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The Village Squire, 1981-08, Page 8The Community Centre, the hub of Ripley's social life. is where"everything of note takes place,- says Wylds. MacDonald: "If you walk down the street here, somebody waves and says 'hi'. " time a station was built to help serve the Wellington -Grey -Bruce railway line. Then Paul D.Mclnnes came from Kincardine to be fulltime postmaster. But he didn't like the name Ripley for a Scottish settlement and he endeavored to change it to Dingwall. His efforts added a new dimension to the word confusion but his rallying cry fell on deaf ears and on July 1, 1880, he relented and adopted the name Ripley as the name of his postal charge. But by any name Ripley, in this era. was thriving. There were three hotels, several general stores. two blacksmith shops, a liquor store, a flaxmill, a sawmill and a couple of banks. The railway made it important for shipping and its retail outlets made it a shopping centre for the surrounding area. On Saturday nights it was the place to be. In the last decade of the 19th century, however, the Canadian west was also the place to be and many in the Ripley area headed that way. That was just after a great fire wiped out 26 shops in the town's core. The end of an era was close at hand. But then. with Goderich to the south. Kincardine to the north, and Wingham and Hanover to the east, there wasn't a lot of growth potential for Ripley as better roads and then the automobile gave area residents more mobility than ever before. Ab Wylds will tell you all of that. And more. If you steer him to the present day he'll mention with pride how the town still has two garages. a grocery store, a hardware store, plumbing and electrical contractors, a general store and harness shop, a firehall, two new schools, a seed cleaning plant, three churches, a post office, a Legion hall, a community centre ("everything of note takes place tnere"), a curling rink, a two-day fall fair and an equally -long and prosperous antique and craft show. He'll tell you, too, that the town has received what he calls "a second shot in the arm" with the Bruce Nuclear Power Development on nearby Lake Huron. It's been nothing like the resurgence PG. 6 VILLAGE SQUIRE/AUGUST 1981 experienced by Port Elgin and Kincardine, mind you, but it has resulted in some new residential areas and, more importantly. some younger families. The harness shop of which Ab Wylds speaks is owned and operated by 65 -year-old George McLean, that's George McLean Junior. For all but the first 10 of those years he has been a Ripley resident, and he learned his trade in the mid 30s. Soon after his father bought the Commercial Hotel (at Ripley's main intersection) in 1942, George Junior moved his harness business there. There's no call for a hotel any more (the other one, the Royal, burned down in 1974 and was replaced by a bank building) and the McLeans long ago opened a shop that sells everything from plug tobacco to work boots. "As far as harness today." says George, "you wouldn't sell enough to make a living. There are some horse racin' people around here and we sell some to them." In political circles George McLean is known as a diehard Liberal, a leader for the red and white in the Huron -Bruce riding. He also served 10 years as Ripley's reeve. As he puts it, "I've seen a lot comin' and goin'. There must have been nine or 10 hardware men in here in my time. 1 can remember when we had 750 people livin' here. That's what it was when it got incorporated in 1925. "But we didn't have too much to employ the lads. They had to head to other places. These small towns aren't gettin' any livelier, you know." George McLean doesn't bubble over about Ontario Hydro but he does think the BNPD has had positive vibrations for Ripley. "More younger families can stay here, now." he says. "They can livc cheaper here than they can in the city. And we've got everything they need. In the winter we've got curling, skating and hockey.