Early patterns of settlement in Haldimand County are still visible in the landscape and architecture, spanning from the pre-Contact era to the proclamation of the Haldimand Land Grant for the Six Nations and the subsequent migration of Loyalist settlers – Americans, largely of German descent and Mennonite tradition. Throughout the 1800s, immigration from the British Isles contributed significantly to the area’s development, as did the small but industrious Black community of the late nineteenth century – many descended from ex-slaves of the American South. Since the post-war years of the twentieth century, a significant stream of immigration from the Netherlands has also added to our ever-expanding mosaic of cultural identity, as have the age-old traditions of our Indigenous neighbors – the Six Nations and New Credit communities.
Following the American Revolution, Sir
Frederick Haldimand, Governor-in-Chief of Canada, granted in 1784 to the Six
Nations of the Iroquois a tract of land extending for six miles on both sides
of the Grand River from its source to Lake Erie. This grant was made in
recognition of their services as allies of the British Crown during the war,
and to recompense them for the loss of their former lands in northern New York
State. In later years, large areas of this tract, including portions of the
present counties of Haldimand, Brant, Waterloo and Wellington, were sold to
white settlers.
By 1853, Cayuga had lumber yards, a foundry,
and a glass factory.
At its height, York had twenty businesses that included mills, inns,
shoemakers, general stores, blacksmiths, and a lumber yard. It had a two-room
school house and two churches.