Carmunnock, Ontario (original) (raw)

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Carmunnock was an early hamlet along the border of Grey, Elma and Logan townships, located on the boundary road west of Monkton, Perth County in southern Ontario. Carmunnock's origins can be traced back to 1866 when William Machan obtained Lot 24 and 35 in the 18th Concession of Grey Township, Huron County, and erected a sawmill on Lot 35. Machan, who had immigrated from Carmunnock, Scotland, named the hamlet for his native village. The hamlet grew, and at its peak boasted a hotel, combined store, post office and dwelling a two-storey log boarding house, a one-storey log house and two barns. All situated on the west section of the land.

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dbo:abstract Carmunnock was an early hamlet along the border of Grey, Elma and Logan townships, located on the boundary road west of Monkton, Perth County in southern Ontario. Carmunnock's origins can be traced back to 1866 when William Machan obtained Lot 24 and 35 in the 18th Concession of Grey Township, Huron County, and erected a sawmill on Lot 35. Machan, who had immigrated from Carmunnock, Scotland, named the hamlet for his native village. The hamlet grew, and at its peak boasted a hotel, combined store, post office and dwelling a two-storey log boarding house, a one-storey log house and two barns. All situated on the west section of the land. In 1901 Carmunnock listed with a population of about twenty, and the following business given: A. Haffmeyer, shoemaker; H. Jack, cheese manufacturer; Wm. Robertson, blacksmith; F. W. Schnaefer, general shore; and Charles Schneider, Postermaster and General Store. Carmunnock, which was 100 per cent Scottish in the early days, held a community picnic which was a big event in the area. Two factors account for the demise of this once flourishing village. The hotel was the victim of a fire which destroyed other buildings nearby and William Machan in time moved his sawmill equipment to Monkton as early as 1878. The first post office was opened in 1875 with Machan as the first postmaster. When he moved his sawmill operation to Monkton, the post office was moved to the home of David Harrison, who lived in the present Bradshaw home on the 15th Concession of Logan. Today North Logan / Harvey's Cemetery on Line 53 is all that remains of Carmunnock, which is registered to Municipality of West Perth. It is the only public burial ground in Logan Township; the first interment was in 1897. (en)
dbo:country dbr:Canada
dbo:postalCode N0K
dbo:subdivision dbr:Perth_County,_Ontario
dbo:timeZone dbr:Eastern_Time_Zone
dbo:type dbr:Hamlet_(place)
dbo:utcOffset -5 -4
dbo:wikiPageID 66000865 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 5007 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1122674110 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Carmunnock dbc:Communities_in_Perth_County,_Ontario dbr:Perth_County,_Ontario dbr:Postal_codes_in_Canada dbr:Monkton,_Ontario dbc:Former_towns_in_Ontario dbr:West_Perth,_Ontario dbr:Eastern_Time_Zone dbr:North_Perth,_Ontario dbr:Hamlet_(place) dbr:Ontario
dbp:establishedDate 1866 (xsd:integer)
dbp:establishedTitle Settled (en)
dbp:mapsize 200 (xsd:integer)
dbp:name Carmunnock (en)
dbp:postalCode N0K (en)
dbp:postalCodeType dbr:Postal_codes_in_Canada
dbp:pushpinLabelPosition left (en)
dbp:pushpinMap Canada Southern Ontario (en)
dbp:settlementType dbr:Hamlet_(place)
dbp:subdivisionName dbr:Perth_County,_Ontario
dbp:subdivisionType Country (en) Province (en) County (en)
dbp:timezone dbr:Eastern_Time_Zone
dbp:timezoneDst dbr:Eastern_Time_Zone
dbp:utcOffset -5 (xsd:integer)
dbp:utcOffsetDst -4 (xsd:integer)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:CAN dbt:Coord dbt:Infobox_settlement dbt:Reflist dbt:ON
dct:subject dbc:Communities_in_Perth_County,_Ontario dbc:Former_towns_in_Ontario
georss:point 43.6092 -81.1367
rdf:type owl:Thing dbo:Place dbo:Location schema:Place wikidata:Q486972 dbo:PopulatedPlace geo:SpatialThing dbo:Settlement
rdfs:comment Carmunnock was an early hamlet along the border of Grey, Elma and Logan townships, located on the boundary road west of Monkton, Perth County in southern Ontario. Carmunnock's origins can be traced back to 1866 when William Machan obtained Lot 24 and 35 in the 18th Concession of Grey Township, Huron County, and erected a sawmill on Lot 35. Machan, who had immigrated from Carmunnock, Scotland, named the hamlet for his native village. The hamlet grew, and at its peak boasted a hotel, combined store, post office and dwelling a two-storey log boarding house, a one-storey log house and two barns. All situated on the west section of the land. (en)
rdfs:label Carmunnock, Ontario (en)
owl:sameAs wikidata:Carmunnock, Ontario https://global.dbpedia.org/id/FLTDB
geo:geometry POINT(-81.136703491211 43.609199523926)
geo:lat 43.609200 (xsd:float)
geo:long -81.136703 (xsd:float)
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Carmunnock,_Ontario?oldid=1122674110&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Carmunnock,_Ontario
foaf:name (en) Carmunnock (en)
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Carmunnock,_Ontario