Brantford likes to boast that it has the "best blooming
streets" in Canada.
One reason for the profusion of flowered gardens is the mild
climate. Brantford is tucked between the Great Lakes which
act like a huge, automatic climate control. In summer, the
Great Lakes absorb heat keeping the air temperature cool. In
winter, they give the heat back by warming frigid air blowing
in from the north and west.
Brantford has grown up gracefully from beginning as a mill
town serving surrounding farms. Its shaded streets of well-maintained
red-brick homes make Brantford a cultural anchor in a sea of
economic and social change.
Another of its proud claims is the conception of the telephone
in 1874 by a resident teacher of the deaf, Alexander Graham
Bell. While Bell actually made and first tried his device while
living in the United States, Brantford boasts that he developed
the idea at the Bell family homestead, the city's best-known
tourist attraction.
Rapid economic growth and immigration have changed the physical
appearance and cultural definition of southern Ontario. Brantford,
while prospering from that development and enrichment, is unique
in retaining the visual character of old Ontario, neat, sure
of itself, and in no great hurry to change. Brantford's Loyalist
roots are still firmly in place.
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