Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Saugeen Shores is a town in Bruce County, Ontario, Canada, formed in 1998. In addition to the two main population centres of Southampton and Port Elgin , the town includes a portion of the village of Burgoyne and the North Bruce area, straddling the municipal eastern and southern boundary respectively.
Port Elgin is a community in the town of Saugeen Shores, Ontario, Canada.Its location is in the traditional territory of the Saugeen Ojibway Nation.Originally named Normanton the town was renamed Port Elgin when it was incorporated in 1874, after James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin, a former Governor General of the Province of Canada.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Saugeen_Shores,_Ontario&oldid=442460928"
The Town of Saugeen Shores' hospital is in Southampton, Saugeen Memorial. Many physicians' practices are at the Saugeen Shores Medical Building. The hospital is part of the Bright Shores Health System's network of hospitals in northern Bruce and in Grey County. Hospital facilities include 16 beds, a 24-hour emergency department, surgery, acute ...
Town of Saugeen Shores (Population centres: Port Elgin, Southampton) Municipality of Kincardine (Population centre: Kincardine) Municipality of Brockton (Population centre: Walkerton) Town of South Bruce Peninsula (Population centre: Wiarton) Municipality of Arran–Elderslie; Township of Huron-Kinloss (Population centre: Lucknow) Municipality ...
Publix announced it had leased property to build a new store in Carolina Shores in April 2023. Construction has yet to begin, and town officials haven’t heard from the Florida-based supermarket ...
NEXT surveyed 1,500 small business owners aged 18-64 across industries and regions in late October and November 2024 to share findings about how economic factors are shaping business in the new year.
On 4 April 2023, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruled that the waterfront area between 1st and 6th is part of the Saugeen reserve, owned by the Saugeen First Nation. The court also ruled that the Government of Canada had abrogated the 1854 Treaty by allowing the beach waterfront to be taken away from the Saugeen. [ 21 ]