Bowmanville Family Law and Divorce Lawyer
The History of Bowmanville
Bowmanville is the largest community in the Municipality of Clarington in Durham Region, Ontario, Canada.
The population of Bowmanville is approximately 31,380.
The history of Bowmanville is quite interesting.
Settlers were attracted to the area by the farmland, and creeks for water mills, first (including one still standing, now called Vanstone’s Mill) at Bowmanville (originally Barber) Creek, at the present-day intersection of King Street and Scugog St., from which businesses and housing spread east, and later on Soper Creek (including another still standing as the municipality’s Visual Arts Centre).
The lands which would later become Bowmanville were first purchased by Jeff Bowman, who later sold it to Lewis Lewis. Lewis opened the first store in what was then called Darlington Mills. The store was purchased in about 1824 by Jeffrey Robert Earl Bowman (for whom the town was eventually named) who then established the first post office. [1].
The success of the Vanstone Mill, fueled by the machinery of the Crown’s land grant program, led to the rapid expansion of the Bowmanville settlement in the early years of the 19th century. Under the generous yet discriminate eyes of wealthy local merchants such as John Simpson and Charles Bowman, small properties would often be sold to promote settlement and small business. The town soon developed a balanced economy; all the while gradually establishing itself as a moderate player in shipping, rail transport, metal works and common minor business (including tanneries, liveries, stables and everyday mercantile commodity exchange).
By the time of Confederation, Bowmanville was a vital, prosperous and growing town, home to a largely Scots-Presbyterian community with all manner of farmer, working, and professional class making the town their home. With local economic stability and accessible, abundant land available for the construction of housing, the town soon sported several new Churches, each designated to house both Free and Auld Kirk, Anglican and Protestant congregations, including the Bible Christian Church, later to be a major stream of Canadian Methodism.
At present, St. John’s Anglican Church. St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, St. Paul’s United Church and the impressively ornate Trinity United Church (site of an old Auld Kirk church) still serve the community. All of these edifices, quite appropriately, line or are in close proximity to present-day Church Street.
Local business organized and modernized nicely in the 20th century, with the Dominion Organ and Piano factory, the Bowmanville Foundry, and the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company (1910) all providing steady work for Bowmanville’s ever-growing working populations. Goodyear even went so far as to provide affordable housing for its employees, and present day Carlisle Ave. (built by magnanimous Goodyear president W.C. Carlisle) in the 1910s still stands as one of Ontario’s best preserved examples of industrial housing. The land on which the Bowmanville Hospital was built was donated by J.W. Alexander, the owner of the then-prospering Dominion Organ and Piano factory.
Formal education evolved in-step with Ryersonian philosophies of the day, and the advent of the Central Public School (1889) and the Bowmanville High School (1890), (both designed by Whitby architect A.A. Post) were the finishing touches to the town that was a model of then-Ontario Premier Oliver Mowat’s philosophy of education, expansion and innovation for the citizens of the province.
The 20th century saw a steady rise in the construction of area schools, with Vincent Massey P.S. (1955); Waverley P.S. (1978); Dr. Ross Tilley P.S. (1993); John M. James P.S. (1999) and Harold Longworth P.S. (2003) all accommodating gradual population increases and building developments in specific demographic areas of the town. The local school board (Northumberland/Newcastle)was amalgamated with neighboring Peterborough jurisdictions to form the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board in 1997.
As the town grew and prospered, so arrived Bowmanville’s grand era of architectural building and refinement. Many excellently maintained specimens of Italianate, Gothic Revival, Colonial Brick and Queen Anne architecture line the central aspect of Bowmanville’s oldest neighborhood, and this contributes to the present-day attractiveness and sense of history that the old town radiates so nicely.
Much of Bowmanville’s residential and commercial architectural heritage was either lost or threatened by demolition and modern development from 1950-1980, but a 25 year renaissance in appreciation and awareness (led largely by local historians and LACAC members) helped to preserve the precious remnants of days gone by.
Bowmanville was incorporated as a village in 1852 and as a town in 1858. In 1974, the municipality was amalgamated with Clarke Township and Darlington Township to form the Town of Newcastle as part of the municipal restructuring that created the Regional Municipality of Durham from Ontario. Newcastle was renamed Clarington in 1993.
Housing developments arrived in the 1950s around Bowmanville and did not boom until the 1970s in the northern portion and lasted into the late-20th century and continues to this day. Developers include Halminen, Greenpark, Melody Homes and Tribute, Baywood among others. Luxury homes are about 4 km north of Bowmanville. The population rose to about 10,000 in the 1970s, about 20,000 in the 1980s, about 25,000 in the 1990s and today is about 30,000. In the 1980s, Highway 401 was later expanded to six lanes from four and later Highway 2 added another two lanes west of Bowmanville. Some have referred to this as the “lane-era” of Bowmanville.
As a family law and divorce lawyer, Thomas O’Malley is committed to helping spouses living in Bowmanville solve their family law and divorce legal problems.
Call the Family Law Office of Thomas O’Malley at 905-434-8837 to set up your appointment or consultation today.

