Table of Contents
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- Bond Lake
- 1 of Stouffville Road announces Bond Lake, where residents of Richmond Hill and
- 2 of the future Yonge Street around Bond Lake, then to the east side again at Elgin
- 3 Road and partly cut to Lot 53 near Bond's Lake. "The piece of Yonge Street from
- 4 avoid swamps. North of Bond's Lake, or Bond's Pond, as it was known, all the way from Oak
- 5 in 1899 built a new steam powerhouse at Bond Lake, with a capacity of almost 1000 horsepower.
- 6 at Oak Ridges. Just north of Bond Lake, the mainline tracks of the Metropolitan
- 7 (Toronto and York) car barns at Bond Lake, pictured as a service station in the 1950s.
- 8 Mort and Vernon" in a rowboat on Bond Lake, circa 1905. North York
- 9 was perfectly safe. "Bond Lake commends itself to parents as an ideal place
- 10 then there was Bond Lake! For generations swimmers and boaters had
- 11 to get the last car either way from Bond Lake.
- 12 Metropolitan trolleys took dancers to Bond Lake. Couples swung gracefully around the floor
- 13 technology. With its generating station at Bond Lake and its utility poles and overhead wires
- 14 be supplied on a separate line from the Bond Lake powerhouse, and suggested that lighting could
- 15 on the east side of Yonge Street near Bond Lake, "three Mississaugas or Chippewas" threatened
- 16 water on his land - originally called Bond's Pond and later Bond
- 17 had opened at Langstaff Road and Bond Lake. 12 And William Crew began construction
- 18 travellers at Langstaff Corners, Bond Lake, and Oak Ridges, with a busy tannery at
- 19 Bond Lake Hotel and stables. At Bond Lake,
- 20 Bond Lake, Oak
- 21 at Bond Lake
- 22 as long as you lib, until you empty Bond's Lake wid a cla-am sha-al." Miss Lizzette
- 23 as long as you lib, until you empty Bond's Lake wid a cla-am sha-al." Miss Lizzette
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Copyright © Richmond Hill Public Library Board, 1991
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