Difference between revisions of "Leeds and Grenville, Ontario"
(Created page with "{{Locale | wikipedia=United Counties of Leeds and Grenville }} The United Counties of Leeds and Grenville were formed in 1850 by unifying Leeds County and Grenville County....") |
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{{Timeline | {{Timeline | ||
| 1792: Leeds County, Upper Canada and Grenville County, Upper Canada formed | | 1792: Leeds County, Upper Canada and Grenville County, Upper Canada formed | ||
| − | | 1841: {{Wikipedia|Acts of Union 1840}} created a single {{Wikipedia|Province of Canada}} | + | | 1841: {{Wikipedia|Acts of Union 1840}} created a single {{Wikipedia|Province of Canada}} (Leeds County, Province of Canada and Grenville County, Province of Canada) |
| 1850: Counties are merged to produce Leeds and Grenville, Province of Canada | | 1850: Counties are merged to produce Leeds and Grenville, Province of Canada | ||
| − | | 1867: {{Wikipedia|Canadian Confederation}} established the modern province of Ontario | + | | 1867: {{Wikipedia|Canadian Confederation}} established the modern province of Ontario (Leeds and Grenville, Ontario) |
}} | }} | ||
{{Locale Footer}} | {{Locale Footer}} | ||
Latest revision as of 12:57, 8 December 2015
Located in Ontario, part of Eastern Canada
See also Wikipedia, FamilySearch
The United Counties of Leeds and Grenville were formed in 1850 by unifying Leeds County and Grenville County.
| 1792 | Leeds County, Upper Canada and Grenville County, Upper Canada formed |
| 1841 | Acts of Union 1840 created a single Province of Canada (Leeds County, Province of Canada and Grenville County, Province of Canada) |
| 1850 | Counties are merged to produce Leeds and Grenville, Province of Canada |
| 1867 | Canadian Confederation established the modern province of Ontario (Leeds and Grenville, Ontario) |