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Good morning, Pelham!

USED 12-december-05-2023-1-copy
VISITING TEMPERANCEVILLE: First Presbyterian Church, Metler Road. (First in a series.)

Temperanceville display at Peace Park

Miniature village of Fonthill in its early days

Volunteers and friends of the Rotary Club of Fonthill met at the Fonthill Bandshell in late November to set up the annual miniature village of Temperanceville, a title bestowed upon the village for a short period in the mid 1800s. About 1842 the name Osborne’s Corners had been adopted, which was replaced by Temperanceville, and finally Fonthill. The naming was in tribute to Fonthill Abbey, a large Gothic Revival country house in Wiltshire, England.

The tiny buildings have been a seasonal display for 33 years, and will be at Peace Park until the end of December. The Temperanceville miniature village was first envisioned in 1993 by a group of Fonthill Rotarians, who continue to provide artistic, construction, maintenance, and restorative work on the village.

Keith's Restaurant was the first replica built. It is currently being restored, along with several others, and is not part of this year's display, which includes about 15 buildings. The oldest building currently on display is the Print Shop, built in 1993. There are two churches currently in the display that were built by their respective congregations, the North Pelham Presbyterian Church (1994) and the Holy Trinity Church (2012).

Fonthill Rotarian Doug Burr, who passed away after a battle with cancer in 2017, always provided hot refreshments for the setup of the village. Doug's daughter and son-in-law still provide this service, courtesy of their family Tim Horton's franchise.

So why “Temperanceville” as a name for the village?

Graham Segger’s book, The Land at the Crest of the Hill: Clues to Niagara History from Upper Fonthill, describes how, throughout Fonthill’s early history, there was strong support for organizations opposed to liquor, including the Sons of Temperance, the Royal Templars of Temperance, and the Fonthill Women's Christian Temperance Union. Quakers in the area had established abstinence from alcohol as one of their core values, as did local Baptists, Evangelicals, and Church of God supporters. Anglicans, Presbyterians, and Catholics, by comparison, were more inclined to enjoy a tipple.

The 1864 Dunkin Act gave local governments the option of banning the sale of alcohol, either by popular vote or a resolution of the local town councils. Under the Canada Temperance Act of 1878, also known as the Scott Act, only Pelham and Thorold townships retained the ban on booze in Niagara.

By the late 1800s, Fonthill had become a thriving community, with a land registry office, a library, several churches, a three-storey high concert hall (which also housed a grammar school and a two newspapers), two general stores, a harness shop, a shoe shop, a blacksmith shop and carriage factory, a bakery, two tailor shops, and a meat market. Fonthill even had a cigar factory.

The first stretch of cement sidewalk was built in 1903, and electricity was brought to the village in 1909. In 1907, a trolley line was built from St Catharines to Fonthill, which officially became a village in 1922.

 

Current Weather

Flurries

Flurries

-8.6°C

Pressure
102.7 rising
Dewpoint
-12.2 °C
Humidity
75%
Wind
NW 13 km/h

Radar Satellite


Hourly Forecast

Today
9 AM
-7°C
A mix of sun and cloud
Today
10 AM
-7°C
A mix of sun and cloud
Today
11 AM
-7°C
A mix of sun and cloud
Today
12 PM
-7°C
A mix of sun and cloud
Today
1 PM
-7°C
A mix of sun and cloud
Today
2 PM
-7°C
A mix of sun and cloud
Today
3 PM
-7°C
A mix of sun and cloud
Today
4 PM
-7°C
Chance of flurries
Today
5 PM
-7°C
Chance of flurries
Today
6 PM
-7°C
Chance of flurries
Today
7 PM
-7°C
Chance of flurries
Today
8 PM
-7°C
Chance of flurries

7 Day Forecast

Flurries

Today

-7 °C

A few flurries ending early this morning then a mix of sun and cloud. 30 percent chance of flurries late this afternoon. Wind north 20 km/h gusting to 40 becoming light near noon. Temperature steady near minus 7. Wind chill near minus 15. UV index 1 or low.


Chance of flurries

Tonight

-12 °C

Partly cloudy with 60 percent chance of flurries. Wind up to 15 km/h. Low minus 12. Wind chill minus 11 this evening and minus 18 overnight.


Chance of flurries

Sunday

-7 °C

A mix of sun and cloud with 40 percent chance of flurries in the morning. Becoming sunny in the afternoon. Wind up to 15 km/h. High minus 7. Wind chill near minus 14.


Clear

Sunday night

-10 °C

Clear. Low minus 10.


Chance of flurries

Monday

1 °C

Cloudy with 40 percent chance of flurries. High plus 1.


Periods of snow or rain

Monday night

0 °C

Periods of snow or rain. Low zero.


Chance of flurries or rain showers

Tuesday

3 °C

Cloudy with 60 percent chance of flurries or rain showers. High plus 3.


Chance of flurries

Tuesday night

-2 °C

Cloudy periods with 30 percent chance of flurries. Low minus 2.


A mix of sun and cloud

Wednesday

1 °C

A mix of sun and cloud. High plus 1.


Cloudy periods

Wednesday night

0 °C

Cloudy periods. Low zero.


A mix of sun and cloud

Thursday

3 °C

A mix of sun and cloud. High plus 3.


Cloudy periods

Thursday night

2 °C

Cloudy periods. Low plus 2.


Chance of showers

Friday

5 °C

Cloudy with 30 percent chance of showers. High plus 5.


Normals

Low
-6 °C
High
1 °C

Sunrise and Sunset

Sunrise
7:45 AM
Sunset
4:46 PM

Based on Environment Canada data