Priceville, Ontario

Coordinates: 44°12′36″N 80°37′36″W / 44.210019°N 80.626602°W / 44.210019; -80.626602
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Priceville
Village
c. 1908 CPR Railway station in Priceville, 1914
c. 1908 CPR Railway station in Priceville, 1914
Priceville is located in Ontario
Priceville
Priceville
Location of Priceville in Ontario.
Coordinates: 44°12′36″N 80°37′36″W / 44.210019°N 80.626602°W / 44.210019; -80.626602
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
CountyGrey County
MunicipalityGrey Highlands

Priceville is a village in the southwest corner of the Municipality of Grey Highlands, Grey County, Ontario, Canada. It is on the Saugeen River on Grey Road 4, east of Durham and southwest of Flesherton.

History[edit]

The first settlers were African Americans, who established a small settlement along Old Durham Road (now Durham Road B) east of the village. Here they built a log school, a log church and established a cemetery.[1] Many of these early settlers later moved to Collingwood, Oro, or Owen Sound. All that remains to commemorate this community is a cairn and refurbished grave site at the intersection of County Road 14 and Durham Road B some three kilometers east of Priceville. The discovery and refurbishment of this cemetery is documented in the 2000 National Film Board of Canada film, Speakers for the Dead, co-directed by Jennifer Holness and David Sutherland (now Sudz Sutherland).[1][2]

The 1908 CPR Priceville Station was located on the CPR Walkerton Sub-division and formerly Walkerton Lucknow Railway. The station was relocated off the abandoned line and is now located on 405019 Grey County Road 4 as a private residence.[3]

Gaelic-speaking Scottish people arrived around 1850. Almost all the early headstones in the pioneer cemetery commemorate people of Scottish origin. Some of these settlers intermarried with the black settlers.[1]

Amenities in Priceville include a post office; a riverside park with a picnic area, swimming and fishing opportunities, and a canoe and kayak launch; a toboggan hill; a sports park; an outdoor skating rink; and a children's playground. Events that attract many visitors include a biennial Santa Claus parade, an annual antique car and tractor show, and a July 1 Canada Day celebration with a concert and fireworks.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Brown, DeNeen (19 February 2002). "Canadian town tried to bury its founding by black pioneers". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 – via Pipe Dream (Binghamton University).
  2. ^ Jennifer Holness and David Sutherland (co-directors) (2000). "Speakers for the Dead". NFB.ca. National Film Board of Canada. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  3. ^ "Existing Stations of the County of Grey".

Further reading[edit]