Fleetwood Town Centre

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Fleetwood Town Centre or Fleetwood is a town centre of Surrey, British Columbia, Canada. According to the 2001 census, the population of Fleetwood was 43,300.

[edit] History

After the Yale Wagon Road (now Fraser Highway) opened in the late 19th century, farming, logging and fishing became the primary industries of new settlers from New Westminster and Vancouver.

In 1907, Edith and James Francis settled near present-day 160 Street and Fraser Highway. Over the next decade, several of Edith's family — whose birth name was Fleetwood — joined them. In August 1915, Edith’s brother, Arthur Thomas Fleetwood (also known as Tom Fleetwood) joined the 47th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Forces, and he was sent to France to fight in WWI. He died as a result of battle wounds on 8 September 1917.

Edith applied to the provincial government for a charter to name her community after her brother.

In 1923, local residents formed the Fleetwood Community Association, with Edith as one of the founding members. The Fleetwood Community Hall was built in the 1930s, and is located across from the Fleetwood Community Centre, which opened in 1995.

Rapid population growth beginning in the 1970s brought with it retail, commercial and multi-family residential developments. Residents turned down attempts to develop light industrial properties.

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