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Former township municipalities in Ontario This page was last edited on 22 June 2020, at 02:57 (UTC) . Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ; additional terms may apply.
Selwyn is a township in central-eastern Ontario, Canada, located in Peterborough County. The township comprises a mix of rural areas and built up urban areas (former independent towns and villages). The township was created in 2001, as Smith-Ennismore-Lakefield, changing its name to Selwyn
Skyline began operating in Canada in 1998. [5]In the 2010s, Skyline worked on rebuilding the 12,000-acre (4,900 ha) Port McNicoll site in Ontario, Canada. In 2011, Skyline International Developments Inc. (now Skyline Investments Inc.) bought the SS Keewatin, [6] Skyline Investments is also the owner of Keewatin and surrounding development properties in Canada.
Map of Townships in Ontario South of the French River c. 1950 - 1960. Northern Ontario ... Selwyn (formerly Smith-Ennismore-Lakefield) Trent Lakes ...
Ski Snow Valley is a ski resort located in Minesing, Ontario, north of Barrie Ontario. It has 3 ski lifts and a snow tubing facility operating in the winter. In the summers, Snow Valley offers weddings, banquet and corporate events. Ski Snow Valley was named "best Ontario hill for kids" by Ski Canada Magazine in 2001. [4]
The average depth of Whitefish Lake is seven feet. Access to the lake is a public launch located on Highway 588 and many independent tourist resorts. [2] Whitefish Lake is 11.7 square miles (30 km 2) and has a maximum depth of 22 feet (7 m). [3] The lake drains into Lake Superior via the Little Whitefish River.
Lakeridge Ski Resort - located north of Dagmar was opened in 1989 following Toronto Ski Club acquisition of part of the former Pugh family farm in 1983; Skyloft - smallest of the three resorts and located on property just northwest of Lakeridge; it was the site of the original Toronto Ski Club's first ski area on the original Pugh farm [21]
The Cameron road, now mostly encompassed by Highway 35, provided access from Lake Ontario to the northern limits of Victoria; The Bobcaygeon Road, begun in 1853, traversed north and south along the present-day eastern boundary of the region, and is mostly encompassed by former Highway 121 ;