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Your search for Boyle-Atkinson Site returned 10 entries.

Table of Contents

Title Page
Author's Preface
1 The Road through Richmond Hill
2 First Peoples on the Land
3 The European Settlers Arrive
4 From Miles' Hill to Richmond Hill: The Birth of a Community
5 Tories and Reformers
6 Stagecoach Lines and Railway Tracks
7 The Neighbours at Mid-Century
8 Fire Brigades and Fence Viewers
9 Picture Post Card Village of the 1880s and 1890s
10 Rails through Richmond Hill
11 The Flowering of Richmond Hill
12 The Village Transformed
Epilogue
Appendices
Table of Illustrations
Index
Boyle-Atkinson Site
1   while the distance from McGaw to Boyle-Atkinson measures 3.8 kilometres (over two miles). If
2   twentieth-century archaeologists as the Boyle-Atkinson Site - was located southwest of the intersection of
3   work at Boyle-Atkinson likely reflected the traditional division of
4   of daily tasks at what is now Boyle-Atkinson. Feasts incorporating games such as lacrosse,
5  Boyle-Atkinson is only one of several Richmond Hill
6   first European to draw attention to the Boyle-Atkinson Site and to the larger story of Iroquoian occupation
7   a series of recorded visits to the site first described by Boyle almost forty
8   following Clark's work, the Boyle-Atkinson Site suffered from "indiscriminate looting of its
9   1984, the Boyle-Atkinson Site was excavated by archaeologists Mayer, Pihl,
10   area that later yielded evidence of a Late Iroquoian Indian village.

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