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HISTORY
Agincourt began as a small village centred around the Knox Presbyterian Church.
The original frame Knox Church, built in, 1846 was replaced in 1872 with the story-book
brick church that still stands today on the the north-west corner of Sheppard
and Midland Avenues.
In 1858, the "Agincourt"
post office opened in the general store of John Hill. Hill secured this post office
with the help of a Quebec member of Parliament who insisted the post office be
given a French name. Hill's customers were mostly English and Scottish and so
he chose the name "Agincourt" after the French Town where King Henry the V won
his famous battle in 1415.
Agincourt began
to boom in the late 1800's when two railway lines opened stations here. This led
to the building of the first Agincourt subdivision in 1913, on the old Patterson
farm north of Sheppard Avenue, between Midland Avenue and the Railway tracks.
The most significant wave of development in Agincourt took place between 1945
and 1965, when most of the present day neighbourhood was developed.
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