When
Leamington was incorporated as a village in 1876,
it was a crossroads hamlet with about 300 residents
and was known for its lumber products rather than
its tomatoes. There were several docks, and fish were
plentiful in Lake Erie... so much so that sturgeon
could be speared from the shore and fish was about
the cheapest food around.
A settler named Peter Conover owned 170 acres along
the shoreline and called it Seacliff Farm. He later
set aside 20 acres and offered it to the municipality
as a park. Surprisingly, his first offer was declined,
but Leamington voters finally said "Yes" to Seacliff
Park in 1907.
The records are sketchy about when a hotel was first
built nearby, but a clapboard structure named the
Erie House existed before the turn of the century.
It may have been destroyed by fire, but there's no
doubt that an establishment named the Dew Drop Inn
arose near the docks and used to be a favourite haunt
of sailors.
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