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Huntsville is a town in Muskoka district, Ontario.It is located 215 kilometres (134 mi) north of Toronto and 130 kilometres (81 mi) south of North Bay.Of the three major Muskoka towns (the others being Gravenhurst and Bracebridge), Huntsville has the largest population (21,147 per 2021 census) and land area (710.64 square kilometres (274.38 sq mi)).
Deerhurst Resort in Huntsville, Ontario, is 215 km (133 Miles) north of Toronto in Ontario's Muskoka region, bordering the Algonquin Provincial Park. [1] The resort dates from 1896 when it was opened by English entrepreneur Charles Waterhouse. [2] The lakeside hotel was the central venue of the 36th G8 summit in 2010. [3]
People from Huntsville, Ontario (19 P) T. Transport in Huntsville, Ontario (1 C, 8 P) Pages in category "Huntsville, Ontario"
Huntsville station is located in the town of Huntsville, Ontario. It was a station stop for Northlander trains of Ontario Northland . However the station is no longer in use since the cessation of the Northlander passenger service in 2012.
Skeleton Lake is a lake in the municipalities of Huntsville and Muskoka Lakes in the District Municipality of Muskoka, Ontario, Canada, about 17 kilometres (11 mi) west of the town centre of Huntsville.
Peninsula Lake is a mid-sized cold-water lake located just east of Huntsville, Ontario. [3] Municipal jurisdiction is split between the Town of Huntsville and the Township of Lake of Bays. The Lake encompasses a surface area of 868.8 ha (8.6 km 2) and a total shoreline of 27.4 km.
It crosses through central Ontario in a generally east–west orientation. The triangle-shaped area bounded by Highways 11, 17 and 60 is largely uninhabited wilderness dotted with lakes and muskeg. [3] East of Huntsville, Highway 60 meanders east then south through the northeastern corner of Muskoka District, meeting Highway 35 at Dwight.
The wholly owned Huntsville and Lake of Bays Railway ran a short line narrow gauge railway to connect steamboats operating on Lake of Bays and Peninsula Lake outside Huntsville, Ontario. Covering a vertical distance of 175 feet (53 m) along the hilly 1.125-mile (1.811 km) route, it was known as the "smallest commercially operated railway in the ...