Speaking of giving "better attention to accuracy," Grimsby is in the Regional Municipality of Niagara, near Hamilton.
The town in South-Western Ontario that suffered storm damage last year, that you're probably confusing it with, is Goderich
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Thank you. I may have made the connection because Seaman's job in Aurora and Oakville, I believe was Heritage Planner.
For the sake of full disclosure about the Petch House, several things combined made it possible.
After years of mouldering at the side of the road, collecting rain from a gaping hole in the roof , dead animals and every other kind of festering stuff one might imagine, and myself making as much noise as possible about imminent demise, no interest was stirred in a possible location or use for the building.
The developer who committed to working with the town to save the structure. made a final commitment of $50,000. to use as the town saw fit.
The town's manager of parks proposed a location.
The town's manager of parks proposed a location.
An anonymous contribution of $15,000 was already in the pot. .
Vandorf's Van Nostrand, specialist in re-building and re-locating old structures, indicated after the foul debris was removed it was still salvageable
Aurora Council agreed to undertake the project.
Aurora Council agreed to undertake the project.
Total cost will be more than combined funds mentioned above.
Funds budgeted for several years will be utilised. .
Final figures are not yet known.
Credit for saving the Petch House belongs to Council and the community that paid the bills.
The anonymous donor whose passion undoubtedly had an influence.
And the developer who carried through with his commitment.
The building's use has yet to be determined.
The anonymous donor whose passion undoubtedly had an influence.
And the developer who carried through with his commitment.
The building's use has yet to be determined.
That will be the final telling point.
From a heritage perspective the structure is not authentic.
It' no longer sits out there in the hills of Whitchurch.
But it will sit on a former Whitchurch farm.
It will have a sense of the home it was. Of generations of babies born and those who drew a last breath within its walls and the joy and sadness that accompany any family's life.
It will almost certainly never move again from the place it sits now. I hope it will be respected.
I think it's a good thing.
And for the record, it had absolutely nothing to do with Michael Seaman or Katherine Belrose.
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We would not want the facts to get in the way of the spin.
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