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The Founding of Bolton


Location
The Region of Peel - Caledon
In Bolton, at the south end of Laurel Hill Cemetery on the east side of Centennial Drive, just west of Queen Street North


Photographer
Alan L Brown

More Information
Posted
April 20, 2004

Text from the Plaque
In 1821 George Bolton, an English immigrant purchased 200 acres of land here on the Humber River. Two years later in partnership with his uncle, James Bolton, one of Albion Township's earliest settlers, he erected a grist-mill. This provided the nucleus around which a community known as Bolton's Mills was established by 1830. A post office named "Albion" was opened in 1832. By 1850 the settlement contained a sawmill, stores, a woollen factory, tannery and blacksmith's shop and within five years a village plot was laid out. The construction of the Toronto, Grey and Bruce Railway in 1871 stimulated the growth of Bolton which, with a population of 795, was incorporated as a village in 1872.

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