Part II
- Flar, did an exceptional job picturing the decay of a town that 10 years ago was full of life. I got married in wallaceburg in 1996, and purchased our 1st house in wallaceburg in 1997 moving from London back to Wallaceburg.
Our house was 25 years old 1 story 1000 sq feet nice size lot, we paid $ 78,000 including all appliances. At that time if you went to the store at 11pm you could see lots off traffic, shift changes at the factories kept the streets busy for a small town.
In 1999 we decided to upgrade our house we sold our little house for $ 85,000 and purchased a 2000 sq foot 1 story house for $121,000. Well over the next 5 years the town started spinning in a downwirl spinn. Wallaceburg is or was an automobile spinn off facilty, making springs, moulds, amoung many other parts for the auto manufacturers. As the free trade began to develop and the asian and mexican markets began to florish, little by little was taken away from small towns.
By now it was 2004, we had a little girl and the town was getting more and more depressed. Many of the people I went to school with disappeared to other parts of Canada. Atleast anyone who was educated or had a trade. My wife had an opportunity at the time to take a new job in Kingston, so we took a leap of faith and sold our home for the same price we purchased it for, even know we put well over $ 20,000 in improvements and blood sweet and tears. But it sold fast which is all we wanted since some properties where on the market for a year or longer.
Since we left the town began to spin further down, the only department store in the town Zellers closed the doors. Leaving people with a 30 or 40 minute commute to buy a new toaster.
To update Flar's posting
Job losses:
Name, Employees (1990), Current Status
Waltec, 652, all three plants
closed
Eaton Yale, 603, became Oxford Automotive and then closed
North American Plastics, 515, closed
Libbey St. Clair Glass, 427, closed
Benn Iron Foundary, 419, still operating as WABCO
St. Clair Tool & Die, 400, two factories closed, but HQ still in Wallaceburg
Accurcast, 323,
closed
Nestle Foods, 234, closed
H.E. Vannatter Tool & Die, 135,
open
Solus Tool & Die, 130,
open i think
Hillerich & Bradsby, 100, still operating
Venture Industries, 100, closed
Aar-Kel Moulds, 73, closing
Five Star Tool & Die, 52,
open
Mylar 2 Moulds, 52,
Under Receiver ship
Active Burgess, 50,
Closed
Flar, What is your date of birth maybe I know you?
Now the town has basically bottomed out. Walmart did come into town and did give people employment, the town is turning into a retirement town. It has potential and alot of beautiful spots that are not depicted on Flars photos. There are lots of water ways that travell through the town of wallaceburg, that flow into st.clair river and into 2 great lakes. You are basically 10 minutes to michigan, 30 minutes to new baltimore michigan some of the best shopping. 1 hour 15 minutes to Windor Ont, 1 hour 30 minutes to London On, 40 Minutes to Sarnia, 30 Minutes to Chatham. You can buy a really nice house for $ 100,000 which would cost $500,000 in Toronto.
Property taxes are lower about $ 1200 for a $ 100,000 home. For $ 300,00o you can buy a beatiful place on the water.
http://www.riversite.com/Pages/Water Property/St. Clair Parkway.htm
Screw the muskokas how about a beatiful island property basically a 3 hour drive from Toronto.
http://www.riversite.com/Pages/Water Property/Fawn Island.htm
THis is what you get for $ 100, Grand In Wallaceburg!
http://www.riversite.com/Pages/Residential/100,000 to 140,000.htm