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Hamilton City Hall (winter) City Hall (west end) The municipal address of the building is 71 Main Street West. The street number was chosen carefully. Several buildings had been torn down to make way for the new City Hall, so city politicians of the day could choose any odd number between 55 and 105 as the address for the new building.
Main Street was originally called Court Street, after the first courthouse that stood on it. It is now called Main Street because it formed the "main" concession line of Barton Township. [1] On June 20, 1877, the first commercial telephone service in Canada began in Hamilton, Ontario. [2]
Commerce St: 1900 HCC main street renamed Main Street 1926 Corum Place Devon Road 1906 Mrs Jolly originally named Devon Street Domain View L Dudley Terrace 1907 Jolly family Francis (Frank) B. Jolly's son Dudley 1913 ran Norton Rd-Roach /Rimu St to the cemetery Duke Street 1912 W.S. Higgins Marmaduke St John Paxton, surveyor
Hamilton West—Ancaster—Dundas was created by the 2012 federal electoral boundaries redistribution and was legally defined in the 2013 representation order. It came into effect upon the call of the 42nd Canadian federal election, on October 19, 2015. [3]
It is the 5th tallest building in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. [2] It is situated on the corner of King Street West and MacNab Street South, and is primarily used to house provincial government offices. The building was first known as the Convention Centre when it first opened up in 1981.
Hamilton's deep sea port is accessed by ship canal through the beach strip into the harbour and is traversed by two bridges, the QEW's Burlington Bay - James N. Allan Skyway and the lower Canal Lift Bridge. Hamilton Harbour ranks one of Canada's largest seaports. The Hamilton Port Authority manages the heavily industrial harbour. [14]
Landmark Place is the tallest building in downtown Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, at the corner of Main Street East and Catharine Street South in the Corktown neighbourhood. This 43-storey building (130 metres/427 feet) was completed in 1974, and was originally known as the Century 21 building. [1]
Columbia's facilities, academic programs, and student population grew in the 1990s. The school's climb in enrollment numbers resulted in a relocation to the Ainsliewood Campus in 2000. The school's current home is an 11,200-square-metre facility located at 1003 Main Street West.