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Kenora and Airport
** Kenora ( Kenora Airport )
* Kenora Airport ( 1 )

Kenora and is
The smallest municipality to produce a Stanley Cup champion team is Kenora, Ontario ; the town had a population of about 4, 000 when the Kenora Thistles captured the Cup in January 1907.
Brampton Lake is located near Kenora, Ontario.
Dryden is currently part of the provincial electoral district of Kenora — Rainy River.
Kenora — Rainy River's Member of Provincial Parliament is Sarah Campbell.
Federally, the city is part of the Kenora riding and is represented by Greg Rickford, a Conservative.
Kenora, originally named Rat Portage, is a small city situated on the Lake of the Woods in Northwestern Ontario, Canada, close to the Manitoba boundary, and about east of Winnipeg.
It is the seat of Kenora District.
Kenora is the smallest town to have won a major North American sports title.
Kenora, a site of natural attractions, is home to visitors from all over the world year round.
The Harbourfront is also the docking point for the M / S Kenora, a small cruise ship which offers a guided tour of the lake.
Kenora is sometimes stereotyped as an archetypal hoser community, evidenced by the phrase " Kenora dinner jacket " as a nickname for a hoser's flannel shirt.
The City of Kenora is home to the Lake of the Woods Museum, which has won awards from the Ontario Historical Society for its exhibits.
Kenora is a cruise located at the waterfront.
Kenora is represented at in the House of Commons by Conservative Member of Parliament Greg Rickford, and in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario by MPP Sarah Campbell of the Ontario New Democratic Party.
Housed within the college is Contact North, which offers Kenora residents local access to university and college programs not directly offered by the college campus.
The median household income in 2005 for Kenora was $ 59, 946, which is slightly below the Ontario provincial average of $ 60, 455.
Kenora, Ontario is the smallest town ever to win the Stanley Cup.
The land area of this district is, making it slightly smaller than the US State of Michigan and the second largest district in Ontario after Kenora District.
Hall won the Stanley Cup with the Kenora Thistles in 1907, for which he received a ' loving cup ' which is on display in the Hockey Hall of Fame.
Through the town of Kenora, Highway 17 is signed, but maintained under a connecting link agreement between the town and the province.
Aside from the city of Thunder Bay, Kenora is the only other municipality in the entire region with a population of greater than 10, 000 people.

Kenora and located
Ignace is a township in the Kenora District of Northwestern Ontario, Canada, located at Highway 17 ( Trans Canada Highway ) and Secondary Highway 599, and on the Canadian Pacific Railway between Thunder Bay and Kenora.

Kenora and east
The highway continues east from Winnipeg for another to Kenora.
The existing branch from Kenora continues east for to Dryden.
* the part of the Territorial District of Kenora lying east of a line drawn from the northeast corner of the most northerly point of the Territorial District of Thunder Bay ( Albany River ) due north to Hudson Bay ;
* the part of the Territorial District of Kenora lying east of a line drawn north from the most northerly northeast corner of the Territorial District of Thunder Bay to Hudson Bay.
It begins at the Manitoba border west of Kenora and ends south of Arnprior at the western terminus of Highway 417, to the east.
To the east, the highway travels through thick boreal forest towards Keewatin, where the grade-separated Kenora Bypass, Highway 17A, splits to the north.
Further east, the highway merges with the Kenora Bypass.
The riding also included the two geographic townships in Algoma District immediately south of Hearst and all of Kenora District east of the prolongation of the westerly border of Cochrane District.
In 2009 Dryden Mobility began conversion to a GSM network in the 850MHz band that will cover a greater area than that covered by their CDMA network, from Kenora in the west, to Sioux Lookout to the north, east to Hearst, and south to Sault Ste.

Kenora and northeast
* Kenora District, Ontario ( northeast )
It consists of the part of the Territorial District of Kenora lying west of a line drawn due north from the northeast corner of the Territorial District of Thunder Bay ( Albany River ) to Hudson Bay ; and the part of the Territorial District of Thunder Bay lying northwest of a line

Kenora and city
Highway 17 passes through Kenora, and the Highway 17A Kenora By-Pass goes around the city.
Confederation College has a Kenora campus and serves post-secondary and adult education needs in the city and surrounding area.
Nault began his career as city councillor in Kenora, Ont.
In 1947, it was defined to consist of the city of Fort William and the southern parts of the territorial districts of Rainy River, Kenora and Thunder Bay adjacent to by the southern boundary of Canada.
It consisted initially of the parts of the territorial districts of Algoma, Cochrane, Kenora, and Thunder Bay not included in the electoral districts of Algoma West, Cochrane, Fort William, and Kenora-Rainy River herein defined, and including the city of Port Arthur, together with that part of the district of Patricia not included in the electoral districts of Kenora — Rainy River and Cochrane.

Kenora and .
Four more northern districts were created between 1907 and 1912: Cochrane, Kenora, Sudbury and Timiskaming.
At Kenora, the Trans-Canada designation includes both the main route through the city's urban core and the Highway 17A bypass route.
A second branch extends southward along Highway 71 from Kenora to Chapple, a routing of, and then eastward along Highway 11 for to Shabaqua, where it reunites with the main Highway 17 route.
The town of Kenora was amalgamated with the towns of Keewatin and Jaffray Melick in 2000 to form the present-day City of Kenora.
Pierre La Vérendrye established a secure French trading post, Fort St. Charles, to the south of present-day Kenora near the current Canada / U. S. border in 1732, and France maintained the post until 1763 when it lost the territory to the British in the Seven Years ' War — until then, it was the most northwesterly settlement of New France.
In 1878, the company surveyed lots for the permanent settlement of Rat Portage (" portage to the country of the muskrat ") — the community kept that name until 1905, when it was renamed to Kenora.
The name, " Kenora ," was coined by combining the first two letters of Keewatin, Norman ( two nearby communities ) and Rat Portage.
Ojibwa tipi, Kenora, 1922.
Kenora was once claimed as part of the Province of Manitoba, and there are early references to Rat Portage, Manitoba.
Kenora officially became part of the province of Ontario in 1889.
Later, a highway was built through Kenora in 1932, becoming part of Canada's first coast-to-coast highway in 1943, and then part of the Trans-Canada Highway, placing the community on both of Canada's major transcontinental transportation routes.

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