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Port Hope, Ontario

Port Hope, Ontario

FieldValue
namePort Hope
official_nameMunicipality of Port Hope
settlement_typeMunicipality (lower-tier)
image_skyline{{multiple imagetotal_width=250pxperrow=1/2/2border=infobox
image1Downtown Port Hope, ON, April 1 2025 (06).jpg
image2Port Hope Town Hall, April 1 2025 (01).jpg
image3Ganaraska River in Port Hope N.jpg
image4Welcome, Ontario.jpg
image5Zion, Ontario.jpg
image_captionFrom top, left to right: Downtown Port Hope, Port Hope Town Hall, Ganaraska River, Welcome, Zion
flag_size120x100px
shield_size100x90px
image_blank_emblemMunicipality of Port Hope, Ontario logo.png
blank_emblem_typeLogo
pushpin_mapCAN ON Northumberland#Canada Southern Ontario
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameCanada
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Ontario
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Northumberland
established_titleSettled
established_title2Formed
established_date21789
named_forHenry Hope
government_typeMunicipality
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameOlena Hankivsky
leader_title1Federal riding
leader_name1Northumberland—Clarke
leader_title2Prov. riding
leader_name2Northumberland—Peterborough South
total_typeTotal
area_land_km2278.80
area_urban_km212.72
area_footnotes
area_urban_footnotes
population_as_of2021
population_footnotes
population_total17,294
population_density_km262.0
population_urban13,012
population_density_urban_km21,023.1
population_urban_footnotes
timezoneEST
utc_offset−05:00
timezone_DSTEDT
utc_offset_DST−04:00
postal_code_typeForward Sortation Area
postal_codeL1A
area_codes905, 289 and 365
website

Port Hope is a municipality in Southern Ontario, Canada, about 109 km east of Toronto and 159 km west of Kingston. It is at the mouth of the Ganaraska River on the north shore of Lake Ontario, in the west end of Northumberland County. The private Trinity College School opened here in 1865.

History

The Cayuga people inhabited the area in the early 17th century, and there was a Mississauga village named Cochingomink also in the 17th century.The Story Of A Town By Jane Staunton. from The Evening Guide, March 6, 1984 - page 3. https://www.porthopehistory.com/townstory/

In 1778, a fur trade post was established and the settlement was known as Smith's Creek.

In 1793, Loyalists from the northern colonies became the first permanent settlers of European heritage in the area, as the Crown granted them land as compensation for being forced to leave the colonies (much of their property was confiscated by rebel governments) and as payment for military service. John Graves Simcoe, then lieutenant governor of Upper Canada, established the Township of Hope in the early 1790s, named after Colonel Henry Hope, lieutenant governor of the Province of Quebec.

From 1817 to 1819, the area was known as Toronto or "Toronto at Smith's Creek".

In 1819, the village and township were united and named Port Hope. In 1834 Port Hope was incorporated as a town.

Relatively slow growth from 1881 to 1951 resulted in much of the town's 19th-century architecture surviving. Port Hope's downtown is celebrated as Ontario's best-preserved 19th-century streetscape. The town's chapter of the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario and the Heritage Port Hope Advisory Committee are very active and advise on the restoration and preservation of architecturally or historically significant buildings. With over 270 heritage-designated buildings, Port Hope has a higher per capita rate of preservation than any other town or city in Canada.

In 1978, eight members of the Satan's Choice Motorcycle Club were charged with a murder that occurred at Port Hope's Queen's Hotel. The trial and conviction of some members—the Port Hope 8 case—has been described as a miscarriage of justice.

In 2001, the original town amalgamated with Hope Township to form the Municipality of Port Hope and Hope, which was renamed to its current name in November of that year. At the time of amalgamation, the census listed the town's population as 11,718 and the township's as 3,887.

The 2017 supernatural horror film It, its 2019 sequel It Chapter Two, and its prequel television series It: Welcome to Derry were all filmed in Port Hope, which portrayed the fictional town of Derry, Maine.

Radiation and cleanup

Port Hope is known for having the largest volume of historic low-level radioactive wastes in Canada. The waste was created by Eldorado Mining and Refining Limited and its private sector predecessors, resulting from the refining of radium from pitchblende. Radium was used in radioluminescent paint (such as aircraft dials) and in early cancer treatments.

During World War II, the Eldorado plant produced exponentially more uranium oxides, which the United States used in the Manhattan Project to make nuclear weapons. This plant, now under the ownership of Cameco, continues to produce uranium fuel for nuclear power plants.

In 2002, a large amount of contaminated soil was removed from beachfront areas. More recently, testing of over 5,000 properties began, with a plan to remove and store contaminated soil that had been used as landfill. Over $1 billion is expected to be spent on the soil remediation project, the largest such cleanup in Canadian history.

Geography

Communities

Besides the town proper of Port Hope, the municipality of Port Hope comprises a number of villages and hamlets, including Campbellcroft, Canton, Dale, Davidson's Corners (partially), Decker Hollow (ghost town), Elizabethville, Garden Hill, Knoxville, Morrish, Osaca, Perrytown, Port Britain, Rossmount (partially), Tinkerville, Thomstown, Welcome, Wesleyville, and Zion.

Climate

Port Hope has a humid continental climate (Dfb) with warm summers and cold winters.{{Weather box |Jan record high C = 17.2 |Feb record high C = 11.7 |Mar record high C = 19.0 |Apr record high C = 25.6 |May record high C = 30.5 |Jun record high C = 34.4 |Jul record high C = 37.2 |Aug record high C = 37.8 |Sep record high C = 37.8 |Oct record high C = 26.7 |Nov record high C = 20.6 |Dec record high C = 18.3 |year record high C = 37.8 |Jan record low C = -32.2 |Feb record low C = -30.0 |Mar record low C = -22.8 |Apr record low C = -13.9 |May record low C = -5.0 |Jun record low C = 2.2 |Jul record low C = 3.3 |Aug record low C = -0.6 |Sep record low C = -2.8 |Oct record low C = -16.7 |Nov record low C = -27.2 |Dec record low C = -29.0 |year record low C = -32.2

Demographics

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Port Hope had a population of living in of its total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of . With a land area of 278.8 km2, it had a population density of in 2021.

|1841| 1200 |1851| 2476 |1871| 5114 |1881| 5581 |1891| 5042 |1901| 4188 |1911| 5092 |1921| 4456 |1931| 4723 |1941| 5006 |1951| 6548 |1961| 8091 |1971| 8872 |1981| 9992 |1991| 11505 |2001| 15605 |2006| 16390 |2011| 16214 |2016| 16753 |2021| 17294

Mother tongue (2021):

  • English as first language: 93.5%
  • French as first language: 1.1%
  • English and French as first language: 0.4%
  • Other as first language: 4.3%

Economy

CompanyEmployees
CPK Interior Products403
Cameco Corporation390
ESCO157
Cameco Fuel Services140
Akzo Nobel78
Standard Auto Wreckers60
Disk Tooling40
Curtis Chicks32
Unitrak21
Port Hope Patterns12

Downtown Port Hope offers shopping and a historic main street. Port Hope is served by a Via Rail station. It has a medical centre, and a community health centre. It has had a daily newspaper since 1878, the Port Hope Evening Guide. Until 2007, this was part of the Osprey Media chain and subsequently a part of the Sun Media organization. In 2009 the newspaper was amalgamated with the Cobourg Daily Star and renamed as Northumberland Today.com. In November 2017 the newspaper was included in the large-scale closing of many local community newspapers throughout the province of Ontario.

Port Hope's Economic Development Strategic Plan aims to increase job growth at least as fast as population growth. The town has a variety of industries.

In January 2025, the Ontario Government announced plans for a new nuclear generating station to be built at Wesleyville.

Arts and culture

[[Ganaraska River]] at Port Hope

The Ganaraska River (affectionately known as "The Ganny"), is well known to area anglers for annual salmon and trout runs. It has caused many historic floods, the most recent having occurred on March 21–22, 1980. Every April since until 2020, Port Hope has commemorated the flood with "Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny" ten kilometre boat race. "Participants range from serious paddlers navigating the cold, fast-moving water in kayaks and canoes, to the very entertaining 'crazy craft' paddlers, floating any combination of materials down the river in an attempt to reach the finish line." Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the event was cancelled in 2020 and 2021, the first time in its history for such action.

Attractions

The Capitol Theatre is Canada's last functioning atmospheric theatre. The theatre's main auditorium is styled after an outdoor medieval courtyard and rolling clouds are projected onto the ceiling. The town spent in excess of three million dollars renovating and upgrading the theatre in 2004–2005. It is also used for live events by Port Hope Festival Theatre.

John David Smith House, c. 1834
Waddell Block-Lantern Inn, 1845

The Municipality of Port Hope is home to many heritage and cultural attractions, and events, including:

  • Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny—a water race commemorating the 1980 flood of the Ganaraska River
  • Ganaraska Forest Centre
  • Canadian Firefighters Museum (now demolished)
  • Port Hope Yacht Club
  • Port Hope Festival Theatre at the Capitol Theatre
  • La Jeunesse Youth Orchestra (3 concerts per year)
  • Port Hope and District Agricultural Fall Fair
  • The All Canadian Jazz Festival
  • Port Hope Farmers' Market (May to October)
  • Port Hope Christmas and Santa Claus Parade (includes Festival of Trees, Candlelight Walk to Memorial Park, and Carol Singing)
  • Port Hope Drive-In (Built in 1952, it is among the oldest Canadian drive-ins still operating)
  • Architectural Conservancy of Ontario Annual House Tour, Garden Tour, and Antiques and Artifacts Auction
  • Port Hope and District Historical Society Dorothy's House Museum
  • Port Hope Archives
  • Friends of Wesleyville Village
  • Beaches:
    • West Beach (parking at the end of Marsh Street)
    • East Beach (parking at the bottom of King Street at Madison Street)
  • Port Hope Waterfront Trail
  • Port Hope Golf and Country Club

Infrastructure

Transportation

Highway 401 runs through the north end of Port Hope, with exits at County Road 2/Toronto Road (461) and Highway 28/Ontario Street (464).

An inside look of the Port Hope VIA Rail station

Port Hope Transit provides local bus service, and VIA Rail provides passenger service from the Port Hope railway station along the Toronto-Montreal corridor. The station was built in 1856 for the Grand Trunk Railway and later CN Rail. It was restored in 1985.

Pleasure boats dock at the foot of John Street at Hayward Street and share the facilities with Cameco, which has berths for freighters servicing their manufacturing facilities at the mouth of the Ganaraska River.

Education

Public education in Port Hope is under the management of the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board, and Catholic education is by the Peterborough Victoria Northumberland and Clarington Catholic District School Board.

Elementary schools

  • St. Anthony's Elementary School, Catholic JK–8
  • Ganaraska Trail Public School, Public JK–6
  • North Hope Central School, Public JK–6
  • Beatrice Strong Public School, Public JK–6

High schools

  • Port Hope High School c. 1871, Public Gr 9-12 - opened in 1853 as Port Hope Grammar School
  • Dr M. S. Hawkins Senior Public School, Public Gr 7–8 (same building as Port Hope High School)
  • Port Hope High School Student to Work Transition Program (SWOT Campus), Public Grade 9–12
  • Trinity College School, Private Gr 5–12
  • Discovery Academy, International campus (not active)

Notable people

  • Owen Beck, professional ice hockey player.
  • David Blackwood (1941–2022) , artist.
  • Lew Cirne, pioneer of Application Performance Management, founder of Wily Technology and New Relic.
  • William Henry Draper, lawyer, judge, and politician.
  • Sue Gardner, executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation.
  • J.J. Hagerman, Colorado railroad and mining magnate who went on to become one of founders of New Mexico.
  • William Leonard Hunt ("The Great Farini"), entertainer.
  • Watson Kirkconnell (1895-1977), linguist, public intellectual, father of multiculturalism in Canada, and a highly important figure in both Canadian poetry and the culture of Canada.
  • Archibald Cameron Macdonell, commander of the 1st Canadian Division during the First World War.
  • Charles Vincent Massey, first Canadian-born Governor General of Canada.
  • Claire Mowat, writer.
  • Farley Mowat, conservationist and writer.
  • Alice Munro, author and Nobel Prize winner, lived in Port Hope.
  • Dennis O'Brien, NHL hockey player.
  • Shane O'Brien, NHL hockey player.
  • David Piccini (born 1988), politician, Ontario’s Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training & Skills Development
  • Cal Quantrill, Major League Baseball player.
  • Paul Quantrill, Major League Baseball player.
  • Jim Roberts, NHL hockey player.
  • Wade Rowland, writer and journalist.
  • Joseph M. Scriven, author of the hymn "What a Friend We Have in Jesus".
  • William Sims, U.S. Naval Admiral, awarded 1921 Pulitzer Prize for History.
  • Ron Smith, NHL hockey player.
  • Ambrose Thomas Stanton, Chief Medical Officer for the British colonies. Born in Kendal and attended Port Hope High School.
  • Paul Terbenche, NHL hockey player.
  • Arthur Trefusis Heneage Williams, politician.
  • Major-General Arthur Victor Seymour Williams.

References

References

  1. "Port Hope Ontario [Population centre] Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population". Government of Canada - Statistics Canada.
  2. {{SCref. (2021)
  3. "Port Hope", K.l. Morrison, ''The Canadian Encyclopedia'', October 31, 2012
  4. "Port Hope", K.l. Morrison, ''The Canadian Encyclopedia'', October 31, 2012
  5. "Port Hope", K.l. Morrison, ''The Canadian Encyclopedia'', October 31, 2012
  6. "Ontario Heritage Trust - Bringing our story to life".
  7. Edwards, Peter ''Unrepentant The Strange and (Sometimes) Terrible Life of Lorne Campbell, Satan's Choice and Hells Angels Biker'', Toronto: Vintage Canada page 88
  8. {{SCref. (2001)
  9. {{SCref. (2001)
  10. Campbell, Morganne. (2019-09-05). "Small-town Ontario community featured in 'It: Chapter Two'".
  11. (3 February 2014). "Historic nuclear waste".
  12. "Port Hope Area Initiative".
  13. "Use of Canadian Uranium in the World's First Atomic Bombs".
  14. [https://www.voicemagazine.org/pdf/pdf2007/1543_Nov_16_07_VOICE.pdf "Ontario town seeks federal inquiry into radiation pollution"] {{webarchive. link. (2017-01-12 , ''The Voice'', Volume 15, Issue 43, November 16, 2007. Mandy Gardner)
  15. "Port Hope, Ontario". Environment Canada.
  16. (July 1973). "1971 Census of Canada - Population Census Subdivisions (Historical)". Statistics Canada.
  17. (2015). "Port Hope Community Profile". Municipality of Port Hope.
  18. (November 30, 2017). "Saying Goodbye to Northumberland Today". Canadian Journalism Project.
  19. (2025-01-15). "Ontario Exploring New Nuclear Energy Generation in Port Hope". Ontario Newsroom.
  20. (2017). "Visit Port Hope: Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny". Municipality of Port Hope.
  21. Fisher, Pete. (April 8, 2017). "Paddlers get creative for Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny in Port Hope, Ont.". [[Toronto Sun]]/Northumberland Today.
  22. (2017). "Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny". Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny.
  23. (2017). "Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny - Crazy Crafts". Passport2017.
  24. "Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny in Port Hope, Ont. to return in April after 2-year hiatus - Peterborough {{!}} Globalnews.ca".
  25. "History of the Capitol Theatre".
  26. "About". Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny.
  27. "Canadian Fire Fighters Museum".
  28. [http://www.ljyo.ca/ La Jeunesse Youth Orchestra]
  29. "Port Hope Farmers' Market".
  30. "Port Hope Archives".
  31. "Waterfront Trail".
  32. "Port Hope Golf & Country Club".
  33. "Port Hope High School: School and Contact Information". Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board.
  34. (June 2, 2011). "Black Ice: David Blackwood Prints of Newfoundland".
  35. Stren, Olivia. (July 26, 2010). "Wikipedians do it for love. Really". [[The Globe and Mail]].
  36. "Alice Munro, Canadian author who mastered the short story, dead at 92". CBC.
  37. (July 22, 2010). "Ex NHLer to be honored in Port Hope".
  38. "The Hamlet of Kendal, Ontario". tripod.com.
  39. (January 11, 2012). "Former Pro Hockey Player Dies".
  40. "Port Hope census profile". Statistics Canada.
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