Official Name: | Camden East |
Settlement Type: | Unincorporated village |
Pushpin Map: | Canada Southern Ontario |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Canada |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name1: | Ontario |
Subdivision Type2: | County |
Subdivision Name2: | Lennox and Addington |
Subdivision Type3: | Municipality |
Subdivision Name3: | Stone Mills |
Government Type: | Unincorporated |
Unit Pref: | Metric |
Population As Of: | 2009 |
Population Footnotes: | [1] |
Population Total: | 306 |
Timezone: | EST |
Utc Offset: | -5 |
Timezone Dst: | EDT |
Utc Offset Dst: | -4 |
Postal Code: | K0K 1J0 |
Area Code: | 613 |
Camden East is a village in the Municipality of Stone Mills, located east of Greater Napanee in Lennox and Addington County, Ontario, Canada.
In 1800, one of the first settlers was Albert Williams, the son of a United Empire Loyalist family. The first sawmill was built in 1818 on the Napanee River by Abel Scott at a site upstream of the present town.[2] [3] He sold the rights to the mill to Samuel Clark who moved it to the location we now know as Camden East, and added a wool mill and a grist mill. The community was then called Clark's Mills. In 1832, the post office was built. The name changed to Camden East, after the township which was organized in 1787 and named in honour of Charles Pratt, Earl of Camden, and Lord Chancellor of Great Britain in the late 18th century. At its height, the town contained four hotels and several stores, mills, a carriage factory, a cheese factory, carpenters, cabinet-makers, saddlers, tanners, shoemakers, tailors, bakers, tinsmiths and a fanning-mill maker.[4] However, since the mills closed in the 1950s, the population of the town has decreased significantly.
While Samuel Clark's mills no longer exist, his house still stands, built in the rare stacked plank construction style. The date of construction is unknown but as it was the miller's house it is likely contemporary with the original mills of the 1820s. The house also contains three examples of the Rumford fireplace. Other historic buildings include:[5]
James M. Lawrence founded Harrowsmith magazine in Camden East in 1976; it was sold to Telemedia in 1988 and relocated to Toronto in the early 1990s. Lawrence also founded Equinox magazine and the publishing company Camden House Publishing Ltd in Camden East.[6] The Harrowsmith headquarters was in the Williams house while Harrowsmith Bookstore was, for many years, located in the limestone building that used to be Haydon's General Store.
A tornado cut through the town in the mid afternoon of the 2nd of August 2020, damaging property, destroying dozens of trees, and ripping the roof off the former bank building that had been housing the daycare and post office.[7]