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Creemore
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==History== French explorer [[Samuel de Champlain]] first visited the Creemore area in 1616 to promote trade with the Petun, a [[First Nations in Canada|First Nations]] tribe. He was the first to write a description of the area: “The country is full of hill-slopes and little level stretches, which make it a pleasant country.’ Before explorers arrived in the early 17th century, [[Indigenous peoples in Canada|indigenous people]] lived in the general area of Creemore. Some of these native tribes included: [[Petun]], [[Wyandot people|Wyandot]] (Wendat), [[Iroquois]], and [[Algonquin people|Algonquin]]. Soon, early white explorers arrived to trade with these native tribes. Along with the arrival of the explorers, English civilization was soon imported into the area that we now know as Creemore. The settlement of Creemore began in 1842, and by the turn of the century it was a thriving village of about 800 people with a vibrant business community. Creemore's name and town origins have strong Irish roots – the name is derived from the Irish “croí mór,” which means “big heart” and it was the village's founder, Irish entrepreneur Edward Webster who coined the name in the year 1845. He paid tribute to his family by naming the original streets after them: Elizabeth (for his wife and daughter), Francis and Wellington (for his sons), and Alice and William (for his parents). In 1993, the amalgamation of Sunnidale, Nottawasaga, Village of Creemore and the Town of [[Stayner, Ontario|Stayner]] took place and it became Clearview Township.
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