Beamsville, Ontario

Coordinates: 43°09′57″N 79°28′35″W / 43.16583°N 79.47639°W / 43.16583; -79.47639
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Beamsville
Unincorporated community
Highways
 Queen Elizabeth Way
NTS Map030M03
GNBC CodeFEGRM

Beamsville (

2021 Urban area estimated population 13,323)[2] is a community that is part of the town of Lincoln, Ontario, Canada. It is located along the southern shore of Lake Ontario and lies within the fruit belt of the Niagara Peninsula. It contains century-old brick buildings, an old-fashioned downtown area with barbershops, women's dress shops, a bakery, a print shop, restaurants, banks and other businesses, and many orchards and vineyards
.

Queen Elizabeth Way, the main road that connects Toronto and Buffalo, New York, has an interchange at Beamsville. Many tourists stop for something to eat at the many fast-food restaurants nearby.

Industry

Beamsville is in the heart of Ontario's wine country and contributes greatly to the wine industry in the

wineries from the area have won top awards locally and internationally, including Grape King at the Niagara Grape & Wine Festival.[3]

Alanson Harris operated a foundry making farm tools that became farm implements maker Massey Harris.

History

Beamsville was named after Jacob Beam (1723-1812), a United Empire Loyalist. Both of his homes—the original one, on Thirty Mile Creek, and the one near downtown Beamsville—are still intact.

Jacob Beam (1723-1812), his wife Anna Catharine (Boughner) Beam (1737-1820) and their daughter Catharine (Beam) Merrell (1766-1842) and son-in-law Samuel Russell Merrell (1757-1835), emigrated to Canada from Hopewell, Sussex County, New Jersey in 1788, and founded Beamsville.

Royal Flying Corps Historical Plaque

By 1869, it was a village of 550 in the Township of Clinton, Lincoln County, on the Great Western Railway.[4]

In 1898, hockey players in Beamsville were the first to use a hockey net.

In 1917 the Royal Flying Corps established a School of Aerial Fighting on the farmland immediately east of Beamsville. It consisted of a camp, an airfield, and a gunnery range over Lake Ontario. Today an historical plaque at 4222 Sann Road marks the geographical centre of the 300-acre school property.[5] Adjacent to the plaque is an original hangar building.[6]

In 1970, the Town of Beamsville was amalgamated with Clinton Township and (half of) Louth Township to form the larger Town of Lincoln.

Education

Alfred Peckham orchards 1924

Beamsville has two secondary schools (grades 9–12) and three elementary schools (Kindergarten to Grade 8).

District School Board of Niagara

Beamsville used to have a public secondary school, Beamsville District Secondary School. Beamsville District Secondary School, on Central Avenue, was established in 1888[7] and draws students from all over the Town of Lincoln. Its current principal is Mr. Miller, and the current student population is just over 400.[8]

There are two public elementary schools located in Beamsville, Senator Gibson Public School[9] and Jacob Beam Public School.[10]

Niagara Catholic District School Board

The Niagara Catholic District School Board has two elementary schools in Beamsville (St. Johns and St. Mark). St. Mark Catholic Elementary School was opened in 2001. It has undergone a large expansion in 2011, growing to 22 classrooms. The current enrollment at St. Mark is 541 students. St. Johns Catholic Elementary School was built in 1958 and the current enrollment is 346 students [11]

Private schools

Great Lakes Christian High School is a private, four-year coeducational day and boarding Christian high school affiliated with the Churches of Christ.[12]

People

Beamsville is home to numerous Dutch and

Anglican
churches.

William Fairbrother, inventor of the hockey net, lived in Beamsville. Bill Berg, formerly a hockey player for the Toronto Maple Leafs and now an National Hockey League (NHL) broadcaster, was born, and continues to make his home in Beamsville. Paul Laus, a former Florida Panthers defenceman, and Ryan Christie, who played seven games with the Dallas Stars and Calgary Flames, are also Beamsville natives.

Another Beamsville native, Tonya Verbeek, earned an Olympic silver medal in women's wrestling at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. She won a bronze medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China, and another silver medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, England.

Beamsville natives Ralph Reid and Lloyd Southward were Lancaster pilots during the Second World War and both received the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC).

Another Beamsville native is former Canadian Football League (CFL) running back Andre Sadeghian, who was drafted in the third round of the 2007 CFL Draft by the BC Lions and played four seasons with the Lions, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, the Saskatchewan Roughriders, and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers.

Evelyn Dick, known for the murder of her estranged husband John Dick, was born and lived in this town.

Performance artist, writer and former sex worker Nina Arsenault grew up in a trailer park in Beamsville.

References

  1. ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census". Statistics Canada. November 29, 2017. Retrieved July 13, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2022-02-09). "Profile table, Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population - Beamsville [Population centre], Ontario". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  3. ^ Niagara Grape & Wine Festival
  4. ^ The province of Ontario gazetteer and directory. H. McEvoy Editor and Compiler, Toronto : Robertson & Cook, Publishers, 1869
  5. ^ Town of Lincoln (1991), Royal Flying Corp Historical Plaque, 4222 Saan Road, Beamsville.
  6. ^ Niagara This Week–May 9, 2013
  7. ^ Fraser Institute Report on Ontario Secondary School Performance–2014 Report
  8. ^ Senator Gibson home page
  9. ^ Jacob Beam home page
  10. ^ St. Mark home page
  11. ^ Great Lakes home page Archived February 20, 2014, at the Wayback Machine

External links