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Mason Cogswell's Wagonyard / Weigh
Scales
Mason Cogswell (1818-1893) operated a wagonyard at this
corner c.1850. Wagon and barrel making were two main industries
associated with a milling-agricultural village. It was not uncommon
to see wagons lined up past this point until after dark, waiting
their turn at Thorne's Mill in the valley to the north.
Mason Cogswell is buried in the Thornhill Cemetery with his wife
and six children, two of whom died before their second birthday and
four who died between the ages of twenty and twenty-four, likely
victims of the epidemics of cholera and small pox that swept
through the village, the worst being in the winter of
1874. Weigh
Scales Weigh
scales near this location, in the early part of this century, were
usually operated by the nearby postmaster or storekeeper. Farmers
on their way to Toronto could weigh their produce or hay prior to
sale in the city markets. Toronto's considerable horse population
required a large supply of hay and grain. The short weighing stop
afforded rest for the driver as well as an opportunity for small
children to snatch a fistful of hay or grain for their rabbits or
other pets.
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