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Nobleton, Ontario
View on WikipediaNobleton (2021 population 6,507)[2] is an unincorporated community in southwestern King, Ontario, Canada. It is the third-largest community in the township, after King City and Schomberg. Located south of the Oak Ridges Moraine, Nobleton is surrounded by hills and forests. Many horse farms are found on Nobleton's eastern periphery.
Key Information
It is located between King City and Bolton along King Road, and directly north of Kleinburg along Highway 27. To the northwest is Hammertown.
Geography
[edit]Nobleton is at an elevation of approximately 300 m, just south of the regional peak of the Oak Ridges Moraine.
The Humber River flows in the southwestern part with a conservation area covering the southwest.
The Oak Ridges Moraine is to the north and is covered with pine forests with a few other types of trees and lakes to the north and the northeast. Nobleton Lakes is located nearly 2 to 3 km north and includes two lakes and a golf and Country Club. Forests are scattered throughout Nobleton's valleys to the east and into the southeastern portion. The farmlands lie to the west, south, east, and sporadically to the north.
History
[edit]Nobleton was first settled in 1812, primarily based on its location midway between King City and Bolton on the east–west route, and Kleinburg and Schomberg on the north–south route. Taverns and hotels were built to serve travellers, and general stores and a post office were built to serve the fledgling businesses. The board and batten blacksmith shop originally built in Nobleton in the 1850s was moved to Black Creek Pioneer Village.[3]
The village takes its name from Joseph Noble, an early settler of the town, and local tavern keeper.
The slow urbanization of Nobleton began in the 1950s and the 1960s, with development of portions of the village's southwest. Housing developments began in the northern part of the village in the 1990s and 2000s, and accelerated in recent years after construction of a new wastewater system.
Demographics
[edit]As of the 2021 census, the top three ethnic groups in Nobleton are Italian (3,120; 47.6%), which is the most concentrated population in Canada, English (470; 7.2%), and Canadian (430; 6.6%).[4]
Business
[edit]The town contains two main business plazas, one of which was completed in the summer of 2015, the other one finished in the winter of 2020 (January). The town also has many small businesses owned by locals.
King Brewery, which was founded in 2002, was based in Nobleton. King Brewery was purchased in 2015 by Thornbury Beverages Company (now Thornbury Village Craft Cider & Beer) and relocated to Thornbury, Ontario.
Politics
[edit]Nobleton is represented on King Township council by Ward 2 Councillor Dave Boyd.
Education and community centres
[edit]
The town is served by both public and Catholic separate schools for elementary and junior-age children. In the public system, Nobleton Public School and high school students attend King Secondary in King City.
Nobleton also offers the community an accredited Montessori private school. The Montessori Country School has been a part of the town for over 25 years.
Pre-high school Catholic children attend St. Mary Catholic School and high school students attend Cardinal Carter in Aurora.
Dr. William Laceby Community Centre has a large regulation size ice rink.
Local services
[edit]Nobleton Fire Station 38 provides fire suppression for the area and part of King Township Fire Services. Policing is provided by York Regional Police. York Region EMS provides ambulance services.
References
[edit]- "Nobleton, Ontario (Code 1071) Census Profile". 2011 census. Government of Canada - Statistics Canada. 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-25.
- "Population and Dwelling Counts and Population Rank, for Canada, Provinces and Territories, and Urban Areas, 2001 Census - 100% Data". 2001 Census. Statistics Canada. Retrieved 2006-06-29.
- "Nobleton, ON". Community Demographics. Industry Canada. Archived from the original on 2007-06-04. Retrieved 2006-06-29.
- "Nobleton [Population centre], Ontario and Ontario [Province]". Census Profile, 2016 Census. Statistics Canada. 8 February 2016. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
Notes
[edit]- ^ "LIVE: Nobleton newcomer fires up King Township council, incumbents win handily in other wards". 27 October 2014. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
- ^ a b "Nobleton, Ontario (Population Centre)". Census Profile, Canada 2021 Census. Statistics Canada. 9 February 2022. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
- ^ Mika, Mike; Mika, Helma; Thompson, Gary (2000). Black Creek Pioneer Village: Toronto's Living History Village. Dundurn. ISBN 1896219640.
- ^ "Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population Profile table". Statistics Canada. October 26, 2022. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
External links
[edit]Nobleton, Ontario
View on GrokipediaNobleton is an unincorporated community and population centre in King Township, York Region, Ontario, Canada, founded around 1812 and named for Joseph Noble, an early settler who operated a local store and tavern.[1][2]
Situated in the southwestern quadrant of the township, bisected by King Road and Highway 27, it spans approximately 8.6 square kilometres with a population density of 758 persons per square kilometre.[3][4]
As of the 2021 Canadian census, Nobleton had 6,507 residents, reflecting a 32.1 percent increase from 2016 amid ongoing development in the Greater Toronto Area's rural periphery.[5][6]
The community is characterized by its rural setting amid rolling hills, forests, and horse farms, supporting a primarily residential economy with over 135 local businesses, including golf courses, grocery stores, and educational institutions.[3]
Nobleton ranks as the third-largest settlement in York Region after King City and Schomberg, with a median age of 38.4 years and notable growth driven by proximity to urban centres.[7][5]
Geography
Location and Topography
Nobleton is an unincorporated community in the southwest quadrant of King Township, York Region, Ontario, Canada.[3] It is situated approximately 42 kilometres north of downtown Toronto by road.[8] The community is bisected by King Road and Highway 27, with its boundaries spanning from the 8th Concession to the 10th Concession, extending north to the 15th Sideroad and south of King Road.[3] Geographic coordinates place it at approximately 43°54′N latitude and 79°39′W longitude.[9] Topographically, Nobleton lies south of the Oak Ridges Moraine and immediately north of the Humber River, which delineates much of its southern edge.[10] The terrain features prominent rolling hills, with an average elevation of 264 metres above sea level.[11] These hills, influenced by glacial deposits from the nearby moraine, support surrounding horse farms, pine forests, and agricultural fields that define the area's rural landscape.[3][10] The undulating topography provides natural drainage patterns and contributes to the region's scenic and equestrian-oriented environment.[3]Climate and Environment
Nobleton lies within the humid continental climate zone classified as Dfb under the Köppen system, characterized by cold, snowy winters and warm, humid summers without a pronounced dry season.[12] Average January temperatures hover around -5°C, with lows occasionally dropping below -15°C during cold snaps, while July averages reach 22°C, with highs up to 28°C on peak days.[13] Annual precipitation totals approximately 850 mm, distributed fairly evenly but with peaks in summer months like June, which sees about 90 mm and a 39% chance of daily rain; snowfall accumulates to around 120-150 cm per winter season.[14] Recent observations indicate a 1.1°C rise in average annual temperatures over the past 30 years in the surrounding York Region, accompanied by more frequent extreme events such as flash floods and heat waves.[15] The local environment features rolling hills, forests, and wetlands influenced by proximity to the Oak Ridges Moraine, a significant geological formation just north of Nobleton that serves as a major aquifer recharge area supplying groundwater to the Greater Toronto Area and supporting diverse habitats.[16] Although Nobleton sits south of the moraine's core ridge, the area's topography includes glacial deposits contributing to permeable soils and streams that feed into regional watersheds.[17] Key natural assets include the adjacent Cold Creek Conservation Area, spanning over 400 hectares west of the community, which preserves rare ecological elements such as a mixed coniferous swamp forest with black spruce trees uncommon to southern Ontario, alongside Carolinian forests, meadows, and over 7 km of trails for wildlife observation.[18] This area hosts diverse flora and fauna, including protected species, and functions to mitigate flooding while enhancing biodiversity amid ongoing pressures from urbanization and climate variability.[19] Conservation efforts under the Oak Ridges Moraine Conservation Plan restrict development to protect these hydrologic and biotic functions, emphasizing the moraine's role in filtering water and sustaining ecosystems vulnerable to habitat fragmentation.[17]History
Early Settlement and Founding
Nobleton, located in the Township of King, Ontario, emerged as a settlement around 1812, driven by its strategic position at the intersection of key rural routes, including the 9th Concession and the King Sideroad (now 15th Sideroad), midway between larger hamlets like King City and Bolton.[1][20] This crossroads facilitated early trade and travel, attracting initial pioneers to the fertile lands of York County, which had been surveyed for settlement following the establishment of Upper Canada. The area's topography, with gently rolling hills and proximity to the Humber River watershed, supported rudimentary agriculture and milling, though the hamlet remained small and agrarian-focused in its formative years.[21] The community derived its name from Joseph Noble, a prominent early settler who established a homestead, general store, and tavern at the northeast corner of Lot 5, Concession 9, serving as a vital hub for travelers and locals.[22][23] Noble, arriving among the first wave of migrants to the township, capitalized on the location's role in north-south and east-west pathways linking Kleinburg and Schomberg, which predated formal road improvements.[20] By 1820, the settlement had grown sufficiently to warrant its first log schoolhouse on Lot 2, Concession 9, reflecting basic communal infrastructure amid sparse population.[22] Early inhabitants, primarily of British descent, engaged in subsistence farming, with land grants from the Crown encouraging clearing of oak-dominated forests for cultivation.[24] Settlement patterns followed broader York County trends, where Loyalist and post-War of 1812 immigrants sought affordable acreage away from urban pressures in York (now Toronto).[1] Joseph Noble's enterprise not only anchored the hamlet's identity but also underscored the causal role of commercial nodes in nucleating rural communities, as taverns and stores reduced isolation for scattered farmsteads.[2] No formal incorporation occurred in this era; Nobleton functioned as an unincorporated crossroads village under township oversight, with growth constrained by limited transportation until later sideroad developments.[25]Industrial and Agricultural Development
Early settlers in Nobleton established primarily agricultural operations following the hamlet's founding around 1812, with land grants supporting farming activities amid the rolling hills and fertile soils of King Township.[1] Families such as the Pringles acquired multiple farm properties in the area during the 19th century, transitioning some descendants into related trades like carpentry while maintaining agrarian roots.[26] Specific holdings included Martin Snider's property, procured from the Crown in 1843, and Aaron Cody's farm, later sold and exemplifying the patchwork of family-operated lands that defined local sustenance.[24] Agricultural practices evolved to leverage the region's topography, incorporating vegetable cultivation, nursery production, and tree farming, which remain prominent in King Township's over 41,000 acres of farmland across 239 operations.[27] By the late 20th century, Nobleton's periphery developed into a hub for equine activities, featuring world-class horse farms and prize-winning cattle operations that capitalized on the area's scenic valleys and pastures.[28] These sectors, including the equine industry, continue to underpin the local economy, with ancillary support from agricultural societies like the King Township Fair, which historically rotated through Nobleton to showcase livestock and produce.[29] Industrial development in Nobleton remained limited historically, lacking large-scale manufacturing or extractive operations such as quarries, in contrast to nearby hamlets with mills or tanneries.[22] Early economic activity centered on small-scale services tied to agriculture, including a shoemaker's shop integrated into farm operations and general stores, rather than independent factories or heavy industry.[23] This rural character persisted, with the township's agricultural sector employing about 6% of the labor force and prioritizing land preservation over industrialization.[27]Post-War Suburbanization and Modern Growth
Following the end of World War II, Nobleton experienced initial suburban expansion in the 1950s and 1960s, primarily through the development of housing in the village's southwest quadrant, shifting from predominantly agricultural land use to residential subdivisions.[22] This period introduced characteristic mid-century homes, including ranch-style bungalows and split-level designs concentrated in the core area, reflecting broader Canadian suburban trends driven by postwar economic prosperity and proximity to Toronto's expanding commuter belt.[30] Further residential growth occurred in the 1990s with subdivisions in the northern portions of the community, increasing density while preserving much of its rural character amid King Township's agricultural preservation policies.[22] By 2016, Nobleton's population reached approximately 5,700 residents, growing to 6,507 by the 2021 census as a designated population centre within the township.[31] [32] In the modern era, growth has remained controlled under York Region's official plans, with projections estimating an increase to 6,750 residents by 2031, representing a modest annual rate of about 0.7% amid emphasis on infill development and infrastructure limits in the village core.[31] Township strategies, including neighbourhood plans for Nobleton adopted in recent years, prioritize sustainable expansion tied to local services like the community centre and library, while accommodating spillover from Greater Toronto Area urbanization without large-scale boundary expansions.[33] This approach has sustained Nobleton's appeal as a semi-rural enclave, with housing trends favoring renovations of existing stock over rapid new builds.[30]Demographics
Population Statistics
As of the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Nobleton, designated as a population centre, had a total population of 6,507.[5] This marked an increase from 4,614 residents recorded in the 2016 Census, reflecting a growth of 41.0 percent over the five-year period.[34] The 2016 figure itself represented an 80.7 percent rise from 2,554 in the 2011 Census, indicating accelerated expansion in the preceding decade.[34]| Census Year | Population | Percentage Change from Previous Census |
|---|---|---|
| 2011 | 2,554 | - |
| 2016 | 4,614 | +80.7% |
| 2021 | 6,507 | +41.0% |
