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Hiram Capron

Hiram Capron
Reeve of Paris
In office
1850 – 1851
In office
1854 – 1855
Personal details
Born February 12, 1796
Leicester, Vermont
Died September 10, 1872
Paris, Ontario
Spouse(s) Mary De Long Capron

Hiram Capron (February 12, 1796 – September 10, 1872) was the founder of the town of Paris in Ontario, Canada, which was incorporated in 1849. An immigrant from the United States, he purchased large plots of land by the Grand River and Nith River which he settled and developed.

Capron was born and raised in the town of Leicester, Vermont in 1796 to a family of farmers. Upon reaching adulthood, he briefly worked at an instructor at a ladies' academy before moving to New York to work for an iron-founder named Theophilus Short. Short owned a number of iron blast furnaces in the area of Shortsville, and he employed Capron as a bookkeeper. Some time later, about 1821, Capron began investigating establishing his own blast furnace and, with a few business associates, he purchased a plot of land in Norfolk County by Lake Erie and erected a new blast furnace in 1822. By 1823 the furnace was operational and Capron was traveling the province selling ironware. At this time he revoked his American citizenship in order to swear an oath to the crown of England.

In 1823, Capron passed through the area then known as The Forks of the Grand River where he met a man named William Holme. At this time, most of the land which now makes up Paris belonged to Holme; the region was mostly undeveloped, but included a small plaster mill which likely indicated to Capron the area's economic value. While the two men conducted no business on this occasion, Capron was eventually able to buy the land from Holme and in 1829 prepared to move to his new home.

Once he had moved to the Forks of the Grand River, Capron set about clearing the land and dividing it into lots. He began leasing it to settlers in order to encourage the growth of a community. He also undertook the development of Governor's Road, the Paris branch of the Dundas Street highway, in order to permit trade and further enhance the growth of the village. When the village had grown enough to sustain industry, Capron began developing his land along the Nith and Grand Rivers into raceways to supply water power, which would eventually form the basis of the town's manufacturing industry.


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