Prescott, Ontario

Prescott is a town of approximately 5,000 people on the north shore of the Saint Lawrence River, directly across from Ogdensburg, New York. There is an international bridge connecting the two towns. Prescott was the home of the British Fort Wellington, which is now a tourist destination. During the War of 1812, troops stationed at Fort Wellington crossed the frozen river and burned Ogdensburg in retaliation for an American raid further up the river; the American citizens of Ogdensburg, who were profiting by supplying the British army with food and other necessities, drove out their own American military detachment after the raid so that they could continue doing business with the British army in Prescott. Prescott was originally an important transhipment point for cargo moving from the Great Lakes eastwards towards Montreal, Quebec and the Atlantic Ocean, but the construction of the Saint Lawrence Seaway ended the forwarding trade. Prescott is on the mainline of the Canadian National Railroad connecting Toronto, Ontario to Montreal, Quebec, and is at the junction of the east-west Highway 401 and Highway 416 north to Ottawa, Ontario.

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
blank media tax
cobleskill, new york
dennis gabor
setbal (district)
statoil
wusun
kjell magne bondevik
bob kerr's whoopee band
luitzen egbertus jan brouwer
storting
dire straits
walt disney pictures
openexr
hardiman's history of galway
house of windsor
monkey's audio
peter frampton
sementivae
national university of ireland, galway
nuclear weapon design
lake of tears
suicide (band)
thousand islands
limes
mylar
ignition (album)
transportation security administration
smash
ixnay on the hombre
legalism (disambiguation)
weak verbs
family ties
chroma subsampling
piper cherokee
strong (grammatical term)
demos
demo
demomakers
demoscene
galway airport
the black lotus
mobile suit zeta gundam
carol moore
napier nomad