| RESEARCH |
| The Lost
Village of Palestine The inn that once stood at the southwest corner of Derry and Tomken roads must have appeared as a godsend to the weary traveler: a place to gather, to eat or sleep, or to share in the day’s news.The inn (possibly Madigan’s) is shown on the 1859 Tremaine Map. The small community that developed in the vicinity of the inn was dubbed “Palestine” in the 1877 Historical Atlas of Peel.
Palestine later acquired a store (apparently poorly stocked) and a school. The four corners of Palestine became humorously referred to as Education, Damnation, Salvation and Starvation. The church and the name “Palestine” were both gone by 1970.
We can look at the names from the 1877 Atlas – names like Wedgewood, Dobson, Aikens, McBride, Baldock, Gage, Grafton, Reed and Montgomery (amongst others) – in an attempt to stir community memories or place a human face on this once forgotten hamlet from our pioneer past. Perhaps as we speed along the asphalt at Tomken and Derry
roads today, we can imagine that we are traveling in their footsteps,
jostling along the same bumpy roads as the people that once called the
area home. As we stop for a break or food at the modern Please share your memories and photographs of Palestine with us and help to preserve the story of this vanished village.
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