PAUL’S PHARMACY Manotick’s only locally owned Pharmacy 613-692-0015
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Much like proper vision, adequate learning and to their positive schoo dergo an infant hearing screening s take the recommended rechecks eve because it is expected that 2-in-3 ch sode of ear problems, and 1-in-6 wil to the illusiveness of hearing loss, ma Mon. - Fri: 9 a.m. - 8 p.m. if mild or one-sided, makes it difficult And even when temporary, th Sat: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Sun: 10 a.m. -world. 4 p.m. impacts because they can lead to f gagement, needlessly impacting a ch to academic struggles, children wi 990 River Road Manotick Across from Tim Hortons
See Pages 16 613-692-7375
For Hearing Freedom 5528 Ann St., Manotick full page ad www.HearingFreedom.com VOL. 39 • No. 14
MANOTICK, ONTARIO
www.manotickmessenger.ca
Friday July 15, 2022
Kars bicentennial celebrates 200 years of the village on the Rideau By Manotick Messenger Staff The year was 1822. The nearby town of Richmond was still in its infancy. Lyman Clothier and his family had just opened a sawmill, a blacksmith shop and a carding machine for weaving down the river in Oxfordon-Rideau, which would be renamed Kemptville after Upper Canada Governor Sir James Kempt, who is said to have camped along the banks of the Rideau in the area. Osgoode would be founded in 1927. Township C, which was founded in 1792, had been named the Township of North Gower. It was just being settled by United Empire Loyalists. It would be a generation before the Village of North Gower came into existence, and even later than that
came Manotick and Bytown, which would be renamed Ottawa. North Gower Township was named after Admiral John Leveson-Gower, Lord of the Admiralty from 1783 to 1789. In the early 1800s, there was also a South Gower Township. The Village of Kars will be celebrating its 200th anniversary this weekend. There is a complete day of activities planned for Sat., July 16 at the Kars RA Centre. The day includes activities such as a pancake breakfast, a craft and farmers’ market, a softball tournament, a bouncy castle, face painting, a historic walk of the village, a car show, and historic and military displays. Both Trinity Church and St. Andrew’s Church will also be holding events, including cemetery tours, a barbecue
and live music, and a ringing of the bell at Trinity at 11.
A rich history
Through its 200 years, Kars was not always known as Kars. Wellington Village was the original name of Kars. However, there was also a Wellington Village in Prince Edward County. Mail intended for Wellington (Kars) ended up in Wellington (Prince Edward County) and vice versa. In 1857, Wellington Village changed its name to Kars. The name Kars was chosen to commemorate the Canadian-born General William Fenwick Williams, who had undertaken the siege of the town of Kars for the Ottoman Empire against the Russian Empire during the Crimean War of the 1850s.
Kars was a city in northeast Turkey, and it was the capital city of the Kars Province. By the 1860s, Kars was a bustling community and shipping centre. Not only was the village on the Rideau, conveniently located between Ottawa and Kemptville, and just south of Manotick, but it was only a mile west of the Ottawa and Prescott Railway. Kars had a sawmill that had capacity of producing three million feet of sawed lumber per year. A.J. Eastman and Co. owned a brewery in Kars that produced 40 barrels of beer per week. There were four general stores, two churches, two wagon shops, a tannery, a school, a cooperage, and a hotel.
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The Village of Kars will be celebrating its 200th anniversary on Sat., July 16. For more information on the events planned by the Kars Community Recreation Association, visit www.kars.ca. Manotick Messenger photo
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