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Whillans has several landmarks named in his honour in Brampton and in adjacent Caledon: Pond at Ken Whillans Resource Management Area. The Ken Whillans Resource Management Area which is a provincially significant wetland swamp stretching for 48 km from Terra Cotta to Palgrave, from the Caledon Trailway to the Credit River, on the eastern boundary of Inglewood village within the town of Caledon ...
A park on the site for many years was home to the Brampton Cenotaph (opened in 1928 by Governor General Lord Willingdon [1]), it was named Memorial Park. (A park at South Fletcher's Sportsplex now uses the name and the old former park named Ken Whillans Square ) [ 2 ] A downtown bus terminal on part of the site opened after 1976 and was closed ...
Ken Whillans, 1982–September 1990, died in office; Paul Beisel, 1990–1991, Whillans' appointed replacement; Peter Robertson, 1991–2000; Susan Fennell, 2000–2014; Linda Jeffrey, December 1, 2014 – December 1, 2018; Patrick Brown, December 1, 2018–Present; Note that some publications credit C. A. Irvine as a mayor; he never served in ...
Brampton is a city in the Canadian ... Citizens donated $1,054 and the town used the funds to purchase extra land to ensure a larger park. ... Mayor Ken Whillans ...
Paul Beisel, appointed Brampton mayor after the death of Ken Whillans, decided to retire from politics at the end of his term, returning to his position as vice-president of Midland Mortgages. [17] Regional councillors Robertson, Eric Carter, and Frank Russell all stood for election, along with businessmen Alan Austin and Don McMullen. [18]
Whillans may refer to: Don Whillans (1933–1985), British rock climber and mountaineer. Ken Whillans (1927–1990), Canadian politician and mayor of Brampton, Ontario.
Dr. Caroline Park, ... Ken Whillans (1927–1990), mayor of Brampton; Catherine White ... There are 1253 Brampton residents to receive Exemplary Service Medals. ...
An estimated 750,000 residents in the Credit River Watershed, 87% of whom live in the lower third of the watershed, in present-day Mississauga and Brampton. In 1999, 21% of the watershed was developed, and by 2020, 40% of the watershed will be developed (based on approved development and the official plans of the municipalities).