Oakville Images

Oakville Beaver, 14 Jan 1994, p. 17

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Trafalgar Village 844â€"2668 This call will cost 90 seconds of your time, but could save some major coin. Manning Jewellers GOLDSMITH DIAMOND MERCHANT 4 42 Finest Quality Entering our 15th Year in Business Personal Service Dependable Repair Service Knowledgeable consultation for sales service to visit our professionals ... 125 Cross Avenue, Oakville EXCLUDING SALE ITEMS, VALID FOR SIDEWALK SALE ONWY Large Selection Competitively Priced Friendly Staff Convenient Location at Trafalgar Village Custom Designs Available tion. The $23.5â€"million structure feaâ€" tured some novel engineering techâ€" nology to reduce damage to the senâ€" sitive Sixteen Mile Creek valley. Smithâ€"Triller Viaduct spanned 16 Mile Creek _ an original poem. If we use it on our chalkboard, on the sidewalk, we‘ll give you ons 5* on Cabine\% B .c s Q\\“ ne of the largest construcâ€" tion projects in the town‘s history was completed in Custom Cabinets Accessories any purchase for submitting My best poems you‘ve already read, My wife believes that my brain has gone dead. So we‘re running a contest here at the store, Submit your poem, for savings and more .. 10% OFF 20% OFF 259 LAKESHORE ROAD EAST 338â€"5181 Triller was a United Empire Loyalist who moved from New Jersey to the area in 1806. His mill was located on the creek south of Dundas Street and just north of Upper Middle Road. The mill continued in operation until the 1830s. Products from Triller‘s mill were some of first exports from the Oakville area. In planning the bridge, changes also had to be made to the Glen Abbey Golf Club layout but it didn‘t affect play at the Canadian Open. The bridge was named for two of the town‘s early industrialists, Thompson Smith and Philip Triller, who operated flour and saw mills on Sixteen Mile Creek in the 1800‘s. Smith operated a mill one mile north of what is now the QEW and south of Upper Middle Road. He became one of the largest lumber dealers in the area during the 1840s. The bridge is 335 metres long and has two 17.7 metre wide twoâ€" lane decks. About 16,000 cubic metres of concrete was used by Dufferin Construction, contractors. The span is of a cantilever segâ€" mental design and took two years to complete, one year ahead of schedâ€" ule.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy