A railway point called "Tara Siding" is south of the community on the opposite bank of the Sauble River.[7] It was created in 1855 by the building of the Stratford and Huron Railway, and abandoned 1993.
History
Richard Berford and John Hamilton were the first European settlers to move onto and survey the lots of the future village of Tara in 1851. The opening of the road from Southampton to Owen Sound in 1852 helped the early growth of the community, as the village is located approximately half-way in between the two larger towns. Shortly after, Hamilton opened a hotel, serving the incoming settlers of the surrounding townships.[8] A post-office opened in 1862 with the name, Eblana, however it was changed the following year to Tara, after a town in County Meath, Ireland which served as the seat of Irish royalty.[9] In 1880, the local newspaper, The Tara Leader was first published, and the following year the railroad was built to the community and the first locomotive arrived.[10]
In 1855, a sawmill opened by H. W. M. Richards, becoming the first manufacturing industry; a grist mill was added to it in 1857. Two years later, a large foundry and agricultural implement works was started by W. A. Gerolamy. Other earlier businesses included a steam sawmill, a woolen mill and a potash factory. The first post office opened in 1862. The railway reached Tara in October 1881. The village never did become a major manufacturing centre.[11]
A historic plaque at Tara reads:
Soon after the survey of Arran Township was completed in 1851. John Hamilton and Richard Berford, early settlers in the area, located here along the Sauble River. The opening of the Owen Sound Post road stimulated the growth of a small community and in 1858 Berford registered a village plan. Situated in a rich agricultural region with abundant water power, the settlement developed quickly. By 1861 it contained saw and grist mills, a foundry producing agricultural implements, wagon works and a tannery, and the following year a post office was established. Tara became a thriving commercial and manufacturing centre and, in anticipation of the arrival of the Stratford and Huron Railway, it was incorporated as a village by a county by-law effective January 1, 1881.[12]
Demographics
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Tara had a population of 1,119 living in 462 of its 476 total private dwellings, a change of -1.7% from its 2016 population of 1,138. With a land area of 2.4 km2 (0.93 sq mi), it had a population density of 466.3/km2 (1,207.6/sq mi) in 2021.[13]
Arts and culture
The Arran-Tara Agricultural Society holds an annual fair, the Arran-Tara Fall Fair; it was first held in 1858.[14]
The Tara Santa Claus Parade is held every year on the first weekend of December.
Christ Anglican Church, affiliated with the Anglican Church of Canada; part of the Diocese of Huron, Parish of Chesley, Tara, Paisley, Desboro and Walter's Falls; located at 102 Bruce County Rd 17
Cornerstone Presbyterian Church, affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in Canada; formed in 2008 by the amalgamation of Knox Presbyterian in Tara and the Presbyterian church in the nearby community of Allenford.[16]
Glad Tidings Mennonite Fellowship Church
Education
Tara's elementary school is the Arran-Tara Elementary School, part of the Bluewater District School Board; there are no secondary or Catholic separate schools in Tara.[17]
^Elevation taken at geographic coordinates from Google Maps. Accessed 2017-03-17.
^ ab"Designated places: Ontario". Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, and designated places, 2006 and 2001 censuses - 100% data. Statistics Canada. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
^"Village of Tara". Electric Scotland. Alastair McIntyre. 2015. Retrieved 4 March 2017. From the book History of the County of Bruce, Ontario, Canada, by Norman Robertson (1906)
^"B Company". Bruce County Museum & Cultural Centre. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
References
Robertson, Norman (1971) [First published in 1960]. The History of the County of Bruce (3rd ed.). Owen Sound: Bruce County Historical Society; Richardson, Bond, and Wright. OCLC16980677.