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Huron and University
* Huron University, a former institution in South Dakota
* Huron University College, a confederated college of the University of Western Ontario
* Clarke Historical Library, Central Michigan University, Bibliography on Huron County
Huron is the home of the Huron Playhouse, once a division of the Bowling Green State University Department of Theatre and Film, is now an independent non-profit corporation.
Huron was the home of now-defunct Huron University ( known in its later years as Si Tanka University ) since 1897.
The university was founded in 1878 as the Western University of London, Ontario, a denominational school of the Church of England, by Bishop Isaac Hellmuth and the Anglican Diocese of Huron.
The university was founded on 7 March 1878 by Bishop Isaac Hellmuth ( 1817 – 1901 ) of the Anglican Diocese of Huron as " The Western University of London Ontario.
" It incorporated Huron University College, which had been founded in 1863.
The university also is affiliated with three university colleges, Brescia University College, Huron University College and King's University College.
His paternal grandfather, Verschoyle Cronyn, was the son of the Right Reverend Benjamin Cronyn, an Anglican cleric of the Anglo-Irish Protestant Ascendancy, who served as first bishop of the Anglican diocese of Huron, and founder of Huron College, from which grew the University of Western Ontario.
He then attended Huron College in South Dakota and transferred to Rutgers University after one year.
** Huron University College
Since 2004, the two buildings on the southern side, at numbers 46 and 47, are occupied by the Huron University USA in London.

Huron and USA
* Blue Water Bridge, which links Port Huron, Michigan, USA to Sarnia, Ontario, Canada
The Blue Water Bridge is a twin-span international bridge across the St. Clair River that links Port Huron, Michigan, USA and Sarnia, Ontario, Canada.
The community is situated next to Highway 402 between London and the border to Port Huron, Michigan, USA at Sarnia, Ontario.

Huron and London
By 1838, there were twenty districts: Bathurst, Brock, Colbourne, Dalhousie, Eastern, Gore, Home, Huron, Johnstown, London, Midland, Newcastle, Niagara, Ottawa, Prince Edward, Simcoe, Talbot, Victoria, Wellington, and Western.
** New London Township, Huron County, Ohio
New London is a village in Huron County, Ohio, United States.
Privately published 71 page booklet available at St. Marys Museum and St. Marys Library, St. Marys, Ontario, Huron County Library, Ontario ; Middlesex County Library, Ontario ; London Public Library, Ontario ; Dorset County Library, England.
Originally founded in London, Ontario in 1864 as Huron and Erie Savings and Loan Society, Canada Trust was a trust company that offered the same services as a bank.
The Saugeen Complex was a Native American culture located around the southeast shores of Lake Huron and the Bruce Peninsula, around the London area, and possibly as far east as the Grand River.
Local businessmen in London, Ontario, in 1864, founded it, as the Huron & Erie Loan and Savings Company.
Of the 600 Canadian Important Bird Areas only seven report the Red-headed Woodpecker in their area: Cabot Head, Ontario on the Georgian Bay side of the tip of Bruce Peninsula ; Carden Plain, Ontario east of Lake Simcoe ; Long Point Peninsula and Marshes, Ontario along Lake Erie near London, Ontario ; Point Abino, Ontario on Lake Erie near Niagara Falls ; Port Franks Forested Dunes, Ontario northeast of Sarnia on Lake Huron ; Kinosota / Leifur, Manitoba at the northwest side of Lake Manitoba south of the Narrows and east of Riding Mountain National Park ; and along South Saskatchewan River from Empress, Alberta to Lancer Ferry in Saskatchewan.
As a result, significant sections of GTR mainlines in Canada and Grand Trunk Western routes the U. S. are still in active use by Canadian National ( CN ) today, particularly the Quebec City – Chicago corridor by way of Drummondville, Montreal, Kingston, Toronto, London, Sarnia / Port Huron, and Battle Creek.
In 1862, William Meredith married Mary ( 1842 – 1930 ), daughter of Marcus Holmes, Mayor of London, Director of the London & Lake Huron Railway Company and President of the Horticultural Society.
Candidates were nominated in Huron — Bruce, Kitchener — Waterloo, and other ridings in London, Ontario, and won only a handful of votes.
Delaware straddles the Thames River, and is accessed by the old highway ( Highway 2 ) linking London and Chatham and the freeway ( Highway 402 ) linking Sarnia along with Port Huron and Toronto.
Highway 4 travels through the following municipalities: Southwold Township, London, Middlesex Centre Township, Lucan Biddulph Township, North Middlesex, South Huron, Bluewater, and Central Huron.
St. Paul's Cathedral in London, Ontario, Canada is the seat of the Diocese of Huron of the Anglican Church of Canada.
Delaware is accessed by the old highway ( Highway 2 ) linking London and Chatham and the freeway ( Highway 402 ) linking Sarnia along with Port Huron and Toronto.
He also ensured that the Great Western Railway, the London and Port Stanley Railway, and the London, Huron and Bruce Railway passed through the city.
Mitchell was born in Clinton, Ontario in Huron County and was educated at Fanshawe College in London, Ontario.

Huron and American
* 2010 – Laura Spurr, American chairperson of the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi ( b. 1945 )
Many North American Native Peoples ( such as the Cree, Iroquois, Huron, Navajo, and others ) were and still are largely panentheistic, conceiving of God as both confined in God's existence in Creation but also transcendent from it.
* To memorise the North American Great Lakes: the acronym HOMES-matching the letters of the five lakes ( Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, and Superior )
* Lake Huron, one of the North American Great Lakes
* USS Huron ( 1861 ), a gunboat acquired by the Union Navy during the American Civil War
* Port Huron Statement, the manifesto of the American student activist movement Students for a Democratic Society ( SDS )
* Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi, a band of Potawatomi American Indians, based in Calhoun County, Michigan ), are also known as the Huron Potawatomi
This Native American tribe was known as the Wyandot or Wendat, and were part of the Huron nation originally from the Georgian Bay area of Canada.
The Wyandot ( sometimes formerly referred to as the Huron ) are a First Nations / Native American people originally from Ontario, Canada, and surrounding areas.
The earliest histories mention trade conducted in the area at the Potawatomi Trail and Pontiac Trail crossings of the Huron River by French traders, and later English then American settlers.
When news of the outbreak of war reached him, he sent a canoe party under the noted trader and voyager William McKay to the British outpost at St. Joseph Island on Lake Huron, with orders which allowed the commander ( Captain Charles Roberts ) to stand on the defensive or attack the nearby American outpost at Fort Mackinac at his discretion.
The racial makeup of Huron was 2, 300 ( 34. 1 %) White, 66 ( 1. 0 %) African American, 77 ( 1. 1 %) Native American, 39 ( 0. 6 %) Asian, 6 ( 0. 1 %) Pacific Islander, 3, 964 ( 58. 7 %) from other races, and 302 ( 4. 5 %) from two or more races.
The Port Huron Fighting Falcons of the junior North American Hockey League currently plays at McMorran Place, beginning in 2010.
Huron was at the center of the " Firelands " of the Connecticut Western Reserve, lands offered to residents of Connecticut who had lost property to British raiders during the American Revolutionary War.
* Heidenreich, Conrad E., " Huron ", Handbook of the North American Indian, ed.
* Huron mythology-A North American people ( sometimes referred to as the Huron ) originally from Ontario, Canada, and surrounding areas.
As soon as war was declared, Brock hastened to capture the American post on Lake Huron at Michilimackinac.
The North American Martyrs, also known as the Canadian Martyrs or the Martyrs of New France, were eight Jesuit missionaries from Sainte-Marie among the Hurons, who were brutally tortured and martyred in the mid-17th century in Canada, in what are now southern Ontario and upstate New York, during the warfare between the Iroquois and the Huron.
* The Martyrs ' Shrine church in Midland, Ontario, the site of their missionary work among the Huron, and the National Shrine of the North American Martyrs in Auriesville, New York, along the Mohawk River, are dedicated to them.

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