Glen Meyer, Ontario

Glen Meyer
Coordinates: 42°43′53″N 80°40′23″W / 42.73139°N 80.67306°W / 42.73139; -80.67306Coordinates: 42°43′53″N 80°40′23″W / 42.73139°N 80.67306°W / 42.73139; -80.67306
Country  Canada
Province Ontario Ontario
County Norfolk
Amalgamated into Norfolk County 2001 (Single-tier municipality)
Government
  Mayor Charlie Luke
  Governing Body The Council of The Corporation of Norfolk County
  MPs Diane Finley (Con)
  MPPs Toby Barrett (PC)
Forward sortation area N0J 1K0

Glen Meyer is an unincorporated community in Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada, southeast of Tillsonburg.

Summary

George Edward Meyer settled here in 1854. When he became postmaster in 1865, he named the community after himself.[1]

During World War II, a labour camp was approved for Glen Meyer, to house enemy merchant seamen held as prisoners of war who would work under guard at local farms.[2] In 1974, radio station CKOT (now CJDL-FM) received permission to move its transmitter to Glen Meyer.

In 2001, Haldimand-Norfolk was dissolved into two separate single-tier counties. Glen Meyer became part of the newly formed County of Norfolk.

The term "Glen Meyer" refers to an Iroquoian aboriginal culture related to the Neutral Nation people.[3] Glen Meyer's earliest known inhabitants, from around the year 1000 until approximately 300–350 years later, were the Algonquin nation. They were noted flint-workers and evidence of the skill in crafting arrowheads is still to be found in open worked field areas surrounding the village. The next wave of inhabitants were the Attawandaron nation, the Neutrals, who occupied the region from about 1350 until their absorption by the Iroquois 300 years later. The last significant native nation to occupy the area was the Mississaugas.

Climate

Glen Meyer traditionally belongs to the humid continental climate zone; even with the recent epidemic of mild winters and extremely warm and dry summers. Like in all communities, towns, and cities throughout the world, global warming due to human industrial activity has drastically altered the climate of Glen Meyer throughout the decades.

The warmest summers that Glen Meyer has witnessed occurred in 1998, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009 (with the exception of the month of July[4]), 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016.[5]

Should the sea levels rise by 60 metres or 200 feet, Glen Meyer would not be affected by flooding.[6] However, it may be affected by droughts as a by-product of the dislocation of available fresh water and may be forced to rely on desalinated salt water piped in from the Eastern United States. Constructing the proper infrastructure to carry the water hundreds of miles away would take considerable manpower along with significant economic costs and an unprecedented level of cooperation from multiple federal, state/provincial, and municipal governments.

References

  1. Information about the first settler at Rural Routes
  2. "Approve P.O.W. labour for Ontario farms". Toronto Daily Star. April 4, 1945. p. 2. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  3. Gillespie, Ian (March 1, 2010). "City's oldest 'cold case' gruesome mystery". The London Free Press. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
  4. "Ontario Weather Review - July 2009". Environment Canada. 2009-09-01. Retrieved 2011-10-27.
  5. "Global Analysis - Annual 2016". NOAA. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  6. "Impact of global warming on Glen Meyer, Ontario". Firetree. Retrieved 2012-07-02.
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