sujhelyi@reviewonline.com
EAST LIVERPOOL The absence of one council member made all the difference Monday at a special meeting when transferring three properties to the city’s Community Improvement Corporation (CIC) came up for a vote.
Throughout the whole meeting, which took around eight minutes, action was swift and unanimous except when council members voted on transferring 427 Vine St., 859 Ohio Ave. and 847 Baxter St. to the CIC for disposal.
During the preceding meeting of council’s finance committee, Mayor Greg Bricker said there had been interest by a real estate firm in flipping the Vine Street property, while the properties on Ohio Avenue is already a vacant lot and the one on Baxter is expected to be so in the future.
Author of the article: Beth Wilkins
Publishing date: Feb 17, 2021 • March 2, 2021 • 6 minute read • • IMG 1801 – Just imagine a “Telephone Girl” sitting at this switchboard “listening to voices from everywhere” and conveying news – good and bad – to and from guests of the McNamara Hotel in downtown Peace River. According to records, it was operated at the Mac until 1962. Photo by SUPPLIED
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We discovered subscribers to the first telephone system in the Peace Country were charged $15/year with the agreement – any neighbour could come in and phone the central telegraph office for 10 cents. The first four on the line were on Shaftesbury Trail: the Anglican (River 11) and Catholic (River Lots 21, 22, 23) missions. Each had one, as did the Jean Collins homestead (River Lot 38) and Allie Brick (River Lot 12). This was possible through the work of G.E. McLeod, superintendent of construction – later reeve of the Village of Peace Ri