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Seaton Neighbourhood Planning - City of Pickering

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From this listing and assessment it is clear that significant built heritage<br />

resources are found on both sides <strong>of</strong> the corridor from just east <strong>of</strong> the<br />

hamlet (within the HCD) to the corridor’s easterly limit. Although these<br />

resources relate to farmsteads and are therefore widely spaced, there<br />

are some concentrations <strong>of</strong> significant buildings. Clusters appear near the<br />

intersections <strong>of</strong> Sidelines with the corridor. The most important <strong>of</strong> these<br />

clusters involves properties in the immediate vicinity <strong>of</strong> Whitevale Road<br />

and Sideline 28 (Nos. 72, 73, 74 and 76). Another cluster is in the vicinity<br />

<strong>of</strong> Sideline 26 as it crosses the corridor (Nos.10, 11, 66, 69) and another<br />

near the intersection <strong>of</strong> Sideline 24 (Nos. 7, 8, 17, 18).<br />

S I G N I F I C A N T B H F s E A S T O F W H I T E V A L E W I T H I N T H E H C D<br />

#615 (76) - Henry Major House<br />

1 storey frame (1820s) and stone addition (1850s) and frame barn (1850); ORC Heritage Property, house and<br />

barn CRs<br />

#650 (75)<br />

1.5 storey frame house (1860); ORC no heritage value*<br />

Page 12<br />

<strong>Seaton</strong> <strong>Neighbourhood</strong> <strong>Planning</strong> Review: Whitevale Road Heritage Corridor Review

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