Kingston, Ontario
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Kingston, Ontario, with a population of approximately 127,436 people, is located at the eastern end of Lake Ontario, where the lake runs into the St. Lawrence River and the Thousand Islands begin. Kingston is nicknamed the "Limestone City" because of the many historical buildings made from the local material which still stand. The municipality of Kingston is effectively split by the Cataraqui River to the East and the Little Cataraqui Creek to the West.
Kingston is the site of two universities, the Royal Military College of Canada and Queen's University, as well as St. Lawrence College. One of the oldest radio stations in the world, CFRC broadcasts from Queens.
Canadian Forces Base Kingston (CFB Kingston) houses the Canadian Armed Forces' military communications training centre.
Canada's largest group of federal prisons, including Kingston Penitentiary, are located within the city or in the immediate area.
The city is famous for its fresh-water sailing (it hosted the sailing events for the 1976 Summer Olympics). CORK - Canadian Olympic Regatta Kingston - is still held every August. Kingston is a very well known sailing venue, and is listed by a panel of experts among the best yacht racing venues in the USA, even though Kingston is, of course, in Canada.
The city's thriving downtown is the site of several major festivals every summer. It has spawned several successful Canadian popular music personalities, including members of The Tragically Hip, Sarah Harmer, Hugh Dillon of The Headstones and David Usher (formerly of Moist).
History
The French originally settled upon a traditional Mississaugas First Nation site called Kateracoui (Cataroqui in the common transliteration which uses French pronunciation rules, it is pronounced CAT - AH - RAH - KWAY) in 1673 and established Fort Frontenac. The fort was captured and destroyed by the British at the end of the Seven Years' War in 1758. The town of Cataraqui, from the original native name, is now located immediately to the west of present-day Kingston. A receiving centre for fleeing refugees from the American Revolution, it became the primary community of south-eastern Upper Canada.
New settlement from the United Empire Loyalists (UEL) and Mohawks from the Six Nations in New York, lead by Molly Brant, formed a signficant part of an expanding population in the area at the end of the 18th century.
Kingston was one of the contenders for the capital of the united Canadas before Confederation, but after a brief stint as the capital from 1841 to 1844, it lost out to an alternating location of Montreal and Toronto, and then later to Ottawa where it has resided since. Kingston was, however, the home of Canada's first Prime Minister, Sir John A. Macdonald and on June 13 1841 was the site of the first meeting of the Parliament of Canada.
During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Kingston was an important Great Lakes port and a center for shipbuilding and locomotive building, including the largest locomotive works in the British Empire (the Canadian Locomotive Company - later Fairbanks-Morse - closed in 1969), but most heavy industry has now left the city and employment is now primarily in the institutional, military, and service/retail sectors.
Business
According to the Kingston Economic Development Corporation, in a 2002 report, the largest employers in Kingston in 1999 were:
- Canadian Forces Base Kingston 5,200
- Queen's University 4,200
- Kingston General Hospital 2,811
- Limestone District School Board 2,720
- Correctional Services of Canada 2,670
- DuPont Canada Inc. 1,400
- City of Kingston 1,397
- StarTek 1,018
- Hotel Dieu Hospital 1,007
- Providence Continuing Care Centre 1,000
- Ontario Ministry of Transportation 998
- Royal Military College of Canada 575
- Bell Canada 500
- Empire Financial Group 400
- Alcan (Rolled Products and R&D Centre) 373
- Bombardier Mass Transit 360
- NORCOM / CDT 300 (Ceased operating in 2003)
- Bombardier Transit System 200
- DuPont Canada Inc. R & D Centre 173
- T-Line Service Ltd. 143
External links
- Official City of Kingston Website
- Kingston Electors (local government issues)
- Kingston Travel Information
- CORK Regatta Information
- Kingston Housing Information
- Kingston Business Listings
- Kingston Frontenacs Hockey - OHL
- Kingston Family Fun World
- Kingston & Area Restaurants
- Time To Laugh Comedy Club
- Kingston Live Music & Concert Listings
- KCAL : Kingstonians Concerned About the LVEC
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