The History of The Queen Elizabeth Way and the Credit River Bridge: Not the Queen You Think.| Modern Mississauga Media
Learn about the history and tragic theft of Yee Bon's painting on the Credit River in Mississauga.| Modern Mississauga Media
The history of the flag of the Mississaugas.| Modern Mississauga Media
The story of Canada’s oldest statutory holiday.| Modern Mississauga Media
The old cemetery is the last resting place for many who settled, lived, and died in this area of historic Mississauga long before the city came to be.| Modern Mississauga Media
NAHNEBAHWEQUAY (Nahneebahweequa, meaning upright woman; known as Catherine Sutton, née Catherine Bunch Sonego), Ojibwa spokeswoman; b. 1824 on the Credit River flats (Port Credit, Ont.); m. William Sutton, and they had seven children; d. 26 Sept. 1865 in Sarawak Township, Canada West.| Dictionary of Canadian Biography
In 1860 a courageous Ojibwe (Mississauga) woman, Nahneebahweequay, or “Nahnee”, known in English as Catharine Sutton, crossed the North Atlantic. She presented important land claims to Queen Victoria at Buckingham Palace.| greyroots.com