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Mayor Drew Dilkens


Windsor, Ontario
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A visit to historic Sandwich First Baptist Church

Monday, October 18, 2021 2:13 pm

A visit to historic Sandwich First Baptist Church
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  • Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens speaks with Lana Talbot, heritage coordinator for the Sandwich First Baptist Church, about the important role the church played in the abolitionist movement and the efforts by the congregation to raise funds to build an Underground Railroad museum on site.

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    Recognized as one of Canada’s most diverse and multicultural communities, the City of Windsor was developed on land that is the traditional territory of the Anishnaabeg people of the Three Fires Confederacy (Ojibwe, Potawatomi, and Odawa). Before Europeans arrived, the land along the Detroit River was referred to as Wawiiatanong by the Indigenous populations. Due to Windsor’s unique location along the Detroit River many different groups have called this area home including: Haudenosaunee, Attawandaron (Neutral), and Huron (Wyandot) peoples. Today, many indigenous people and Métis across Turtle Island call this area home.

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