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To celebrate our 125 years of rich history, we must first understand our beginnings.
Let's step back to the year 1886. In the lively town of Berlin, as Kitchener was known then, a group of interested merchants and manufacturers met to discuss the town's welfare, to maintain its status as the "most rapidly growing and liveliest town West of Toronto." This meeting led to the formation of the Berlin Board of Trade. President John Fennell, a local hardware merchant, was ready, according to an article in The Globe, to "run the race for business and commercial superiority."
And so the race - and the beginning of the Chamber's 125-year story - began...
The Berlin Board of Trade, which later became the Kitchener Chamber of Commerce, established itself as a significant business voice through many early projects: initiating the municipal ownership of the Berlin and Waterloo street Railway company, studying a system of "cheap telephones," campaigning for free mail delivery service, and calling for a new industrial policy.
Four years later, in the neighbouring town of Waterloo, Julius Roos and Mayor George Moore organized another public meeting of town business people, and the Waterloo Board of Trade, later to become the Waterloo Chamber of Commerce, was born.
As in Berlin, The Waterloo Board of Trade's early contributions to the town were significant. Under the leadership of president Christian Kumpf, the group campaigned to purchase Jacob Eby's farm to create Waterloo Park; sought William Lyon Mackezie King's help to establish a post office and federal building; and arranged for the town to donate 5 acres of land and purchase a house on Albert street, securing a home for what is now Wilfrid Laurier University.
In 1895, the village of Elmira followed suit and established the Elmira Board of Trade, under the leadership of President Dr. Ullyot, which later became the Elmira and District Chamber of Commerce. Their early meetings in the Elmira library began their role in promoting the progress of "Enterprising Elmira" and the surrounding district. The Board of Trade supported early and diverse industry, from felt companies and shirt manufacturers to dairies, shoe manufacturers and tanneries. As in Berlin and Waterloo, Elmira's industrial legacy began a long lineage of family names, entrepreneurship and community leadership, such as Martin Feed Mills and Seiling Hatcheries.
Although they began at different times, were made up of different members, and served different communities, there were many similarities among the different Boards of Trades that eventually formed today's Greater Kitchener Waterloo Chamber of Commerce. Read on...