In 1998, the Village of Tiverton lost its separate incorporation, and became part of the Township of Bruce. The Town of Kincardine, the Township of Kincardine, and the Township of Bruce were then amalgamated to form the Township of Kincardine-Bruce-Tiverton on January 1, 1999, with boundaries identical to those of the municipality that had existed in 1855. After the first election of the new municipal council, a
plebiscite was conducted, and the name changed to the Municipality of Kincardine.
Historic sites Kincardine has designated a number of historic sites, per the
Ontario Heritage Act. These include (with local law numbers and listing dates): •
Madison House (#4641), also known as 343 Durham Market Square, designated in 1985, a
Second Empire house with elements of
Italianate style. • 490 Broadway (#1988-56; August 18, 1988) • 1558 Concession 12 (#2008-174; October 2008), stone house built in 1885 • 315 Durham Market Square (#4322; November 20, 1980), Italianate house built c.1860 • 335 Durham Market Square (#4748; July 17, 1986), mortise and tenon-jointed beamed house built in 1868 • 338 Durham Market Square (#2004-009; June 1, 2004), Victorian house with grey brick and pink mortar, with rose, shamrock and thistle pattern in windows • (numerous more) • 727 Queen Street (#4381; September 3, 1981), the Kincardine Library Building, built in 1908, stone and red brick, Romanesque Revival in style. • 780 Queen Street (#4279; April 17, 1980), built in 1881 • 786 Queen Street (#4280; April 17, 1980), two-storey commercial block built in 1881 • 788 Queen Street (#4278; April 17, 1980) • 789 Queen Street (#4667; May 16, 1985) • 1083 Queen Street == Demographics ==