THE GEORGETOWN VAULT
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        • Glen Williams History >
          • 6 Prince Street
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        • Hurricane Hazel
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        • Norval History >
          • Maxted family History
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        • NOTRE DAME DE BEAUREGARD
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        • Stewarttown
        • Street Name Origins
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  • Our Stories
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  • Events
    • Events A - H >
      • 100th Anniversary of WW1
      • 100th Anniversary - Vimy Ridge
      • 10,000 Balloon release - June 1988
      • 2014 Olympics
      • 215 Vigil
      • Bang - O - Rama
      • Bicycle Rodeo
      • Black Lives Matter March
      • Canada Day in the Glen >
        • Other years
        • Canada Day 1967
        • Canada Day 2008
        • Canada Day 2010
        • Canada Day 2012
        • Canada Day 2014
        • Canada Day 2015
        • Canada Day 2016
        • Canada Day 2017
        • Canada Day 2018
        • Canada Day 2019
        • Canada Day 2022
        • Canada Day 2023
        • Canada Day 2024
      • Canada's most Patriotic Town - 2017 >
        • Snowbirds fly over
      • Car Show >
        • Car Show 2005
        • Car Show 2006
        • Car Show 2007
        • Car Show 2008
        • Car Show 2012
        • Car Show 2013
        • Car Show 2014
        • Car Show 2015
        • Car Show 2016
        • Car show 2017
        • Car show 2018
        • Car Show 2019
        • Car show 2022
        • Father's day car show 23
        • Car show 2023
        • Car show 2024
      • Cashh 25th Anniversary
      • Cashh Tour the hills 2023
      • Centennial anniversary of Georgetown Boys’ arrival
      • Centennial Parade 1967
      • Centennial School 50th Anniversary
      • Chapel Street School 25th Reunion 1994
      • Christmas >
        • Christmas
        • Brandylane - Limehouse
        • Christmas 2008
        • Christmas 2012
        • Christmas 2020
        • Glen Williams Christmas Market 2022
        • Glen Williams Christmas Market 2023
        • Glen Williams Christmas Market 2024
        • Main street Christmas 2008
        • Main Street Christmas 2012
        • Main Street Christmas 2014
        • Main street Christmas 2015
        • Main street Christmas 2017
        • Main street Christmas 2018
        • Main street Christmas 2021
        • Main Street Christmas 2022
        • Main Street Christmas 2023
        • Main Street Christmas 2024
      • Cinema Opening 1979
      • Citizen of the Year Awards
      • Coldest night Of the Year >
        • Coldest Night 23
        • Coldest Night 24
        • Coldest Night 25
      • Covid-19
      • Craft Beer Fest
      • Crazy Boat Races >
        • 1988
        • Through the years
      • Cross Country
      • Cruise Nights
      • Doctors vs staff hockey games >
        • Doc's vs Staff Charity Game - 2010
        • Doc's vs Staff Charity Game 2011
      • Donkey Baseball
      • Downtown Palooza >
        • 2023
      • Drummers Snack 1911
      • Easter
      • Fall Fairs >
        • Through the Years
        • Fall Fair 1977
        • Fall Fair 2009
        • Fall Fair 2015
        • Fall Fair 2016
        • Fall Fair 2017
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        • Fall Fair 2020*
        • Fall Fair 2022
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        • Fall Fair 2024
        • RCMP Musical Ride 1996
      • Fan Fest 2025
      • Farmer's Market >
        • Farmer's Market
        • Farmer's Market 2014
        • Farmer's Market 2015
        • Farmers Market 2016
        • Farmers Market 2017
        • Farmer's Market 2018
        • Farmer's Market 2021
        • Farmers Market 2022
        • Farmer's Market 2023
      • Flood - July 2024
      • Fred's Towing 50th Anniversary 2008
      • Georgetown's 50th
      • GDHS 100 YEAR REUNION - 1987 >
        • 100 YEARS Yearbook
        • Newspaper Clippings
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        • Pictures
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      • Halloween >
        • Halloween
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      • Halton Hills 50th
      • Health Home and Wellness Show 2014
      • HHFD vs NHL Alumni >
        • HHFD vs Toronto Maple Leaf Alumni 2009
        • HHFD vs NHL Alumni Hockey 2024
        • HHFD vs NHL Alumni 2025
      • Highland Games >
        • Highland games
        • 1976 Highland Games Programme
        • 2007
        • 2009
        • 2013
        • 2020
        • 2024
      • Highway 413 Protests.
      • Holi Fest >
        • Holi Fest 2025
      • Holmes Tv Show
      • Home Coming 2007 >
        • Meetings and Gatherings
        • The Set up
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        • Final Tally
        • Committee BBQ
        • Newspaper Articles
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        • Odd stuff
      • Home Coming 2013 >
        • Homecoming Literature
        • Friday - Pizza Hut
        • Friday Night Meet and Greet
        • Saturday
        • Saturday Night's Party
      • Home Town Hockey
      • Hospital Walk/Run >
        • Hospital Walk 2018
        • Hospital Walk/Run 2022
        • Hospital Walk 23
    • Events I - P >
      • Ice Storm 2013 >
        • Saturday December 21st
        • Sunday December 22nd
        • Monday December 23rd
        • Tuesday December 24th
      • Ice Storm 2016
      • International Plowing Match >
        • 1974 Plowing Match
        • Plowing Match 2022
      • Jim Cuddy Concert - Oct 17th 2020
      • Light up the Hills >
        • Light up the Hills - Various Years
        • Light up the Hills 2008
        • Light up the Hills 2009
        • Light up the Hills 2010
        • Light up the Hills 2012
        • Light up the Hills 2014
        • Light up the Hills 2015
        • Light up the hills - 2016
        • Light up the Hills 2017
        • Light up the Hills 2018
        • Light up the hills 2020
        • Light up the Hills 2022
        • Light up the Hills 2023
        • Light up the Hills 2024
      • Limehouse corn roast 2015
      • Lobsterfest 2013
      • Lovefest 2014
      • Mold master's skate Park opening
      • Movies/Television Shows
      • Mr. Dressup
      • Municipal awards
      • Normandy Blvd Reunion
      • Norval Bed Race
      • Olympic Torch Relay - 2010
      • Ontario Radio Reunion - 2013
      • Outhouse races
      • Orange Walk
      • Pass, Dribble Shoot
      • Pioneer Days - Downtown
      • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
      • Prime Minister Mark Carney
      • Princess Margaret Train
    • Events Q - Z >
      • Queen's Coronation
      • Rail Road Hall of Fame induction - 2014
      • Random Car Club >
        • Random Car Club 40th Anniversary
        • Random Car Club 45th Anniversary
        • Random Car Club 50th Anniversary
      • Raptor's Championship
      • Raylawn Reunion 2013
      • Red Nose Day - Feb 6th
      • Rib Fest >
        • Ribfest 2021
        • Ribfest 2023
        • Ribfest 2024
      • Rodeo Queen 1961
      • Santa Claus Parades >
        • Santa Claus Parades - Various Years
        • 1971
        • 1978
        • 1995
        • 2004
        • 2005
        • 2006
        • 2007
        • 2008
        • 2009
        • 2011
        • 2012
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        • 2020
        • 2021
        • 2022
        • 2023
        • 2024
      • Salute to the John Street Culvert 2015 - Beep Beep
      • school bus open house 2022
      • Shel Lawr
      • Sheridan Nursery's 100th Anniversary Gala
      • Skate-a-thon 1977
      • Snow Storms >
        • 2007
        • 2008
        • 2025
      • Soap Box Derby
      • Spring Flood 2022
      • Storm 1982
      • Storm of July 19th 2013
      • Terry Fox
      • The Bear
      • The King and His Court
      • Tornado July 31st 1976
      • Tornado - November 15th 2020
      • Town Hall Fire - September 21st 1968
      • Train Derailments
      • TV bingo
      • VolleyBall Tournament
      • Wintario
      • World:s Biggest smoked sausage record
  • In Memory of...
  • In Memory of (2)
  • Lest we Forget
    • Candle Light Tributes
    • Community Covenant for Veterans Ceremony - June 6th 2014
    • Heroes >
      • John Pollands Girvan
    • Pictures
    • Poem by Fred McCartney
    • Remembrance Day >
      • Remembrance Day - Various years
      • Remembrance 1968
      • Remembrance 1989
      • Remembrance Day ~ 1999
      • Remembrance 2007
      • Remembrance Day ~ 2008
      • Remembrance Day ~ 2012
      • Glen Parade ~ 2013
      • Remembrance Day ~ 2013
      • Remembrance day 2015
      • Remembrance Day 2017
      • Remembrance Day 2018
      • Remembrance Day 2021
      • Remembrance Day 2022
      • Remembrance Day 2023
      • Remembrance Day 2024
    • Remembrance Park
    • Warriors Day Parade - Aug 2013
    • V-E Day 2011
  • Our Town
    • Our Town A - E >
      • Abandoned Railline
      • Aerial photos
      • Allison's
      • Amica - Build 2018
      • Andrew Murray Motors
      • Armenian Boys Farm
      • The Armory Renos
      • Around Town >
        • Through the years
        • Older Pictures
        • 1979 - 2011
        • 2000s
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      • Ballinfad
      • Bands
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      • Bob Law Sketches
      • Bowling Alley Demo
      • Car Clubs
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      • Cedervale Park
      • Cemeteries >
        • Devereaux
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        • Greenwood Cemetery A - F
        • Greenwood Cemetery G - L
        • Greenwood Cemetery M - R
        • Greenwood Cemetery S - U
        • Greenwood Cemetery V - Unknown
        • Holy Redeemer
        • Norval Hill Crest A - G
        • Norval Hill Crest H - P
        • Norval Hill Crest Q - Z
        • St Stephen's
      • Churches >
        • Congregational Church
        • Holy Cross
        • Holy Cross - Maple Ave - Demolition 1965 - 2015
        • Holy Cross 1989
        • Immanuel Lutheran
        • Knox Presbyterian - 1985
        • Knox presbyterian Church
        • Knox Church Organ
        • Main Street Baptist
        • Maple Baptist Church
        • Norval Presbyterian Church
        • Sacre Coeur
        • St. Alban's Glen Williams
        • St. Andrew's
        • St. George's
        • St john's Anglican - Stewarttown
        • St. John's United Georgetown and Glen Williams
        • St. Stephen's - Hornby
        • Union Presbyterian Church
        • Wesleyan Methodist Church
      • Credit Union
      • Dayfoot Factory Development
      • Delrex Development
      • Delrex Market Place >
        • The Plaza
        • The Mall
      • Dick Licata Outdoor Pool
      • Dominion Seed House >
        • Dominion Gardens
        • Dominion Seed House
        • 1933 catalogue
        • 1946 Mail Order Catalogue
        • 1959 Cateloge
    • Our Town F - J >
      • Factories >
        • Avian
        • Gage / DRG Stationary
        • Creelman Brothers
        • Dayfoot Shoe Factory
        • Domtar
        • Georgetown Hosiery
        • Harley Kay Knitting Machines
        • H.T Arnold Glove Factory
        • Meadowglen Mushrooms
        • Mold Masters
        • Provincial Paper
        • Smith and Stone
        • Smith and Stone News Letters
        • Standard Products
        • Varian Yearbooks >
          • 1968
          • 1969
          • 1990 - 35th Anniversary
        • Yoder
      • Fairgrounds
      • Families >
        • Barnes/Walsh
        • Bradley
        • Emmerson's
        • Hancocks
        • Keirs
        • Little
        • Wheelers
        • Wrigglesworth
      • Fobert Homes
      • Furnace Room Brewery
      • Gellert Center
      • Georgetown Academy c. 1870
      • Georgetown Cinemas
      • Georgetown Dairy
      • Georgetown District Memorial Hospital >
        • Older Pictures
        • 1958 - 1979
        • 1980 - 1991
        • 1992 - 1995
        • 2000s
        • 90's Expansion
        • 1998 AGM
        • Like Family Book 1998
        • 2002 - 2004
        • Air Ambulance
        • Miscellaneous
        • 50TH Anniversary 2011
        • Expansion 2012 - 2013
        • 60th Anniversary
      • Georgetown Game
      • Georgetown Transit
      • Georgetown Volunteer Ambulance Services
      • Glen Williams >
        • Glen Village
        • Industry
        • Preston's Store
        • Spring Floods
      • Golf Clubs
      • Ground Hog Hill
      • Groups and Clubs >
        • 4H
        • Air Cadets
        • Boy Scouts
        • Choral Society
        • Georgetown Citizen Band
        • Georgetown Little Theatre
        • Georgetown Pipe Band
        • Girls Pipe Band 50th
        • Georgetown Pipe Band Reunion
        • Georgetown Seniors Center
        • Girl Guides
        • Groups and Clubs
        • Jaycees
        • Kinsmen
        • Legion Pipe Band
        • Lions
        • Lorne Scots 676
        • Lorne Scots >
          • Lorne Scots Parade 2023
          • 150th Anniversary Lorne Scots >
            • Lorne Scots Service Monument
            • Meet N Greet/ Armories Open House
            • Trooping of the Colours
        • North Halton Go-Kart Club
        • Optimist Club
        • Optimist Club #2
        • Radical Car Club
        • Red Cross
        • Rotary Club
      • Halton Hills Drive
      • Halton Hills FD >
        • 1894 Bylaws
        • 100th Fireman's Ball Invitation
        • 1921 Bylaws
        • Halton Hills Fire Department
        • New Fire Hall Opening 1977
        • Pearl Oliver - Dispatch
        • Recognition and Awards night >
          • Recognition and Awards night 2016
          • Recongnition and Awards night 2017
          • Recognition and Awards Night 2018
        • World Trade Center Steel
      • Henry Shepherd Park
      • Herrington Animal Control
      • Hornby
      • Hotels
      • Hungry Hollow
      • Hydro Commision
      • Jewish Farm
    • Our Town K - O >
      • Lawn Bowling Club
      • Legion >
        • Legion
        • WW I Quilt
      • Library / Cultural Centre
      • Limehouse
      • Main Street >
        • Main and Mill Streets - old Photos
        • Main Street 1983 - 2023
        • Main and Mills Streets - 2024 -
        • Main Street Constructions
        • Main Street People
        • McGibbon Hotel
        • McGibbon Demo and rebuild
        • McGibbon Hotel 2015/16
        • Mcgibbon Build Documents
        • Royal Bank On Main
      • Maps >
        • 1877 Map book
      • Mayors
      • Memorials and Plaques
      • Memorial Arena >
        • 30th Anniversary of the Little NHL
        • 2010
        • Memorial Arena Demolition
        • Memories
        • Final Skate
        • Seat Sale - Nov 9th 2013
      • Mill Street Home Demolitions
      • (42) Mill Street build
      • New Arena
      • New Paper Articles
      • News Papers >
        • 1867
        • 1893
        • 1913
        • October 25th 1944
        • Aug 15th 1945
        • June 2nd 1954
        • June 9th 1954
        • June 16th 1954
        • November 8th 1961
        • January 30th 1964
        • 1972
        • November 1974
        • May 21st 1975
        • 1976
        • Feb 4th 1981
        • Feb 24 1982
        • March 24th 1982
        • 1983
        • 1984 Hearld
        • 1987
        • March 7th 1988
        • January 4th 1989
        • March 6th 1989
        • March 17th 1996
        • March 17th 1999
        • 2000 - 01
        • 2007
      • Normandy Blvd
      • Norval >
        • Norval
        • Nashville North
        • Willow Park
        • Willow park/Montgomery Gardens 2018
      • Notre Dame De Beauregard
      • New Outlet Mall
      • Odd Stuff
    • Our Town P - T >
      • Paper Mill Dam
      • People
      • Police
      • Post Cards
      • Rainbow Crossing 2020
      • Restaurants
      • Rosetta Street Construction
      • Roxy Theater
      • Scotsdale Farms
      • Silver Creek
      • Station House Hotel
      • Station House Demo
      • Stewarttown
      • Street Names
      • Summer Camps
      • Taxi Companys
      • Terra Cotta
      • Tim Murdock Racing
      • Toronto International Speedway
      • Toronto International Speedway - Ruins
      • Town Hall
      • Town of Halton Hills
      • Trafalgar Sports Park
      • Trains >
        • CN Construction 2015
    • Our Town U - Z >
      • Upper Canada College
      • Water Falls Playground - 6th Line
      • Water Tower
      • YMCA Camp
  • Publications
    • Publications
    • Pamphlets
    • 1947 Booklet
    • 1960s Cookbook
    • Glen Williams Cook Book 1968
    • Lion's Cook Book
    • Herald 125th Anniversary CookBook
    • The Good Stuff Cook Book 1968
    • 1973 Directory
    • 1976 Directory
    • 1978 Directory
    • 1982 Directory
    • 1985 Living in Georgetown
    • Halton Sketches
    • Neighbours in the Glen >
      • September 2015
      • December 2015
      • February 2018
      • April 2018
      • May 2018
      • July 2018
    • My Heritage - Violet Brownridge
    • Walking Backwards
    • Foot Prints from the Near Past
  • Schools
    • PUBLIC SCHOOLS >
      • Centennial >
        • Graduation 1979 - 80 Programme
        • Graduation 1987
        • Odds and Ends
      • Chapel Street Formerly known as Georgetown Public
      • George Kennedy
      • Glen Williams >
        • Mrs Somerville
      • Harrison
      • Holy Cross
      • Hornby
      • Howard Wrigglesworth >
        • 1955 yearbook
      • Joseph Gibbons >
        • Class Photos
        • Holidays
        • Official Opening
        • Pictures
        • Staff Photos
        • sports and Activities
      • Limehouse >
        • Limehouse School 25th Annivesary
      • Norval
      • Park
      • Pine View
      • Sacre Coeur
      • Speyside School
      • SS#9 Gibraltar
      • SS#16 Stone School.
      • Stewarttown >
        • Spread the Net Winners 2018
      • St. Francis
    • HIGH SCHOOL >
      • GDHS >
        • GDHS
        • Changing the Rebel Name
        • Class photos
        • Class Trip - 89
        • Concerts
        • 1956 Commencement Dinner Dance
        • 1962 Commencement
        • 1967 Showcase
        • 1979 Formal
        • GDHS 25th Reunion 1912
        • Georgetown District High School 2010
        • GDHS Slides
        • Rebel Reunion (1973) 2008
        • Spoons Concert
        • Sports Award programmes >
          • 1971
          • 1972
          • 1974
          • 1975
        • Sports Teams >
          • GDHS Badminton
          • GDHS Basketball
          • GDHS Cheer Team
          • GDHS Curling Teams
          • GDHS Field Hockey
          • GDHS Football
          • GDHS Golf Teams
          • GDHS Gymnastics
          • GDHS Hockey
          • GDHS Rugby
          • GDHS Snowboard Teams
          • GDHS Soccer Teams
          • GDHS Special Olympic Teams
          • GDHS Student/Teacher basketball
          • GDHS Swim Teams
          • GDHS Track and Xcountry
          • GDHS Track and Xcountry #2
          • GDHS Volleyball
          • GDHS Wrestling
          • Other Sports
    • Other
  • Sports
    • Baseball >
      • 1960's / 1970's rep
      • Baseball Pictures and Clippings
      • GBA Team Pictures
      • Georgettes
      • Glen Williams
      • Eagles >
        • Team Pictures
        • 1987 Eagles Programme
        • 1988 Eagles Programme
        • 1989 Eagles Programme
        • 1989/90 Eagles
        • 1990 Eagles Programme
        • 2009
        • 2010 COBA Champs
        • 2011 COBA Champs
        • 2015 COBA Champs
        • 2018 OMB Champions
        • 2020
      • Kinsmen Girls Softball
      • Limehouse
      • Powder Puff
      • Racquet Club
      • Royalettes
      • Team Pictures
    • Bowling >
      • Bowling
      • 2016 YBC Kids
      • 2016 Bowling Banquet
    • Figure Skating
    • Hockey >
      • Team Pictures
      • Bantam Tournament
      • Gemini's >
        • Gemini's
        • 1987/88 Juveniles
      • Hockey
      • Hockey Heritage Awards >
        • 1979 - Roy Norton Sr
        • 1980 - Royal Canadian Legion
        • 1981 - Bud James
        • 1982 - Gerry Inglis
        • 1983 - Robert Lane
        • 1984 - Ron Dixon
        • 1985 - Bob Goldham
        • 1986 - Walter Bianchi
        • 1987 - Del Beaumont
        • 1988 - Red Asseltine
        • 1989 - Robert Tost
        • 1990 - Roy Ward
        • 1991 - Gerry Perkins
        • 1992 - Herb Robinson
        • 1993 - James Ford
        • 1994 - Karen Harrison
        • 1995 - Norm Lochurst
        • 1996 - Harold Gilmer
        • 1997 - Shel Lawr
        • 1998 - Ron McKnight
        • 1999 - Bob Webster
        • 2000 - Bryan Lewis
        • 2001 - Wayne Pries
        • 2002 - Dave Kentner
        • 2003 - Zeke McCandless
        • 2004 - Carson Mininch
        • 2005 - Charlie Hanman
        • 2006 - Brian James
        • 2007 - Bob Hooper
        • 2008 - Hal Pells
        • 2009 - Don Fendley
        • 2010 - Finn Poulstrup
        • 2011 - Geraldine Hardcastle
        • 2012 - Neil Cotton
        • 2013 - Bill and Pam McGillivray
        • 2014 - Jack Moon
        • 2015 - Dr. Ron Lefebvre
        • 2016 - Gary Stone
        • 2017 - Sheila Campbell
        • 2018 - Dennis Norton
        • 2019 - Grace Rylett
        • 2020 - John Boyce
        • 2023 - Jay Anderson
        • 2024 - Steve Highfield
      • Hockey Programmes >
        • 1967 Bantam Tournament
        • 1975 Bantam Tournament
        • 1982 Bantam Tournament
        • 1994 Bantam Tournament
        • 1995 Bantam Tournament
        • 1998 Bantam Tournament
        • 1999 Bantam Tournament
        • 2000 Bantam Tournament
        • Geminis 1986 - 87
        • Raiders 1967 - 68
        • Raiders 1973 - 74
        • Raiders 1975 - 76
        • Raiders 1976 - 77
        • Raiders 50th Anniversary
        • Raiders 1978 - 79
        • Raiders 1981 - 82 Champs
        • Raiders 1981 - 82
        • Raiders 1983 - 84
        • Raiders 1984 - 85
        • 40th Anniversary Little NHL
        • 1979 Hockey/Soccer
        • 1994 Midget Tournament
        • 2017 Citation Awards
        • 2017 - Day of Hockey Celebrations
        • 2024 - Citation Awards
      • Junior B Beavers
      • Raiders
      • Raiders 1981 Hardy Cup
      • Refs
      • Timbit's
    • Lacrosse
    • Ladies Flag Football
    • Men's Flag Football
    • Other Sports
    • Soccer Club
    • Sports Museum and HOF
  • Year Books
    • Centennial public School Yearbooks >
      • 1971 - 72
      • 1972 - 73
      • 1973 - 74
      • 1974 - 75
      • 1975 - 76
      • 1976 - 77
      • 1977 - 78
      • 1979 - 80
      • 1980 - 81
      • 1981 - 82
      • 1982 - 83
      • 2017-18
    • Stewarttown Public School Yearbooks >
      • 1978 - >
        • 1978/79
        • 1979/80
        • 1980/ 81
        • 1981/82
        • 1982/83
        • 1984/85
        • 1985/86
        • 1989/90
        • 1994/95
        • 1996/97
        • 1999/00
      • 2000 - >
        • 2004/05
        • 2005/06
        • 2006/07
        • 2007/08
        • 2008/09
        • 2009/10
        • 2010/11
        • 2011/12
        • 2012/13
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Childhood friends MacKenzie Entwistle, Taylor Raddysh, Jason Dickinson amazed by Blackhawks reunion - October 2022

4/8/2025

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Nothing about the Toronto exurb of Georgetown, Ontario — population 42,123 — suggests a Blackhawks pipeline. It’s a typical Canadian town with a small downtown and a hockey rink nestled between strip malls and fast-food chains off the highway.
But unremarkable Georgetown is the hometown of three of the Hawks’ nine Canadian players. Forwards MacKenzie Entwistle, Taylor Raddysh and Jason Dickinson grew up there — and at roughly the same time, too.
“What are the odds of that?” Dickinson said. “I don’t even think you could compute that.”
When the Hawks acquired Dickinson from the Canucks two weeks ago, Entwistle and Raddysh actually tried — and failed — to do just that.
“Me and Raddysh started talking, like, ‘Oh, my God, this is crazy. [We had] two guys on one team, and now all of a sudden we have three?’ ’’ Entwistle said. “We started doing the math. We looked up the population. In 2011, it was 40,000. We couldn’t find anything on the internet for 1999, because that was my birth year, but it must’ve been so small.
“We were shocked. We were excited, though, not only for us three but also for our town, our parents, our families, everyone that drove us to the rinks. It’s so cool.”
(For the record, based on the 290 Canadian players on NHL opening-day rosters and Canada’s population of 38 million, the probability of three Georgetown residents making the NHL is about 1-in-250 — and the probability of three playing for one NHL team is about 1-in-8,000.)
Entwistle, at 23, is the youngest of the bunch, with Raddysh, 24, a year older and Dickinson, 27, the eldest. As is the case in many smaller towns, however, there’s no shortage of ties between the trio — dating back long before their Hawks tenures.
Raddysh’s older brother Darren, a 26-year-old defenseman playing for the Lightning’s AHL affiliate, played minor hockey with Dickinson. Dickinson’s younger brother Josh, a 24-year-old forward playing in Sweden, grew up friends with Raddysh. They still occasionally play Xbox together.
Entwistle and Dickinson have coached at a local kids hockey camp together in recent years. And Entwistle and Raddysh grew up playing on the same lacrosse team. The list of connections goes on and on.
“[Taylor and I] were close,” Entwistle said. “I always make fun of him because he was the kid that just grew way faster than everyone. He was always a heavier-set kid. He was so good at lacrosse, it was nuts. He’d just drop his shoulder and score four or five goals a game. He was that good.”
Added Raddysh: “I was one of the bigger kids . . . [and] that’s where you could dominate. I was actually better at lacrosse than hockey, but I was only 10 years old.”
Both eventually had to pick one sport to focus on, and both chose hockey — although it wasn’t a completely straightforward decision for Entwistle in particular.
Even then, though, they ended up in the same Triple-A hockey program, the Toronto Marlboros, and occasionally played together when Entwistle was called up to the older team as an injury replacement.
“As we got older, we kind of lost touch a little bit — everyone gets on different teams and stuff — but now we’re back,” Entwistle said. “We’re just following each other.”
Entwistle and Dickinson linked up about five years ago, they estimate, as two of a handful of instructors at Pasma’s Hockey Development, a camp run by former Capitals draft pick and Georgetown native Rod Pasma.
“We range from ages 6 to 16, so we see all skill levels,” Dickinson said. “The kids are really receptive and want to learn. It’s nice because I was [once] that kid that was dying to learn. I see a lot of those kids, and I’m like, ‘Yeah, this was me. I get it. They want to learn as much knowledge as they can.’ ”
Entwistle and Dickinson have gotten to know each other well from those two weeks together each August, but their friendship has been elevated to a new level this past week.
With Dickinson and his wife living out of a hotel while sorting out longer-term living arrangements — the trade out of Vancouver took them by surprise — Entwistle has served as their de facto Chicago tour guide and Uber driver.
“He picks me up every day right now, it seems,” Dickinson said. “He’s a good kid, and I’m learning a lot more about him now than I would’ve previously. We didn’t spend this much time together. It’s nice to learn more about his family and what he’s about outside the rink.”
While commuting to and from the United Center, of course there’s plenty of reminiscing to be done about old times in Georgetown. But years down the road, Entwistle, Dickinson and Raddysh likely will be able to reminisce just as much about their hard-to-fathom 2022 reunion on the Hawks.
“We can’t look back on it now, but in time, we’ll look back and say, ‘That was really crazy,’ ” Dickinson said. “I don’t know if anybody else from Georgetown could get to the NHL, and we had three on the same team.”
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Prime Minister quotes Glen Williams students in Parliament Hill tariff speech

4/5/2025

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Prime Minister Mark Carney made a campaign stop in Georgetown Monday, joined by Milton MP Adam van Koeverden and Milton East-Halton Hills South Liberal candidate Kristina Tesser Derksen.
Glen Williams Public School got an unexpected shout out from the Prime Minister today (April 3). 
Addressing the media in regard to yesterday’s tariff announcement by U.S. President Donald Trump, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canada’s counter-tariffs will remain in place, saying it's necessary to protect the country's economy. 
Toward the end of his 23-minute address, Carney spoke about meeting a teacher from the Glen during his campaign stop in Georgetown Monday. 
“She told me about a routine assignment that she had given to her nine and 10-year-olds. The children were asked to describe their dreams for Canada.” Carney said. “Some kids wrote about a country free of poverty, others dreamed about clean air and water or a place where everyone enjoyed equal rights, dignity and respect. These are what we all want ourselves and for each other.”
What caught the Prime Minister by surprise were students who mentioned tariffs and Canada’s sovereignty, “words that I hadn’t met at that age,” he said. 
The Prime Minister then read one student’s response: “I dream of a safe, a kind and a clean Canada. A Canada that is not the U.S.”
“Our children should be able to dream of a positive future,” Carney said, “not worry about an economic crisis.”
Carney spoke on some other topics before returning to the students to close his remarks.
“To those kids at Glen Williams Public School, don’t worry, with your spirit…we will build a better Canada for your future, because that’s who we are. We’re Canada.”
A request by HaltonHillsToday to interview the teacher was declined by the Halton District School Board.
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Georgetown's Condotta signs two-year extension with Montreal Canadiens Laval Rocket captain has played seven NHL games this season - 2025

4/4/2025

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Georgetown's Lucas Condotta signed a two-year extension with the Montreal Canadiens. Condotta, captain of the AHL Laval Rocket, has played seven games with the Canadiens this season.
The Montreal Canadiens have signed Georgetown’s Lucas Condotta to a two-year contract extension.
The Georgetown native has played seven games for the Canadiens this season, scoring his second career NHL goal against Columbus on Nov. 16.
The 27-year-old was named captain of the Laval Rocket, Montreal’s American Hockey League affiliate. Condotta has three goals and 21 assists in 53 games with Laval this season.
The 6-foot-1 winger was originally signed as a free agent by Montreal in March of 2022 after four seasons at the University of Massachusetts-Lowell.
Condotta has played 197 games with Laval, scoring 27 goals and adding 48 assists. He’s played 11 games with Montreal over the past three seasons. He scored in his NHL debut against Boston on Apr. 13, 2023.
Story from Halton Hills today. ​
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Georgetown musher completes 13-day dog sled race across Alaska - 2025

4/4/2025

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Connor McMahon recently completed the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Alaska, finishing 20th out of 33 teams.
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Georgetown native Connor McMahon captured the Northern Lights shining in the night sky from the back of his sled during the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Alaska. Connor McMahon photo
Five miles from the finish line of an 1,815-kilometre, two-week-long trek over unforgiving terrain where temperatures at times hit -40C, Connor McMahon stopped his dog sled. From the ridge he had just crested, he could see the Alaskan city of Nome and the Bering Sea in the distance.  In what has become a tradition in his races, the Georgetown native got off the sled and walked down the line of dogs, thanking each one of them for their hard work.  There was Grace, Mitchy Shake, Wolfman Grotto and Mama Mako – who started leaning into her harness to show him that she was ready to go when McMahon began having doubts a third of the way through the race. There was Mackenzie, King Bruce, Omis, Rock and Ice – the latter two being “the big boys” whose strength kept the team on course when the howling winds slowed their progress. 
There was Missy Elliott, Jay Z, Beyonce and Timo – “the brains of the operation,” the mentally strong lead dog who loved to cuddle between Rock and Ice during the rest stops.  And there was Annie R U OK, Krypto and Ned Kelly, the yapper, the team alarm clock who made sure he alerted everyone in the village that they were about to leave before the sun rose. “I just soaked in the moment,” McMahon said of the final stop. “It’s a mixture of emotions. There’s relief that it’s over, but you know there are lots of logistics and people to deal with when you finish. I was grateful that we all got there, but I know it’s the last time where it’s just me and the dogs.”
It takes a special bond between a musher and his dogs to complete the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race – the Super Bowl (or Stanley Cup, for a Canadian like McMahon) of dog sled racing. McMahon attempted the race last year, but pulled out due to concern for his dogs. Better trained and better prepared this year, McMahon again entered ‘The Last Great Race.’ He could have never imagined taking part in such an incredible adventure when he adopted an Alaskan Malamute named Chumie. Looking to burn off some of his new friends’ abundant energy, he built a sled and had Chumie pull him on fishing trips. When McMahon’s work as a guide on Great Slave Lake dried up during the pandemic, he used his new-found time to start training sled dogs. It didn’t take long before he was entering races. He won his first race, the 177-kilometre Percy DeWolfe Memorial Mail Race in 2021.

McMahon finished 20th out of the 33 teams that started the Iditarod in Fairbanks, Alaska - a significant placing as it's the cutoff between prize money for placing as opposed to just finishing. McMahon took a conservative approach this year, finishing in 13 days, four hours, seven minutes and 47 seconds and achieving his goal of gaining experience for the future.  There are three mandatory rest stops during the race – one 24-hour and two eight-hour breaks. The remainder are up to each musher to decide. McMahon sometimes took longer breaks, sometimes by choice, others not. “I definitely need a louder alarm clock next time,” he said.

A 1,200-kilometre stretch on the Yukon River was challenging, and a little monotonous, testing both him and the dogs mentally. That’s where he found out how much of a team race the Iditarod really is. “It’s tough on your mental state. You’re a little sleep deprived but you have to keep that mental energy positive through the race,” he said. “The dogs are a mirror to what I’m feeling. If you start to slip you see it in them. There were times I got in my own head. I’d come down and look at the dog team and they’re all standing, ready to go. They were letting me know it was all good.

Surprisingly, it was a Disney movie that caused McMahon the most stress. “I was horrified to cross Norton Sound. I think I watched Togo too many times,” he said of the movie telling the story of serum being transported by dog sled through harsh weather across Alaska during a diphtheria outbreak in 1925. The dangerous, life-saving mission inspired the Iditarod. As he reached the Bering Sea and neared the next checkpoint, McMahon got to witness the lunar eclipse as the sun set. “That’s something I’ll never forget,” he said.  Overall, McMahon was pleased with his preparation, saying he never suffered from dehydration and didn’t lose any weight. He fully intends to return next year and move up in the standings. He mentioned that no Canadian has ever won the race, hinting at his long-term goal. 

For the dogs, he said he’ll make some adjustments to their training regiment with more shorter runs. Thirteen of his 16 dogs completed the race. McMahon took three out due to minor injuries, leaving them with the veterinarians at the checkpoints, who then returned them to his support team. He said they were home getting spoiled before he crossed the finish line. As McMahon approached the Nome city limits, he couldn’t help but get emotional.  “This is the pinnacle,” he said. “You get to explore all of these amazing villages, you learn more about the incredible capabilities of these four-legged athletes. I was crying, but they were tears of gratitude. Luckily, I got them all out by the finish line, because I was crying like a baby. I got to the finish line with 13 happy dogs barking. They didn’t want to stop.”
​Story from Halton Hills Today. ​
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Longtime sewing and vacuum shop closing its doors in Georgetown

3/24/2025

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Tony and Heike Chiufo, who operate Halton Hills Sewing and Vacuum.
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Tony and Heike Chiufo bidding farewell to the community.
It's almost time for Tony and Heike Chiufo to sew their final stitch.
The local residents, who own Halton Hills Sewing and Vacuum, will be closing their Guelph Street business at the end of April and retiring. The pair has been in the sewing machine and vacuum repair business for decades, having a history in Mimico, Brampton and now Georgetown.
It's clear their expertise has been appreciated by the community, with many people sharing heartfelt well wishes for the Chiufos on social media following the announcement of the store's impending closure. “We were very overwhelmed by the amount of people saying they liked us because we are honest and trustworthy. We just go to bed at night with a clear conscience. And we’ve made a lot of friends out of here. That’s the part we’re going to miss the most,” Heike said.
Tony acknowledged that he will miss the social side of the business because he enjoys talking to people.
“You would be surprised how people just confide in you. So you get all kinds of stories,” he said.
“Sometimes you felt like a bartender,” Heike joked.
Now that the couple's careers are ending with grace, they're looking to the future. Once certain health issues have been dealt with, they plan to enjoy themselves by travelling to the Mediterranean, specifically to Italy and Greece. 
Tony has memories of spending carefree moments on his grandfather’s olive farm in Italy, often riding the very same donkeys that turned the grinding machines used for making oil. His father worked multiple jobs in Canada to save up and move the family closer to him. Tony was eight at the time.
Four years later, papa Chiufo told Tony that he should get a summer job to help support his mother. As luck would have it, the Singer sewing machine company had a warehouse near where he lived. He walked there and asked for a job. 
So began a decades-long relationship between him and the company, learning the sales and repair trade. 
Heike, a German immigrant from a small village near Frankfurt, came to Canada when she was around five years old. Her father worked in greenhouses in the old country. But in Canada, he was a body shop mechanic. 
Her mother worked various jobs, including at the car rental firm Hertz and in real estate. It was through her Tony and Heike met. At the time, Tony was running a Singer shop in Brampton’s Shoppers World mall. Her mother took a liking to the kindly sewing machine salesman and repair guy. 
“I was dating this guy that my mom didn't like. And she says, ‘I met this really nice guy. You got to come and meet him at the store.’ I said, ‘If you like him, forget it,’” Heiki joked. 
“I went there one day [with my mom] and she conveniently left the store real fast and left me alone with him. So we got talking and then after a couple of days of talking, he invited me out for dinner.”
They were married in the '80s, thus solidifying Heike's place in the sewing world. Their first shop in Georgetown debuted in 1991 in Moore Park. Three years later they moved to Mill Street before arriving at their current home of 140 Guelph St. in the mid-2000s.
Throughout that time, the pair has become pillars of the community, often supporting local sports teams. They donated sewing machines to schools so students can learn to work with textiles. One exceptional and lucky student going into the fashion industry got picked by teachers to receive a free sewing machine from the Chiufos every year, no doubt delighting the student as the vital piece of equipment is often quite expensive.
“It's nice because they come back in a year or two and they go, ‘Thank you so much for the sewing machine. This is what I've made and this is what I'm doing.’ And that feels good to hear them say that,’” Heike said.
Their name carried as far as the penal system as well, which Tony learned when he was asked to repair the sewing machines used in prisons as part of their education system.
In addition to travelling, the Chiufos intend to spend time with family and enjoy the company of their grandkids during retirement.
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Driveway Skate Shop bringing indoor skate park to Georgetown

3/8/2025

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Thomas Morley of Driveway Skate Shop is launching an indoor skate park in Georgetown this month.
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Thomas Morley stands in the new skate shop that is part of the indoor skate park on Armstrong Avenue that is set to open this month.
As he works toward completion of his latest venture, Thomas Morley has been hesitant to install wifi. 
“There’s a couch, there’s a kitchenette,” he says. “If I put in wifi, it will be too tempting to stay.”
As much work as it has been, Morley is thrilled to be opening an indoor skate park in Georgetown.
Morley launched Driveway Skate Shop as a mobile store in April 2020. Five years later, he's realizing his original vision. The indoor park will open next week with a one-day March Break camp on Tuesday, Mar. 11.
“Skateboarding is a seasonal sport and Mother Nature takes control for half the year,” he said. “With a roof over our heads we can do March Break camps, day camps, birthday parties. It will be a good space to keep the community and kids active.”
He put word out last year that he was looking for a building for an indoor park and through various connections he had a landlord contact him about a location at 31 Armstrong Ave. 
“He showed us the space and I knew instantly we could turn it into a skatepark,” Morley said. 
Since December, the vision has been taking shape. A company called Ramp 2 Rail has been building the park’s features.
“They’re a really talented group of skaters out of Toronto who have experience building skateparks, so I put my trust in them,” Morley said.
The new location will feature a permanent retail skateshop, which until now had been operating out of the truck. (The truck will continue to visit local skate parks.)
There will be a classroom with a whiteboard and a projector and a third room with a mini ramp, for those who just want to do transition skating.
And of course there will be the skatepark.
Morley said the skateboarding community has been extremely helpful in getting the new space ready. 
“You would be surprised how many middle-aged skaters there are in trades,” he said with a laugh. 
Morley, who works mornings as an educational assistant, has operated the Town of Halton Hills skateboarding programming for the past three years and was recently approached about doing the same for the Town of Caledon. 
He has also been giving skateboarding lessons at the local parks, where he was limited to one-on-one lessons due to space constraints. Now with the new location, he’ll be able to offer group lessons.
Morley said he intends to run the business as a not-for-profit. 
“Skating is not a sport you enter to try to make money,” he says. “It's more of a passion project. It makes me happy. I really just want to create a community of skaters and grow their love of the sport.”
Anyone interested in the March Break camp can email [email protected] or contact the shop through the Driveway Skate Shop website. 
Herb Garbutt - Halton Hills Today 

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'Proud that it’s still going strong': Cancer Assistance Halton Hills marks 25th anniversary

3/8/2025

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Dianne Penrice was shocked when she heard the news. With just a few days notice, the Canadian Cancer Society informed its volunteers that the Georgetown office would be closing.
Immediately concern grew for local cancer patients. Though the Cancer Society ensured it would still coordinate services in Georgetown, volunteers worried about maintaining the same level of service – would a driver from Oakville be able to find a patient in rural Halton Hills? They also worried about it losing its personal touch, the feeling of a neighbour helping out.
Penrice, Rita Bearstow, Lorri Kelly Quinn, Bill Smith, Bob Stewart and Barry Timlick began exchanging ideas. 
“We quickly organized and arranged to have a meeting in the basement of Holy Cross church,” Penrice said. “We had 100 to 120 people there. It was very well supported. We gave them our proposal and our ideas and they were 100 per cent behind us.”
The Premier at the time, Mike Harris, had recently sent $200 cheques to Ontario residents. People were encouraged to donate their cheques to the new organization to give it a start. It was incorporated as a charity and within two months, Cancer Assistance Services of Halton Hills was driving cancer patients to appointments to receive treatment.
Twenty-five years later, Cancer Assistance Halton Hills (as it's now known) is still going strong. In 2024, the organization’s volunteer drivers provided 1,400 rides to appointments for cancer patients in Halton Hills and reimbursed more than $15,000 in parking and mileage to clients.
In the past five years alone, its number of clients grew by 20 per cent.
The organization will mark its milestone with the Cancer Assistance Halton Hills 25th Anniversary Celebration Dinner at Granite Ridge Golf Club on Friday, Apr. 4. Tickets are $75, which includes a three-course meal, an antipasto bar and wine with dinner.
“We are a grassroots charity,” said current executive director Julie Liddle. “We wanted it (the celebration) to be accessible to everybody. We wanted to price the tickets so that anybody could go.”
Penrice, who became the organization’s first president, said that while the Canadian Cancer Society may have left, the volunteers did not.
“The lady who looked after our drivers stayed, our campaign person stayed with us, most of the people directly involved with patients stayed,” she said. “They knew what the job was and they went out and did it.”
Today, the organization has 250 volunteers. Among CAHH’s 65 volunteer drivers are two that have been with the organization since its beginning, three that have been providing rides for more than two decades and eight who have been with them for more than 15 years.
Over the 25 years since it was formed, CAHH has assisted more than 2,200 people. 
The charity has expanded its services to include free medical equipment loans, such as bath chairs and walkers, as well as practical and palliative home support, at no charge, to anyone that has been diagnosed with cancer in the Town of Halton Hills.
And what services it doesn’t offer, it has partnered with other organizations, including the Local Health Integration Network, Acclaim Health, Links2Care and Wellspring.
“It’s great that we have these added partnerships to supplement our programs for the things we can’t do,” Liddle said. “At least we can guide our clients and get them the resources and services that they need.”
Liddle joined CAHH seven years ago, initially as a fundraising coordinator. She had organized a successful Ladies Pink PJ Party in support of the organization. It did so well that when CAHH was looking for someone to head their fundraising, they asked her to join the organization.
The Ladies Pink PJ Party is now one of a number of annual CAHH fundraising events that also include the Tour the Hills bike ride and its annual online auction.
Those events are critical for CAHH as it receives no government funding for its services, which are supported by local donations, its fundraising events and its volunteers. 
Liddle said the organization gets such great support from the community, citing Christoph Summer from Mountainview Residence for providing CAHH with space for an office. It all helps Cancer Assistance Halton Hills continue to provide its valuable services.
“I’m very proud that it’s still going strong, helping people that need the help,” Penrice said. “The people of this community are very generous and without their support, we couldn’t have done it.”
Herb Garbutt - Halton Hills Today 
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Seth Patriquin

2/16/2025

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Georgetown man has maintained community rink for more than two decades
​'Kids deserve the opportunity to go outside, have fun,' says Seth Patriquin
More than two decades ago, providing an opportunity for his son to stay active, plus a little dash of nostalgia, led Seth Patriquin to create an outdoor skating rink in Joseph Gibbons Park.
When he and his wife moved to Georgetown in 2001, she often talked about skating in the park when she was growing up. Wanting his kids to have that same opportunity, Patriquin worked with the Town and created a skating rink in 2002. 
“It gave the kids a place to skate,” he said. “The kids deserve the opportunity to go outside, have fun and burn off some calories.”
Though his son has outgrown the outdoor rink, Patriquin has continued to maintain a rink for the neighbourhood.
“I was there on the weekend and you had grandparents with their grandchildren, parents with their children,” said Lynn McKenzie, Patriquin's sister-in-law. “The arenas are very big and busy and that can be intimidating, so it’s nice to see that we still have these things in our community.”
McKenzie said Patriquin has been very committed to the rinks, heading out in the early-morning hours and biting cold for his labour of love.
Though he’s been at it for 20 years, Patriquin says he has no secrets for creating a good rink. 
“It’s all pretty basic,” he said. “It’s just freezing water.”
He said so far the conditions have been much better than the previous two winters, when skating conditions were limited to as little as a couple of weeks.
Patriquin said that’s a far cry from when he started, when he could count on a couple of months of good conditions.
McKenzie said over the years, Patriquin has purchased equipment like hoses and shovels just to maintain the rink.
But like all good things, the local man's contributions to the community will ultimately have to come to an end. 
“I’ll be retiring soon,” he said. “So if anyone’s interested (in taking over the rink), check with the Town.”
The Town assists those volunteering to maintain an outdoor community rink on municipal property. Interested individuals or groups can call 905-873-2601, ext. 2274.

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New Police Station

1/3/2025

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Halton Hills and Milton will be getting a new police station to serve both towns.
Halton Regional Police Service held a ground-breaking ceremony today (May eg for the 66,000-square-foot police station that's expected to open early in 2026. The new station will be located in Halton Hills on an extension of Hornby Road south of Steeles Avenue, next to Hornby Park.
The new 1 District police station will replace both the Milton station at 490 Childs Dr. and the Georgetown station at 217 Guelph St., bringing the staff from both into a single building.
The new station has been in the works since 2015, but it took time to find a location and purchase land for it. Halton Police also had another big project underway during that time - its new headquarters in Oakville, which was completed in 2018.
Though it will move stations out of both Milton and Georgetown urban areas, Halton Police Chief Stephen Tanner said he doesn't believe it will affect response times. He said police will continue to patrol both towns, just as they do now.
"All our front-line service is done by vehicle," he said. "This is just sort of the beehive that everyone comes out of."
The new station will accommodate 390 staff. It will serve as the 1 District operations centre, will be a collision reporting centre and prisoner lock-up space. The current Milton building has been the operations centre for 1 Division since 1997.
"Staff is going to continue to grow. This will get them into an up-to-date, professional building for them to do what we do these days," Tanner said. "That includes simple things like sufficient ocker space, to house equipment, to report rooms and offices that are large enough." The new building will also be equipped with rooftop solar panels that will significantly reduce electrical consumption and greenhouse gas emissions.
"We're very excited to have this beautiful facility coming to our community," said Halton Hills Mayor Ann Lawlor. "We're very proud of it."
Milton Mayor Gord Krantz said the new station, much like the Steeles Avenue corridor, "is another way of connecting with our neighbours."
Though the station is in Halton Hills, Tanner pointed out that it's actually closer to downtown Milton. The chief also believes that it won't be long before another station in Halton Hills is needed.
"Probably within the next few years, we'll outgrow this building, because Milton is continuing to explode, Halton Hills is growing and we have to grow with that to provide the service," he said.
"At that point, I think there will be another Halton Regional Police building in Halton Hills, in Georgetown, maybe near the town hall. And then we'll have a fourth district with their own command units."
Tanner said the current Georgetown detachment will not close immediately, remaining open as a store front and used for storage until a new station in Georgetown is built. Though not all the logistics have been worked out, Tanner said it's possible the existing station could be used for criminal record checks, lost and found property, and possibly even a collision reporting centre.
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Glen Williams boy's obsession with inflatables blows up into massive Christmas display!!

12/12/2024

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Standing at the end of the driveway of her Glen Williams home, Sara surveys her front yard. 
“We definitely didn’t think this was going to be our lawn,” she says.
It started with three – two Santas and a snowman. And then it grew. And grew. And grew. 
Today, the lawn is a sea of inflatables, everything from a foot-tall wiener dog to a 20-foot Santa, from Frozen characters to Star Wars.
Foster, the seven-year-old responsible for the collection, walks past Santa in a plane, complete with a spinning propeller. Past the Grinch, Christmas tree slung over his shoulder, with his dog Max. Past a Minion. Past Mrs. Claus and a trio of elves. Past Tigger popping out of a snow covered tree, until he arrives at a trembling snowman.
It's his favourite of the 114 inflatables on the lawn. “I like that it shivers,” the Grade 2 student says.
The shivering snowman was a birthday gift. One thing about Foster’s infatuation with inflatables is that it makes it easy shopping for presents.
“He’s obsessed with them,” Sara says. “We go to the States every year for his birthday. They have all the Colossals, the big 20-foot ones.”
Fortunately, his birthday is in November, so he doesn’t have to wait long to see them in action.
Foster got hooked on inflatables when he was three. There was a snowman in the Real Canadian Superstore and he’d make his mom take him to look at it every time they were in the store. 
Eventually his parents bought him one of his own. In 2021, they put up three inflatables on the front lawn. With birthday and Christmas presents, the display grew to 17 the following year. 
And then the family posted a video of Foster saying he’d rather go to Canadian Tire than Disneyland. It went viral and the local Canadian Tire owners saw it and gave him some gift cards, which of course he used to buy more inflatables. 
By 2023, there were 55. And then people started giving Foster inflatables that they weren’t using anymore, which is how the display more than doubled in size this year. 
“It kind of snowballed,” Sara said. (And yes, they do have a snowball, with reindeer legs sticking out of it.)
The display’s biggest enemy is the wind. The family closely monitors weather forecasts and if the wind picks up, the whole display can be deflated in about five minutes.
The display, which stays up for about six weeks, started attracting visitors to Glen Crescent and has grown to the point that it now has its own Foster’s Inflatables website. Because the display is so dependent on weather, the family updates it each day to let people know if the display is up.
There are inflatables for other occasions as well -- Easter, Halloween, Valentine's Day, St. Patrick's Day, Canada Day -- but nothing to rival the Christmas collection.
Sara said it took her and husband Matt about 50 hours to set up the display. Each inflatable has its own fan and they can be inflated in anywhere from two to 10 minutes depending on the size. Surprisingly, Sara said it's not nearly as hard on the hydro bill as a light display would be.
Asked what his favourite time is, Christmas morning or the day the inflatable display goes up, Foster pauses for longer than most kids would given the choice between Christmas and almost anything else. Finally, he chooses Christmas morning. And then changes his mind 15 seconds later.
So while she didn’t envision her lawn being commandeered by inflatables, Sara says there’s a simple reason for continuing to put them up every year. 
“It brings joy to him and it brings joy to others,” she said.
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