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The Elman W. Campbell Museum is a museum in Newmarket, Ontario.Beginning with the first Quaker settlers in the early 1800s, [1] the museum covers the history of Newmarket and the surrounding area, with a focus on local artifacts and their significance.
Newmarket's location on the Holland River enabled travel between Lake Ontario and Lake Simcoe.A portage route, the Toronto Carrying-Place Trail, ran one of its two routes up the Holland River through the Newmarket area, and over the Oak Ridges Moraine to the Rouge River and into Lake Ontario.
The Ray Twinney Complex, formerly known as the Newmarket Recreational Complex, is a multi-purpose recreational facility in the southwest portion of Newmarket, Ontario, built in 1985. The complex was named for former Newmarket mayor Ray Twinney .
Amber and Josh Enright, owners of Roots Cafe, have taken over the first floor of the Newmarket Mills at 55 Main Street to open Watershed Restaurant. Amber and Josh Enright, owners of Roots Cafe ...
Upper Canada Mall is the 25th largest shopping mall in Canada, located in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada. The mall is situated on the northwest corner of the Davis Drive West and Yonge Street intersection. The mall is owned and operated by Oxford Properties, one of the largest shopping centre development companies in Canada. It opened in 1974, at ...
This is a list of organizations, associations, places of interest, and other links relevant to Newmarket, Ontario. Subcategories This category has the following 6 subcategories, out of 6 total.
On 4 January 1904, a town plebiscite was conducted to determine whether residents supported a publicly financed library and reading room. [5] The vote was 90–26 in favour of using tax revenues to fund the library, with support in each of the three wards (36–5 in St. George's Ward, 36–10 in St. Andrew's Ward, and 18–11 in St. Patrick's Ward).
The Newmarket Canal, officially known but rarely referred to as the Holland River Division, is an abandoned barge canal project in Newmarket, Ontario. With a total length of about 10 miles (16 km), it was supposed to connect the town to the Trent–Severn Waterway via the East Holland River and Lake Simcoe .