Uxbridge is a township in the Regional Municipality of Durham in south-central Ontario and is located about forty kilometers northeast of Metropolitan Toronto. The main center in the township is the community of Uxbridge. Other communities within the township include Coppins Corners, Goodwood, Leaskdale, Sandford, Siloam, Victoria’s Corner, and Zephyr.
It was named for Uxbridge, England, a name
which was derived from “Wixan’s Bridge”.
The first settlers in the area were Quakers
who started arriving in 1806 from Pennsylvania. The community’s oldest
building, the Uxbridge Friends Meeting House, was built in 1820 and overlooks
the town from Quaker Hill, a kilometer to the west.
The first passenger-carrying narrow-gauge
railway in North America, the Toronto and Nipissing Railway arrived in Uxbridge
in June 1871, and for over a decade Uxbridge was the headquarters of the
railway. In 1872, the Village of Uxbridge was separated from the Township and
incorporated as a separate entity.
With the creation of the Regional
Municipality of Durham in 1974, Uxbridge Township was amalgamated with the Town
of Uxbridge and Scott Township to create an expanded Township of Uxbridge.
Today, Uxbridge is as a mostly suburban
community in northern Durham Region. Major manufacturing employers include Pine
Valley Packaging (packaging, containers and portable shelters), Koch-Glitsch
Canada (mass transfer systems) and Hela Canada (spice and ingredient
manufacture). Many residents commute to other centers in Durham and York
Regions and beyond.