Photo Hi-lights of Historical Sites around Kitchener, Ontario, Canada
Pioneer Memorial Tower
In 1925, the city council decided to commemorate the establishment of the first farms in the region. The piles of stone which had been laboriously removed from the rich river flood plain below this lookout point, were used to construct the tower.
In Kitchener’s Victoria Park
Small industrial buildings in what had become the downtown area, burned, or were torn down. Council used the land to create a public park, and in 1895 dedicated it to Queen Victoria and erected this display.
Clock Tower from Our Original City Hall
When the city hall was torn down, this clock tower was dismantled and saved. Twenty years later, the clock was cleaned and rebuilt, and it and the rest of the tower were erected at the main park entrance.
Kaiser Wilhelm’s Plinth
Funny thing about the Kaiser……In 1916, Berlin residents were so incensed that he caused World War I that they took the bust of dear old Wilhelm & threw him in Victoria Lake…….he was rescued and reinstalled…..he got thrown in the lake again. Somebody pulled him out, but he was never seen in public again. Perhaps he became shell casings in the war effort.
Note: Before this event Berlin‘s name had been changed in 1912 to Kitchener, after a British, Boer War officer named Lord Kitchener, who was lost off the coast of Ireland, when his destroyer struck a mine on the way to negotiations in Russia, in 1916. A tiny lumber/railroad town in the depths of British Columbia had already named themselves after Kitchener in 1896/7, and still claim that they are the real Kitchener, and my Ontario version unjustly appropriated the name. Germany and the Kaiser’s aggressive actions in Europe caused the “German” people of Berlin, Ontario to show that they were not allied in any way.
Never common in Upper Canada, this is the last surviving covered bridge in Ontario
Historical Field Stone House
Like the pioneer tower, the stones to build this house beside the bridge were removed from the fields so that they could be plowed.
Castle Silo
A rich city dweller who retired to the country built this castle around an old, stone, farm silo to produce a workshop for his hobbies.
Following the Path the Cow took
At the intersection of the main streets, King and Queen, we’re still driving around an apple tree that stood here, two hundred years ago.
Even after the change of name from Berlin to Kitchener, the city retains a strong German heritage. In 1968 it was decided to host a Munich-style Oktoberfest, which is still celebrated each year. This building was erected beside a downtown hotel to house administrative offices and storage.