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Flamboro Speedway

1962 establishments in OntarioMotorsport in CanadaMotorsport venues in OntarioNASCAR tracksPaved oval racing venues in Ontario
Sports venues completed in 1962Sports venues in Hamilton, OntarioStock car racing
Flamboro speedway
Flamboro speedway

Flamboro Speedway is a 1/3-mile semi-banked asphalt short track motor racing oval, located twenty minutes northwest of Hamilton, in the rural community of Millgrove, Ontario, Canada. The track was established in 1962.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Flamboro Speedway (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Flamboro Speedway
Concession 5 West, Hamilton

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Flamboro SpeedwayContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.328234 ° E -80.023583 °
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Address

Concession 5 West
L0R 1V0 Hamilton
Ontario, Canada
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Flamboro speedway
Flamboro speedway
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Nearby Places

Darnley Cascade
Darnley Cascade

Darnley Cascade is a 4-metre-high (13 ft) cascade waterfall located at Crooks Hollow Conservation Area in Greensville, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Nearby attractions include Bruce Trail, Dundas Valley Conservation Area, Spencer Gorge/Webster's Falls Conservation Area, Hermitage ruins, Royal Botanical Gardens, Dundurn Castle, Christie Lake Conservation Area, Dundas Historical Society Museum and Carnegie Gallery.The waterfall got its name from the Darnley Grist Mill, completed in 1813 by Scottish settler James Crooks, who admired Lord Darnley and claimed him as an ancestor. The grist mill was sold to James Stutt after Crooks' death in 1860. Darnley Cascade is sometimes referred to as Stutt's Falls, a name which is used on vintage postcards of the area. The mill burned down in 1934, but the ruins remain.An article published in November 2020 states that the Darnley mill was expanded in 1829 to include "a distillery, a linseed oil mill, a cooperage, a card clothing factory, a fulling and drying works, a tannery, a woollen mill, a foundry, an agricultural implement factory and Upper Canada’s first paper mill". The community also grew in that era, with a general store and inn; residents lived along the valley road. Today, the site "is considered to be one of Ontario’s oldest ruins and is just one of the remains of the early industrial empire of James Crooks and of the community which became Crooks Hollow".Another nearby mill which was destroyed by fire in 1875, also built by James Crooks, is considered to have been "Upper Canada's First Paper Mill (1826)".