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9 Oct 2006 Meeting - "Up North"

Monday October 9, 7.30pm at St. James Anglican Church, 642 Main Road, Hudson,

In the Foreword to Joseph Graham’s Naming the Laurentians Graeme Decarie recalls that when he was teaching in China his students asked him where in Canada he lived. He replied, “UpNorth”. “They were profoundly impressed and wanted to see a picture of my igloo. I had forgotten that UpNorth is a place that exists only in the vocabulary of Montrealers.”


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11 Sep 2006: First Meeting of Autumn 2006 Season - "Up Cote"

Monday 11 Sep 2006, 7.30pm - St. James Anglican Church, 642 Main Road, Hudson

A few years ago Ralph Simpson made an important discovery in his barn: three collections of photograph negatives. The photographer was his father Lem, who as a young man had taken up photography as a hobby.

As a teenager and young adult Lem (born in 1903) often brought his camera along with him to record the people, places and events of his community - the Cote St. Charles Settlement.


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Les Auberges d'Hudson - The Inns of Hudson

Roderick L. Hodgson
141209166-7
$15.00 *Aug 2016

The book describes the various inns, boarding houses and B & B's of Hudson from 1792 to the present. Old photos of the buildings, people and stories and anecdotes are throughout the 110 page book.


Les Auberges d'Hudson - The Inns of Hudson

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Submitted by webmaster on Wed, 2006-06-14 20:10.

The Como-Oka Ferry

The Como-Oka Ferry

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Les Auberges d'Hudson - The Inns of Hudson

Rod L. Hodgson
1-4120-9166-7
$18.00

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Historical Industries & Services of Hudson, Quebec (1841-2004)

Rod L. Hodgson, Margaret A. Peyton, Daniel VIgneault and Martin Hofton
1-41205453-2
$20.00 *Aug 2016

a) The Ottawa River Navigation Company
b) The History of the Hudson Water Works System
c) Hudson's Finest - The Hudson Police Department
d) The Hodgson Brother's Sawmill
e) The Hudson Hosiery


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Submitted by webmaster on Wed, 2006-04-26 18:01.

2. Making socks

As children we have all knocked four nails into the top of a cotton bobbin and by continuously hooking woollen yarn over the nails have produced a circular woollen "rope".

In a typical circular knitting machine for making socks, the four nails are replaced by about 250 needles and hooks, and up to as many as 400 in a machine for making nylon stockings. Although many types of machine were used by Hudson Hosiery including Banner and Komet, the photo shows a typical basic circular sock knitting machine. (This particular machine by Scott and Williams was built around 1915 and was still in operation in the Richelieu Hosiery Plant in Cornwall when it closed in 2000).


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The Hudson Hosiery Company

Started by a group of local entrepreneurs just before World War II, The Hudson Hosiery Co. Ltd. was for many years the only full time industry in the Town (the ice harvesting operations on the Lake of Two Mountains being seasonal) until it was destroyed by fire in March 1965. During its peak years, the "Hosiery" employed some 100 or so local residents.

In a late 2004 meeting of the Hudson Historical Society, the President, Mr.Kevin O'Donnell commented that very little information on the Hosiery Company existed in the Society's archives, and that it would be useful to record its history while there were still people around who remembered it and worked there. I volunteered to do this, and during the summer of 2005, spent many interesting hours poring through back issues of the Lake of Two Mountains Gazette (which paints a fascinating picture of the development of Hudson over the last 50 years), the Canadian Textile Journal with its many illustrations of changing clothing fashions and talking to ex-employees, all of whom seem to have fond memories of that little company.

This, then, is the story of the Hudson Hosiery Co. Ltd.


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Historical articles, stories and news

Welcome to article resource of the HHS. Here we have collected together all our articles, stories, and news that deal with the history of Hudson and its surrounding areas. There might even be some articles about historical happenings elsewhere in the world, but usually there will always be something in the story that links back to Hudson.


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Industries in Hudson

  • There were at least two glass manufacturing factories in what is now Hudson in the 19th century, from the 1840s to the 1870s. We'll be posting information about this industry soon.
  • In winter ice was harvested commercially on the Ottawa River for decades, until about 1965, It was sold in Montreal, especially to the Windsor Hotel, and was a major source of employment in the winter. Check back soon for more information.
  • Have you noticed that there are no factories in Hudson? There used to be - until the mid-1960's. That's when the Hudson Hosiery Company, which made men's socks and ladies' stockings, burned down. The Hudson Hosiery Company operated on the site of what is now the Hudson Medi-Centre. Martin Hofton wrote a paper which gives the history about this factory, which in its day employed many people in Hudson. You can read about this Hudson factory by clicking here.

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