Listen up: in 1975 as the City of Mississauga was finding its rhythm, a trio of long-haired rockers came blasting out of the ‘burbs. Triumph. Guitarist Rik Emmett with his…
Cricket used to be a relic of Mississauga’s early colonial past – until Ali Khan came along. In 1966 the 35-year-old Khan was living and working in Mississauga as a…
Toronto may be ‘Hollywood North’, but Mississauga has fast become Hollywood North By Northwest. These days it’s not unusual to come across the familiar box trucks and lighting apparatus that…
Robert J. Sawyer revels in asking the big questions. The dean of Canadian science fiction, having penned an astonishing 24 novels that have taken us to space, into the future…
As any start-up founder will tell you, you’ve gotta weather a lot of ‘nopes’ in search of your big break.
To understand how Canada rocketed from colonial outpost to G7 nation take a stroll through Square One.
Located on the east bank of the Credit River, just north of Lakeshore Road, the Park has green spaces, a stage, the city’s Music Walk of Fame – and a deep connection to the Mississaugas of the Credit.
The suits were bespoke and the coleslaw was free for the Kentucky Colonel living west of Dixie.
The Canadian-made technology that showed us the world as we’d never seen it before and became a staple of big budget Hollywood films from its offices here in Mississauga.
For Torontonians looking to escape the heat and soot of Industrial-era Toronto there was no better place than Lorne Park.
The suits were bespoke and the coleslaw was free for the Kentucky Colonel living west of Dixie.
To trace the origins of the word ‘Mississauga’ we need to travel to the shores of a great lake.
But it’s not Lake Ontario where we need to go, it’s 600 kilometres north from Port Credit to the north shore of Lake Huron.