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Barrie/Little Lake Water Aerodrome

Defunct seaplane bases in OntarioOntario airport stubsPages with non-numeric formatnum argumentsTransport in Barrie

Barrie/Little Lake Water Aerodrome (TC LID: CPT5) was located on Little Lake on the north side of Barrie, Ontario, Canada. The aerodrome served floatplanes, which parked along wooden docks along the south side of the lake, and was accessed via Little Lake Drive.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Barrie/Little Lake Water Aerodrome (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Barrie/Little Lake Water Aerodrome
Little Lake Drive, Barrie

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 44.416666666667 ° E -79.666666666667 °
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Address

Little Lake Drive 65
L4M 0J2 Barrie
Ontario, Canada
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Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre

The Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre (formerly the Royal Victoria Hospital) is an Advanced Level II facility with stroke designation, serving the needs of the population of the City of Barrie and the surrounding area. The facility is located at 201 Georgian Drive in Barrie, Ontario, Canada. The CEO is Gail Hunt. As of 2017, the hospital operated on a $340 million annual budget.The Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre is a 299-bed acute care facility. With a team of over 380 physicians, 2,500 staff members and 850 volunteers, the RVH provides healthcare specializing in cancer care, surgical services, critical care, mental health rehabilitation services, as well as women and children's programs. The Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre is the only hospital in Barrie and is the regional hospital for a large geographical region including central Simcoe County Barrie, Innisfil (Alcona, Stroud, Gilford), Springwater (Elmvale, Midhurst, Minesing, Snow Valley), south Oro- Medonte (Horseshoe Valley, Shanty Bay), a small portion of Essa Township (Ivy, Thornton). The hospital dates to 1891, when it was known as the Barrie General Hospital, which was located in a home at 105 Duckworth Street near Ardagh's Grove. The facility has relocated and expanded many times since its inception: 1897 BGH relocated to 63 High Street to R.E. Fletcher House and becomes RVH (since demolished) 1903 RVH relocated to purpose-built site at 76 Ross Street 1910-1911 Strathy Wing built 1952 Memorial Wing opened 1962-1963 Ross Street expansion (original 1903 and 1911 Strathy wing demolished) 1997 current site completed and old RVH repurposed as Victoria Village Seniors Retirement Community)

Barrie Jail

The Barrie Gaol, colloquially referred to as the Barrie Bucket, located at 87 Mulcaster Street in Barrie, Ontario, Canada, was a maximum-security facility housing offenders awaiting, trial, sentencing or transfer to federal and provincial correctional facilities, opened in 1841 and closed in 2001. It was replaced by the Central North Correctional Centre in the town of Penetanguishene, about 47 km northwest of Barrie. The gaol was designed by Toronto architect Thomas Young, who subscribed to the contemporary theory that a polygonal structure would make the occupants feel less confined. Construction of the gaol began in 1840. It is built from limestone from the quarry at Longford on the east side of Lake Couchiching.Five prisoners were hanged at this location: James Carruthers age 48 on 11 June 1873 for the murder of his wife; John Tryon age 47, on Dec 30, 1873 for the murder of Francis Fisher; George O'Neil, 47 years, on Jan 4, 1929, for the murders of Azor Robertson and Ruby Irene Martin; Thomas Wesley Campbell, age 54, on Jan 4, 1932, for the murder of William Campbell, his father; Lloyd Wellington Simcoe, age 18 in 1945 for murder. Others died during incarceration and are believed to be buried in the inner courtyard.The last inmate to reside at the Barrie Gaol was transferred to the Penetanguishene 'superjail' on December 7, 2001. It remains vacant to this day. The gaol served as the primary filming location for the movie Dark Reprieve (2008).