The Inn was built as a stagecoach stop by John Lamb in 1837. Blair was perfectly situated between Galt and Preston while being adjacent to the Huron Road, which stretched from Guelph to Goderich.
Growing up in Cambridge during the '70s & '80s, I knew it as the rowdy watering hole, Nicholson's Tavern, before it transitioned briefly to a fine dining restaurant in the 1990's.
Today, Lamb's Inn has been refurbished and is now the office for the rare Charitable Research Reserve, an urban land trust that manages over 1200 acres of natural habitat.
The Lamb's Inn, in the historic village of Blair.
The Inn was built as a stagecoach stop by John Lamb in 1837. Blair was perfectly situated between Galt and Preston while being adjacent to the Huron Road, which stretched from Guelph to Goderich.
Growing up in Cambridge during the '70s & '80s, I knew it as the rowdy watering hole, Nicholson's Tavern, before it transitioned briefly to a fine dining restaurant in the 1990's.
Today, Lamb's Inn has been refurbished and is now the office for the rare Charitable Research Reserve, an urban land trust that manages over 1200 acres of natural habitat.