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・ Eglinton Loch
・ Eglinton LRT Carhouse
・ Eglinton Park (Toronto)
・ Eglinton railway station
・ Eglinton River
・ Eglinton Square Shopping Centre
・ Eglinton Street railway station
・ Eglinton Theatre
・ Eglinton Tournament Bridge
・ Eglinton Tournament of 1839
・ Eglinton Trophy
・ Eglinton West
・ Eglinton West (TTC)
・ Eglinton West line
・ Eglinton, County Londonderry
Eglinton, Ontario
・ Eglinton, Western Australia
・ Eglinton—Lawrence
・ Eglinton—Lawrence (provincial electoral district)
・ Eglis Yaima Cruz
・ Eglisau
・ Eglisau railway bridge
・ Eglisau railway station
・ Eglisau–Neuhausen railway line
・ Eglise Gutiérrez
・ Eglish
・ Eglish (barony)
・ Eglish St. Patrick's GAC
・ Egliswil
・ EGLN1


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Eglinton, Ontario : ウィキペディア英語版
Eglinton, Ontario
Eglinton was a small farming village located at what is today the intersection of Yonge Street and Eglinton Avenue in York County, Ontario, Canada. It was first settled in the early 19th century and became the agricultural hub for the area just north of the city of Toronto. During the early 19th century, the area was part of the largest cattle-grazing region in Upper Canada (now the southern region of Ontario). The region was the first in North America to extend the use of cowbells to all cattle. Prior to this, it had been standard practice for a cowbell to be attached only to the best and leading animal in a group of livestock.〔"A Brief History of Toronto", ''Macleans Magazine'', Dec. 1991, p43〕 To honour this proud and storied heritage, the City of Toronto named a local street Cowbell Lane.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Naming of Public Lane Located East of Yonge Street Between Eglinton Avenue East and Soudan Avenue )
The village was also an important stop on Yonge Street, the main road north from Toronto. One of the first settlers was John Montgomery, who founded a tavern catering to travelers. He likely named the village after the Earls of Eglinton, who had the family name Montgomerie and with whom he believed he had some connection. The name of the village would later be given to the east-west trail running through it, which would become Eglinton Avenue. In 1837 Montgomery's Tavern served as the base of William Lyon Mackenzie's rebels and was the site of the Battle of Montgomery's Tavern.
A successful village of 700 people, the area's character changed in 1884 when the Metropolitan Street Railway began running a horse-drawn streetcar up Yonge Street to the village. Rapid housing development soon followed. As the population grew, the settlement was in 1890 incorporated with the smaller Davisville Village into the town of North Toronto. North Toronto was annexed to the City of Toronto two decades later.
==References==

*F. R. Berchem. ''Opportunity Road: Yonge Street 1860-1939'' Dundurn, 1996.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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