North Huron Museum
Wingham, Ontario

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Facades of Wingham - Past and Present

 
A large block of buildings including Roderus building at 306 Josephine Street.
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This was the site of Mundy's Grocery in 1944.
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John Wilson built this block in 1907. That is how it got the name, the Wilson block.
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The Independent Order of Oddfellows met on the second floor of this building from 1907 on.
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This was the location of the Currie Funeral Home from 1944 to 1979.
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This was once the location of a butcher shop that served many generations of Wingham households.
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Building built by F.H. Roderus for his shoemaking business.
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Wingham Gloves Works, before it became Gurney Glove Factory in 1906.
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This is a Gunn Son Ola phonograph that was produced in Wingham in the 1920s.
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One of four phones in this style that the North Huron Museum has on display.
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This is a ticket for a meal at Lee's Restaurant that was given out by the town of Wingham in 1958.
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In the background is the Roderus building.
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This is a drawing of how the Roderus building looked when it was built in 1879.
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The letterheads from the Brunswick Hotel, the Queen's Hotel, and the Exchange Hotel.
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These two letterheads are from Bell Telephone and town lawyer J.A. Morton.
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The letterheads from J.H. Hiscocks and Gordon's Drug Store.
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The letterheads from the Wingham Times, when S.W. Galbraith and R. Elliott owned it.
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Josephine Street looking south, 1900
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