The William Grier House
6 Gravel Road The land for this solid brick one-and-three-quarter-storey Regency Cottage was a Crown grant to James Hunter registered in February 1825. In 1863, William Grier purchased this property from Robert Medd. This is, in many ways, a typical Regency Cottage with its square symmetry, centre hall plan and
Alexander Armstrong House
8 Dufferin Street Horticulturist and implement merchant Alexander Thomas Armstrong, who was married to Rebecca O’Brian, built this red brick Italianatestyle house in 1880. It remained in the Armstrong family until 1986. The contrasting coloured brick on the corners, ornate brackets under the eaves, the wraparound verandah and original French
Old Millbrook School House
1 Dufferin Street The first school building in Millbrook was built around 1830. As the population expanded, several additional small schools accommodated the growth. In 1887, the largest of these, a fourroom school, was destroyed by fire. Clearly, a new and larger school was needed. The trustees of School Section
St Thomas Anglican Church
28 King Street West The first Presbyterian church to serve Millbrook was located to the west of the Presbyterian cemetery (County Road 10 at Fallis Line); the second was where the public school is now located. Both were destroyed by fire. The site for a third church, at 28 King
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