Casselman, Ontario

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Template:Use Canadian English Template:Infobox settlement Casselman is a village in eastern Ontario, Canada, in the United Counties of Prescott and Russell. Situated on the South Nation River about Template:Convert southeast of downtown Ottawa, along the Trans-Canada Highway 417.

Casselman is an enclave within the Municipality of The Nation, since Casselman citizens refused to join the fusion of municipalities in 1998. The village was named after Martin Casselman who built a sawmill near the site of the current town in 1844.<ref name=Hamilton>Template:Cite book</ref>

It is served by the Casselman railway station on the Montreal–Ottawa Via Rail train, twice a day in each direction.

Casselman hosted L'écho d'un peuple, at Ferme Drouin, one of the biggest shows ever presented in Ontario, until the organization ran into financial trouble in 2008.

History

Casselman was founded by Martin Major Casselman (1805–1881), son of a Loyalist family who had bought large tracts of land in Cambridge Township (now part The Nation) in order to develop his timber trade. He obtained another Template:Convert on both sides of the South Nation River at the current location of the village, where he settled in 1844 and built a dam and sawmill. Settlement by French Canadians and Catholics followed after 1849, when Bishop Guigues founded a colonization society to encourage settlement in the region.<ref name="history">Template:Cite web</ref>

Its post office was established in 1857.<ref name=Hamilton/> That same year, the Township of Cambridge was incorporated, and Martin Casselman became its first reeve, and also served as the postmaster from 1871 to 1881.<ref name="history"/>

In 1881, the railroad connecting Casselman to Coteau Junction was completed, and the next year, it was extended to Ottawa. In 1885, there were about 200 families, and a Catholic chapel was built. On June 11, 1888, Casselman separated from Cambridge Township and was incorporated as a village municipality. It had 750 inhabitants at that time.<ref name="history"/>

In July 1891, the village partially burnt down, and 6 years later in October 1897, it was entirely destroyed in a wildfire. And again in July 1919, another fire destroyed most of the buildings on the main street.<ref name="history"/>

The village installed modern water and sewer services that became operational in 1977.

Demographics

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Casselman had a population of Template:Val living in Template:Val of its Template:Val total private dwellings, a change of Template:Percentage from its 2016 population of Template:Val. With a land area of Template:Convert, it had a population density of Template:Pop density in 2021.<ref name=SCref21/> Template:Canada census

Template:Historical populations

Mother tongue:<ref name="SCref21"/>

  • French as first language: 71.3%
  • English as first language: 21.5%
  • English and French as first language: 3.7%
  • Other as first language: 2.9%

See also

References

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Template:Geographic Location (8-way) Template:PrescottRussell