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It is situated in the Grand River valley, 60 miles (95 km) west-southwest of Toronto. Founded by Bishop Benjamin Eby and settled by German immigrants about 1807, the community was known successively as Sand Hill, Ebytown, and Berlin before being renamed after the British field marshal Lord Kitchener in 1916.
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Kitchener is a city in the Canadian province of Ontario, about 100 km (62 mi) west of Toronto. It is one of three cities that make up the Regional ...
In 1803, Pennsylvania Mennonites purchased land, which became Waterloo Township in 1816, from Richard Beasley and established the nucleus of a large German- ...
The city of Berlin, Ontario, Canada, changed its name to Kitchener by referendum in May and June 1916. Named in 1833 after the capital of Prussia and later ...
Kitchener was the first community in Ontario to obtain hydroelectric power from Niagara. The power was switched on October 11, 1910. A statue of Kaiser ...
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It's a city where you can find established, tree-lined neighbourhoods and new neighbourhoods creating their own sense of community. It's one of the fastest- ...
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In 1784, the land Kitchener was built on was a 240,000 hectare area given to the Six Nations by the British as a gift for their allegiance during the American ...
A History of Kitchener, Ontario was written late in Uttley's career. It was published in 1937, just seven years before his passing in 1944. Global Heritage ...
Settlers are said to have arrived at its site in 1799, but the first recorded settler was Joseph Schneider, from Pennsylvania, who reached the place where ...