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Port Hope is a municipality in Southern Ontario, Canada, about 109 km (68 mi) east of Toronto and 159 km (99 mi) west of Kingston. It is at the mouth of the Ganaraska River on the north shore of Lake Ontario , in the west end of Northumberland County .
The building itself was designed by the former President of the Ontario Association of Architects, Murray Brown, who oversaw the construction by Thomas Garnet and Sons, a local firm responsible for many landmarks of the area, including the 1927 addition to the Port Hope High School. [5] [6] In 1945 the Capitol Theatre was sold to Premier theatres.
Port Hope may refer to: Port Hope, Michigan, U.S. Port Hope, Ontario, Canada Port Hope (Peter's Field) Aerodrome; Port Hope Conference; Port Hope Panthers; Port Hope railway station; Port Hope Transit; Trenton Golden Hawks, formerly the Port Hope Predators; Port Hope Simpson, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada Port Hope Simpson Airport
Welcome is a community in the municipality of Port Hope, Northumberland County, Ontario, Canada.It is located at the crossroads of County Road 10, heading north to the community of Canton; County Road 74, heading east to Dale; and County Road 2 (formerly Ontario Highway 2) heading west to Morrish and southeast to interchange 461 on Ontario Highway 401 and further southeast to the town centre ...
Port Hope Transit is the local bus service provider in the Municipality of Port Hope, Ontario, which is located on the north shore of Lake Ontario about 109 kilometres (68 mi) east of Toronto. With a population of only 16,390 people in 2006, this is one of the few smaller communities in the province with a fully funded public transit system.
CFWN-FM is a community radio station broadcasting at 89.7 MHz in Port Hope, Ontario, Canada. History. On November 10, 2011, Small Town Radio (STR) ...
St. Mark's Anglican Church is a historic Anglican church in Port Hope, Ontario, Canada. The Carpenter Gothic church building dates from the 1820s and was the original home of St. John the Evangelist Anglican Church, now located in a larger stone building on Pine Street. The congregation dedicated to St. Mark was established in 1873.
Port Hope Town Council obtained a partnership with the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario, the Ontario Heritage Foundation, CN/Via and the province to use public funds and the money CN had earmarked for construction of a new shelter to instead retain and restore the original station to its 1881 appearance, returning it to passenger use. [1]