Brant, Ontario

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Location of Brant County in Ontario
Location of Brant County in Ontario
For the defunct provincial electoral district known as "Brant County", see Brant (provincial electoral district).

The County of Brant (2006 population 34,415 ; Census Division population 125,099) is a single-tier municipality and a census division in the Canadian province of Ontario. Despite its name, it is not a county by the standard definition, as all municipal services are handled by a single level of government. The county has service offices in Burford, Paris and St. George.

It is a small, predominantly rural municipality in southern Ontario, approximately 100 kilometres southwest of Toronto. It is bordered by the Region of Waterloo, the City of Hamilton, Haldimand County, Norfolk County, and Oxford County.

Geographically, the city of Brantford is surrounded by the County of Brant, however the municipal government of Brantford is separate from the County of Brant municipal government. Also included in the census division, but not part of the County of Brant municipal government, are the Six Nations Indian Reserve and the New Credit Indian Reserve.

Contents

[edit] Demographics & geography

According to the Canada 2006 Census[1]:

• Population: 34,415 (5.6% from 2001)
• Land area: 1,092.95 km² (421.99 sq mi)
• Population density: 114.5 inhabitants per square kilometre (297 /sq mi)
• Median age: N/A (males: population 15,845, females: population 15,845)
• Total private dwellings: 49,655
• Dwellings occupied by permanent residents: 48,016
• Mean household income: $N/A
N/A = Data Not Available

[edit] Communities

The primary centres in Brant are Paris, St. George and Burford. Smaller communities in the municipality include Bishopsgate, Burtch, Cainsville, Cathcart, East Oakland, Etonia, Falkland, Four Ponds Corners, Glen Morris, Gobles, Harley, Harrisburg, Hatchley, Langford, Lockie, Maple Grove, Middleport, Mount Pleasant, Mount Vernon, Mount Vernon Station, Newport, Northfield Centre, Oakland, Onondaga, Osborne Corners, Pinehurst Park, and Scotland.

In Statistics Canada's census data, the Brant census division also includes the city of Brantford and the Six Nations and New Credit reserves, although none of these is part of Brant's municipal government.

[edit] Historical townships

Brant County was formed in 1852, it had previously been part of Wentworth & Oxford County. On October 25, 1784, Governor Sir Frederick Haldimand formally granted to the Mohawks and their allies under Joseph Brant, the territory located six miles on either side of the Grand River from its mouth to its source.

Source: Province of Ontario -- A History 1615 to 1927 by Jesse Edgar Middletown & Fred Landon, copyright 1927, Dominion Publishing Company, Toronto

[edit] Local organizations

Local organizations include the Kinsmen Club of Brantford.

The County of Brant Public Library is the public library serving the communities in the county of Brant, Ontario, Canada. It has 5 branches located in Paris, Burford, Scotland, St. George, and Glen Morris, Ontario. The system's main branch, in Paris, Ontario, was originally a Carnegie Library, having received an endowment from Carnegie in 1902. In 2007 the County of Brant Public Library circulated over 218,000 items and hosted over 107,000 in-person visits. The library’s new website was also launched in 2007 and received over 43,000 virtual visits.

[edit] Album of Honour

War Monument in Brantford, Ontario
War Monument in Brantford, Ontario

The Album of Honour for Brant County is a book compiled in 1946 by the Kinsmen Club of Brantford to commemorate those of Brantford, the County of Brant and the peoples of the Six Nations who served Canada during the Second World War. [2] The book lists the names of the Brant County men and women who served in World War II. There are more than 3,500 photographs. In addition, local companies provided the names of employees who served in this war. The book is kept on the Digital Archives Page at the Brantford Public Library. [3]

[edit] References

[edit] External links