Acton
For almost 150 years this place has been called
Acton. It was 1844 when Robert Swan, our first postmaster,
suggested this name to replace "Adamsville"
(chosen in honor of the founders) and the original
name, "Dansville".
Acton was settled in 1825 by the Rev. Ezra, Rev.
Zenas, and Rufus Adams. Saddlebag Methodist preachers,
they retired to farm and rebuilt their strength,
returning to the circuit in 1830. Zenas preached
the first sermon ever delivered in the locality,
just east of Acton, opposite Worden's farm. Zenas
held services at his home on the corner of Main
and Church Streets. Built of yellow pine about 1830,
his home still stands. Zenas died in 1847.
Ezra, whose home stood near Bower Avenue later
moved to Drayton. Rufus' wife opened the Acton School
in 1826 where the Knox Church now stands. The school
also doubled as a Methodist Chapel. Rufus died in
1856 and his widow soon moved to Dundas.
A fourth brother, Eliphalet Adams later joined
his brothers here. His son Phineas who died at age
31 in 1830 may have been the first grave behind
the Chapel (Pioneer Cemetery - now behind Knox Church).
Eliphalet, who died in 1844 had a younger son, Ransom,
who was a bachelor businessman here until his death
in 1880. He was the last Adams to reside in Acton.
The Adams brothers dammed up the creek to create
the Mill pond which powered their saw mill and later
the flour mill which operates on the same site today.
The mill pond, named "Fairy Lake" by Sarah
Secord, surrounds Prospect Park.
The 14 acres have served as the town park and fairgrounds
since the village purchased it in 1889 for $3000.
The stone pillars were erected in 1924 to celebrate
50 years of incorporation. The arena was erected
in 1929 on the site of the army drill shed. The
1867 barn stands beside the arena and serves the
Acton Agricultural Society as a Poultry barn at
Fairtimes.
Main street was Acton's principal thoroughfare
in the early days. The Adams family laid out the
streets in a grid pattern, naming them after family
members. Then the boom began with the coming of
the railroad. The first Grand Trunk train steamed
through town in 1856.
The Toronto-to-Guelph Road (Highway 7) also served
as a main road. It was laid out in 1827. Main Street
became Highway 25 as the automobile became king,
causing passenger rail service to decline until
November 1967 when Acton Station was closed. Limited
service was reintroduced in 1987 although the station
has long since been pulled down.
Acton adopted the theme of "Leathertown"
in recent years and with good reason. The tanning
industry began in 1842 under Abraham Nelles. By
1865, the Beardmore Tanning Company, a Hamilton
tanner since 1844, purchased the business and became
an integral part of the village.
They built employee housing, tennis courts, a bowling
green, a golf course, boathouse, ran a cooperative
store, and the village outdoor arena on Frederick
Street. At one time the tannery proclaimed itself
as the largest in the British Empire. Canada Packers
purchased it in 1944, operating under the Beardmore
name until they closed it on Sept. 12, 1986.
Acton supported many industries related to leather,
particularly the W.H. Storey glove factory on Bower
Avenue. Begun in 1868, Storey employed up to 250
people. He built his family a magnificent home on
the corner of Mill and John Streets in 1879. The
Storey family left the house at the end of World
War 1 when Wilfred Coles ran it as a veterans' home.
It was a hotel until 1937 when it became a funeral
home. Storey's son sold the business in 1915 to
H.T. Arnold of Georgetown who ran the glove business
until 1954. The four storey factory was razed in
1962 to accommodate the new Acton post office.
Other tanneries prepared leather for companies like
Hewetson Shoe, Coronna Shoe, Superior Glove, Marzo
Glove and Frank Heller and Co., which confirmed
Acton's leather heritage.
Heller and Dawkins were instrumental in starting
the Olde Hide House, Acton's tourist attraction
in one of Beardmore's warehouses erected in 1899.
While leather was Acton's mainstay, other companies
like Acton Plow co., Building Products, H.K. Porter
(Disston Saws), A.P. Green, Ajax Eng., Blow Press,
Microplastics, Force Electic Mason Knitting, Dills
Printing and Keates Organs have employed many.
Acton was part of Esquesing Township until 1874
when it was incorporated as a village. The Town
Hall was erected in 1882 for the municipal council,
the constabulary and the fire brigade. When Acton
became part of Halton Hills in 1974, the hall was
no longer needed.
Designated an historic building in 1977, it was
eventually sold to Heritage Acton for one dollar.
They are presently restoring the building which
still includes the nineteenth century lockup. The
other principal public buildings in Acton include
its centennial projects: the Hydro offices, which
were considerably enlarged in 1988-89 and the Public
Library, whose park like setting includes a small
arched bridge popular with photographers.
Pausing to read the historical marker at this site,
it is worth noting that the small stream under the
bridge was once responsible for supplying power
to the mills of Acton, the very source of power
that drew the Adams family to the site in the 1820s. |