Stittsville
Stittsville | |
---|---|
Community | |
Stittsville Location in Ottawa | |
Coordinates: 45°16′N 75°55′W / 45.267°N 75.917°W | |
Country | Canada |
Province | Ontario |
City | Ottawa |
Government | |
• Mayor | Jim Watson |
• City Councillor | Shad Qadri |
• Member of Parliament | Pierre Poilievre |
• Member of Provincial Parliament | Jack MacLaren |
Area | |
• Total | 7.74 km2 (2.99 sq mi) |
Population (2011)[1] | 26,807 |
Time zone | Eastern (EST) (UTC−5) |
• Summer (DST) | EDT (UTC−4) |
Postal code FSA | K2S |
Area code(s) | 613, 343 |
Stittsville is a suburban community, part of the City of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It is within the former Goulbourn Township. A part of the National Capital Region, Stittsville is immediately to the southwest of Kanata, and about 31 km (19 mi) west of Downtown Ottawa. The urban part of the community corresponds to Stittsville Ward on Ottawa City Council.
History
The first settlers to the area were Irish soldiers, arriving in the 1820s. The town itself was born in the 1850s by Jackson Stitt, for whom the town is named; he was also the first postmaster in the area.[2]
The original town site, now known as "Old Stittsville", was at the present intersection of Carp Road and Hazeldean Road. It was a small crossroads, consisting of a few houses, a small inn, and a general store and post office, which was owned by Jackson Stitt.
By 1866, Stittsville was a post village with a population of 100, situated in the township of Goulborne. The village contained one general store, one common school, with an average attendance of seventeen pupils. The Loyal Orange Lodge, No. 210, met in Orange Hall, on the first Thursday in each month. The citizens included John S Argue, general merchant and postmaster.[3]
The Great Carleton Fire of 1870 devastated the community, destroying nearly everything. The Hartin House and a handful of other buildings were all that was left standing. This was an extremely large fire, encompassing over 250,000 acres (1,000 km2) from Ottawa to Smiths Falls to Carleton Place.[2]
The regrowth of Stittsville did not occur until the 1870s, when Canadian Pacific built a railway line connecting Ottawa to the booming lumber town of Carleton Place. The new town would be at the current intersection of Abbott Street and Main Street. A train station, grist mill, grain elevators, and several hotels were just some of the features of this sleepy outpost town. The hamlet of Ashton (12 km to the west) also attributes its beginning to the railway line. In 1989, the tracks were removed, and CP Rail donated the land to be used as part of the Trans-Canada Trail.
Stittsville was incorporated as a police village in 1956, and became a full village in 1961. In 1974 it was amalgamated into Goulbourn Township. In 2001 Goulbourn was amalgamated into the City of Ottawa.
Since the extension of the Queensway in the 1970s made travel from Ottawa quicker and easier, Stittsville has experienced rapid growth; it transformed from a quiet farming community of under 500 people to a suburb of 20,000, in just over 25 years. Many residents are employed in Ottawa's high-tech industry or the federal government. Further growth is expected in the near future with the development of neighborhoods such as Jackson Trails and Kanata West to its north, Fernbank to its east and south and West Ridge to its west. In the next 10 to 20 years, Stittsville's population is expected to exceed 30,000.
Services
Stittsville Public School, an elementary school originally on Stittsville Main Street, has had a series of expansions to accommodate the growth in population. The school opened as a two-room, one-story building, and was eventually expanded to a two-story building with about fourteen classrooms. At the start of the 2005–2006 school year, Stittsville Public School, including staff and students, was moved to a new two-story building with over twenty classrooms and now 13 portables at 40 Granite Ridge Drive. Stittsville is also home to seven other schools. Frederick Banting Secondary Alternate Program, Sacred Heart Catholic High School and École Secondaire Catholique Paul-Desmarais are the three secondary schools. Paul-Desmarais being a french school and Sacred Heart and Frederick Banting being English. The elementary schools are: A. Lorne Cassidy Elementary School, Holy Spirit Catholic School, Guardian Angels Catholic School, St. Stephen Catholic School and École Élémentaire Catholique Saint-Jean-Paul II, the latter four being in the Catholic school board. Stittsville is the largest municipality in Canada without its own high school.
Stittsville is also the home of the Stittsville Minor Hockey Rams, as well the Stittsville RAMS competitive hockey association.
Media
The Stittsville News is a weekly newspaper published by Metroland Media. Its 2015 circulation was about 13,446.[4]
There is also one online news site published in Stittsville: StittsvilleCentral.ca.
Stittsville was featured as one of the filming locations for the 1988 CBC TV Movie "The Bobby Gimby Story".[5]
Neighbourhoods
- Amberway
- Amberwood Village
- Bryanston Gate
- Crossing Bridge
- Deer Run
- Fairwinds
- Forest Creek
- Fringewood
- Granite Ridge
- Jackson Trails
- Old Stittsville
- Timbermere
- West Ridge
- Westwind Farms
- Wyldewood
Notable residents
- Paul MacLean - hockey coach
- Dave Cameron - hockey coach
- Adrian Harewood - CBC Ottawa news anchor
- Kathleen Edwards - Juno Winning Musician
- Cody Ceci - professional hockey player, Ottawa Senators hockey club.
- Yuri Andropov - Former General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[6]
- Erica Wiebe - Olympic Gold Medalist in Women's 75 kg. Freestyle Wrestling at the 2016 Summer Olympics
- Dan Biggs - Captain of the Junkyard Dogs
References
- ↑ Canada 2011 Census Data (combining Census Tracts 5050151.06, 5050151.04, 5050151.05, 5050151.08, 5050151.07)
- 1 2 "Stittsville and Area". Goulbourn Historical Society. Retrieved 2011-01-16.
- ↑ Ottawa City and counties of Carleton and Russell Directory, 1866-7
- ↑ http://www.newspaperscanada.ca/sites/default/files/Community_Newspaper_Snapshot_2015_Report_FINAL.pdf
- ↑ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt6234414/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
- ↑ Andrei Gromyko - Memoirs, Arrow Books Ltd. 1989 ISBN 0385412886
External links
Coordinates: 45°15.5′N 75°55.5′W / 45.2583°N 75.9250°W