Another attempt at a community similar to those of Robert Owen was later attempted in Lambton County: the Petworth Settlement at Warwick. However, this one did not rely on Socialism to the same extent. Settlers owned their own land and homes, but worked cooperatively as a community. Warwick was connected to the river via the Egremont Road. Lord Egremont made efforts to facilitate immigration to the New World, alleviating the economic stress facing England. He built the Egremont Road, which gave the first real access to the interior, allowing settlements, like the one at Warwick, to prosper. In 1833, a group of settlers from Petworth came to the area called “The Rapids,” now known as Sarnia. Henry Jones saw the potential in The Rapids and after the burning of Maxwell, he took up permanent residence there. Malcolm Cameron, an astute businessman, arrived in 1834. Cameron, Durand, and Vidal became the main economic force in early Sarnia. They were merchants, millers, and they fostered the ship-building trade. Cameron was involved in some decidedly unsavoury business transactions, one that involved taking land from the Native people.