place

Cullen Gardens and Miniature Village

2006 disestablishments in OntarioBuildings and structures in Whitby, OntarioGardens in CanadaMiniature parksParks in Ontario
Cullen Garden and Miniature Village, Whitby,ON
Cullen Garden and Miniature Village, Whitby,ON

Cullen Gardens & Miniature Village was a popular tourist attraction in Whitby, Ontario, Canada. Officially opened in May 1980 by founder Len Cullen and his wife, Connie, the Gardens were a major tourist attraction in Whitby for 25 years.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cullen Gardens and Miniature Village (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Cullen Gardens and Miniature Village
Cochrane Street, Whitby

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Cullen Gardens and Miniature VillageContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.915 ° E -78.9664 °
placeShow on map

Address

Cullen Gardens and Miniature Village

Cochrane Street
L1R 2Y9 Whitby
Ontario, Canada
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q5192994)
linkOpenStreetMap (2548215147)

Cullen Garden and Miniature Village, Whitby,ON
Cullen Garden and Miniature Village, Whitby,ON
Share experience

Nearby Places

Durham District School Board

The Durham District School Board (DDSB, known as English-language Public District School Board No. 15 prior to 1999) is a public school board in the province of Ontario, Canada. The board serves most of the Regional Municipality of Durham, except for schools within the Municipality of Clarington, which instead belong to the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board. The Durham District School Board Education Centre head office is based in Whitby. The school board has families of schools Pickering, Ajax, Whitby, Oshawa, and Brock-Uxbridge-Scugog, each of which has two trustees except Oshawa, which has three. Three student trustees, using a non-binding, recorded vote, represent the region of Durham. In total the school board has more than 7000 staff who serve approximately 46,000 elementary and 24,000 secondary school students. Previously known as the Ontario County Board of Education, the board was known as the Durham Region Board of Education when it came into existence in 1974. The DRBE was renamed to the Durham District School Board in 1998 and francophone schools that were managed by this board are now part of Conseil scolaire Viamonde. A unique program to the Durham District School Board that is running in a number of its secondary schools is called the Culture of Peace Committee, which works on a wide variety of social and humanitarian issues within the schools and in the community. The Durham District School Board operates a gifted program in select schools. This program for students in grades 4–12 entails material being taught at an accelerated rate. Acceptance into the program is based on ranking in the top 1% of a test in mathematics, logic and literacy during grade 3.