Leeds County is a historic county in the Canadian province of Ontario. The county was first surveyed in 1792 as one of the nineteen counties created by Sir John Graves Simcoe in preparation for the United Empire Loyalists to settle here. The county took its name from Francis Osborne, 5th Duke of Leeds;

In 1798, the Parliament of Upper Canada withdrew parts of Leeds and Grenville to form Carleton County and the three counties together were constituted as Johnstown District, effective at the beginning of 1800. Leeds consisted of the following townships:

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The townships of

  • Elizabethtown
  • Yonge and Escott
  • Landsdowne
  • Leeds
  • Crosby
  • Bastard
  • Burgess
  • Elmsley
  • Kitley

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In 1838, the parts of the townships of Burgess and Elmsley north of the Rideau Canal were withdrawn from Leeds and transferred to Lanark County.

When the Johnstown District was abolished in 1850, Leeds County was united with Grenville County to form the United Counties of Leeds and Grenville.

Municipal restructuring

  • 1998:
  • The townships of Bastard, North Crosby, South Burgess, South Crosby and South Elmsley amalgamated to become Rideau Lakes Township.
  • The townships of Lansdowne, Leeds, and most of Escott (the southern portion) amalgamated to become Leeds and the Thousand Islands Township.
  • 2001:
  • The townships of Elizabethtown and Kitley amalgamated to become Elizabethtown-Kitley Township.
  • The northern portions of Escott and Yonge Townships amalgamated to become Athens Township.
  • The southern portion of Yonge Township became Front of Yonge Township.

See also

  • List of Ontario census divisions
  • List of townships in Ontario
  • Leeds and Grenville County
  • Brockville, Ontario

References

  • 1951 map of Leeds County