|
|
|
UER Store
|
|
order your copy of Access All Areas today!
|
|
|
|
Activity
|
|
888 online
Server Time:
2024-04-26 08:53:24
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Location DB >
Canada >
Ontario >
Campbellville >
9625 Guelph Line, Campbellville
|
9625 Guelph Line, Campbellville
|
|
Log in to activate viewing options
|
|
|
created by Chronic
on 4/9/2004 8:15 PM
last modified by phrenzee
on 6/21/2015 11:30 AM
|
|
|
Publically Viewable |
This location has been labeled as Demolished, and therefore can be viewed by anyone.
|
|
|
|
|
Old two storey wood frame house, barn, and remains of a stone foudation of a barn. May 2012 update - the barns have been demolished.
|
|
|
Type: Building
Status: Demolished
Accessibility: Easy
Recommendation: check it out if you're nearby
|
|
|
|
|
The garbage dumps out back. History in a pile.
|
|
|
wooden boarding Guelph line is visible from front yard.
|
|
|
|
flashlight gloves long pants / sleeves
|
|
|
|
Some old duffer saw me there and was inquiring about the property. He thought I was the new owner. He then filled me in...apparently, last tennants had kids, the septic tank always backed up, the kids mentioned this at school, then the Region of Halton Childrens Services investigated, and then they deemed it an unfit dwelling. That was 3 years ago. EDIT: (Spirit730) This house and site has a lot of history. Here is a little bit that was taken from an article: "George Johnson a slave from the United States, and one of the first settlers in Nassawageya, purchased the 200 acre farm in 1828. However there were two George Johnsons, known as Little George and Big George and they and their families lived together. It is believed they were called Little and Big because of their stature, not their ages. They apparently travelled the underground railroad together to settle in Canada. It's unclear, however, whether the two men were related although that could be presumed. When Little George died in 1865 at age 65, the land was left to Big George, who farmed and also worked with wood and iron. Big George was sexton at St. John's Anglican Church and his wife Emily was the organist. They raised four sons. The oldest son, also George, opened a carpenter's shop in Campbellville. Edward inherited the south-west quarter of his father's lot and had a log home accessed by a lengthy driveway off Guelph Line. James stayed on his father's farm and in 1875 his son, James R., took over the farm with his wife Clarissa (formerly of Oakville). The Johnson family was considered to be one of the founding families of St. John's Anglican Church, being involved in area worship from the early years. The stone church that was constructed in 1870 was often cared for by the Johnsons. James R. and Clarissa were in charge of St. John's cemetery from 1913 to 1933 and his methodical work in recording burials is said to be a blessing to today's genealogists." The Yellow house that is there now, built between 80 and100 years ago, was built on the original log cabin foundation. Plans are in the works to purchase the land and buildings and save them as a Heritage Site.
|
|
|
|
Toronto lawyer owns it. Probably just sitting on the property until the right time.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The moderator rating is a neutral rating of the content quality, photography, and coolness of this location.
Category |
Rating |
Photography |
8 / 10 |
Coolness |
8 / 10 |
Content Quality |
8 / 10 |
|
|
This location's validation is current. It was last validated by
Mike Dijital on 6/21/2015 2:10 PM.
|
|
|
on Jun 21 15 at 14:10, Mike Dijital validated this location on Jun 21 15 at 11:30, phrenzee changed the following: Status on May 19 12 at 15:26, Opheliaism validated this location on May 18 12 at 13:10, phrenzee changed the following: Description on Oct 6 08 at 2:45, Steed validated this location on Oct 6 08 at 0:58, spirit730 changed the following: History on Aug 2 07 at 21:23, Emperor Wang validated this location on Jun 21 07 at 23:45, phrenzee added some pictures to a gallery on Jun 21 07 at 23:41, phrenzee added some pictures to a gallery on Jun 21 07 at 23:38, phrenzee created a new gallery
|
|
|
|
|
Is this location inappropriate / broken / missing key info?
If it's something you can fix, please scroll up and click the EDIT button.
If this location was only posted a few days ago, give the creator time to work on it.
Please try sending a message directly to the creator of the location. You'll find that info at the top of this page.
Otherwise, ONLY if you've already tried to contact the original creator,: Click here to notify an administrator.
|
|
|
|
All content and images copyright © 2002-2024 UER.CA and respective creators. Graphical Design by Crossfire.
To contact webmaster, or click to email with problems or other questions about this site:
UER CONTACT
View Terms of Service |
View Privacy Policy |
Server colocation provided by Beanfield
This page was generated for you in 419 milliseconds. Since June 23, 2002, a total of 739206662 pages have been generated.
|
|