Kent County, area 2,458 sq km (949 sq mi) is a historic county in the Canadian province of Ontario. Population in 2006 was 108,589.[1]
The county was created in 1792 and named by John Graves Simcoe in honour of the English County. The county is in an alluvial plain between Lake St. Clair, and Lake Erie, watered by two navigable streams, the Thames River and the Sydenham River.
On January 1, 1998, the county, its townships, towns, and Chatham were amalgamated into the single-tier city of Chatham-Kent.
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Area 40,625 acres (164 km2). Surveyed in 1794 and named from the Earl of Camden. Community centres: (Dresden, Thamesville)
Area 83,964 acres (340 km2) Surveyed in 1794. Community centres: City of Chatham and (Wallaceburg)
Area 68,617 acres (278 km2). Dover Township was named after Dover, England. It was surveyed in 1794 and incorporated in 1850. Within the boundaries of Dover along the Chenal Ecarte of the river St. Clair is the site of Lord Selkirk's Baldoon Settlement, established in 1803. Communities include Mitchell's Bay, Grande Pointe and Pain Court.
Area 88,349 acres (358 km2). Surveyed in 1794 and named from the English port at the mouth of the Thames. A resident of Harwich, Valintine Zimmer, co-founded with friends of the same nationality the German Concession of Harwich. (Blenheim, Erieau, Erie Beach, Shrewsbury)
Area 58,607 acres (237 km2). Surveyed in 1794 and named after Thomas Howard, Earl of Effingham, father-in-law of Sir Guy Carleton. Community centres: (Morpeth, Ridgetown)
Area, 49,677 acres (201 km2). Surveyed in 1794 and named from the English port of Orford in Suffolk. Community centre. (Highgate)
Area 72,100 acres (292 km2). Surveyed in 1794. Likely named for Walter Raleigh. Community centres: (Charing Cross)
Area 26,193 acres (106 km2), Surveyed in 1794. Named for the Kentish port in England. Community centres: (Wheatley)
Area 54,116 acres (219 km2). Surveyed in 1794, named for the English Tilbury fort in Essex. Community Centres: (Merlin, Tilbury)
Area 27,154 acres (110 km2). Separated from Oxford in 1821 to provide a special organizational district, "the zone", for the Indians of the Moravian Mission on the Thames. Community Center. (Bothwell)