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Thorold, along with other municipalities in the Niagara Region, hosted events for the 2022 Canada Summer Games. The Canada Games Park was built in Thorold for it. The federal government contributed $29 million dollars for the event split between different venues. [1] The Canada Games Park facility cost 107 million dollars. [2]
The building was repurposed as a design studio. [24] Thorold's Carnegie Library, which opened in 1912 and closed in 1983. [25] Chestnut Hall is a historic building that was the home of John McDonagh, who was the mayor of the Village of Thorold. [26] It was then used for the city hall. [27] It is attached to the current Thorold Public Library. [26]
Thorold was approved for a Carnegie Library grant and a new building opened in 1912. This library operated until 1983 and was replaced by the current location attached to Chestnut Hall . [ 2 ] In 2012, Chestnut Hall was assessed by a historical society that determined it was "badly showing its age" and may also be at risk of a fire due to ...
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Allanburg is the capital of the City of Thorold, Ontario, Canada. It is located on the Welland Canal and Highway 20, both important transportation routes through the Niagara Peninsula. The two cross at a [1] vertical-lift bridge, numbered as Bridge 11 by the Saint Lawrence Seaway Authority, but often known simply as the Allanburg Bridge.
Thorold is a city in Ontario, Canada. Thorold may also refer to: Anthony Wilson Thorold (1825–1895), Anglican bishop of Rochester, later bishop of Winchester; William Thorold (engineer) (1798–1878), English millwright, architect and civil engineer; Thorold Dickinson (1903-1984), British film director and academic
St. Catharines Transit (SCT) was a public transit agency which provided bus services to St. Catharines, Ontario, and the neighbouring city of Thorold.The St. Catharines Transit Commission took over operation of transit services within the city from Canadian National Transportation in 1961. [1]
The opening of the nearby Welland Canal in 1829 led to rapid development of industry in St. Catharines, Thorold, and Welland, and encouraged people and commercial enterprises to re-locate from St. Johns to those settlements. By 1850 the water-powered industries in St. Johns were in serious decline, and its population was reduced from 250 to 150 ...