haus Volumes in the MLR Editions Canada series (General Editors: Miguel Mota and Paul Tiessen), drawn from archives and published in limited numbers for scholars and general readers by MLR Editions Canada (c/o Department of English and Film Studies, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3C5 Canada), include: Wyndham Lewis and Expressionism by Sheila Watson (2003) L.M. Montgomery’s Ephraim Weber: Letters 1916-1941 by L.M. Montgomery (2000) Our Asian Journey, a novel by Dallas Wiebe (1997) Refining the real Canada: Homer Watson’s spiritual landscape, a biography by Gerald Noonan (1997) Ephraim Weber’s Letters Home, 1902-1955: Letters from Ephraim Weber to Leslie Staebler of Waterloo County by Ephraim Weber (1996), with Friends of Joseph Schneider Haus (Kitchener, ON) The 1940 Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry (1994) Dorothy Livesay and the CBC: Early Texts for Radio by Dorothy Livesay (1994) Malcolm Lowry and Conrad Aiken Adapted: three radio dramas and a film proposal by Margerie Bonner Lowry, Fletcher Markle, and Gerald Noxon (1992) The Road to Victory: radio plays by Gerald Noxon (1989, with Quarry Press Kingston, ON) ‘On Malcolm Lowry’ and other writings by Gerald Noxon (1987) Teresina Maria, a novel by Gerald Noxon (1986) ~ Contents ~ Preface and Acknowledgements ..
    [Show full text]
  • Early Brantford Banks
    Early Brantford Banks Bank of Brantford The Bank of Brantford was set up by an Act of Parliament of the Province of Canada in 1857. Peter Carroll was the president and J. J. Kingsmill was the vice-president of this bank which was located in the Kerby House block on George Street opposite the old Market Square. The first and only issue of bank notes took place in November 1859. The bills, including a $4 bill, were printed on only one side by the American Bank Note Company of New York. Shareholders and depositors lost their money and merchants were left with worthless bills when the Bank of Brantford closed in 1862. Bank of British North America The Bank of British North America opened the first bank branch in Brantford in 1846. It was initially located on the north side of Colborne Street with James Christie as the manager. After the building burnt down it was rebuilt at the same location. In 1858 the bank moved to the southwest corner of Darling and George streets next to Zion Church. When the Bank of British North America merged with the Bank of Montreal in 1919 the building was torn down to make room for a new Zion Sunday School. For more information: . Expositor October 1909 (p. 54-55 of PDF) . Warner's 1883 History (p. 153 of PDF) . Expositor Semi-Centennial 1877-1927 (p. 51 of PDF) Bank of Hamilton The Bank of Hamilton opened in 1902 on the corner of Colborne and George streets with J. P. Bell as the manager.
    [Show full text]