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HomeYour KawarthaDid You Know A Fenelon Falls Man Came Up With The Idea...

Did You Know A Fenelon Falls Man Came Up With The Idea Of Algonquin Park?

This story is part of our partnership with Maryboro Lodge The Fenelon Falls Museum and was written and photographed by Glenn Walker.

KAWARTHA LAKES-Did you know that James Dickson, Fenelon Falls Land Surveyor, came up with the idea of Algonquin Park?

Islands on Sunbeam Lake
The Stag Root with a pond in the background

In the nineteenth century, the Government of Ontario (and Upper Canada that preceded it) expected that practically all land would become farmland. In the first decades, as they were laying out the southern regions, this agricultural transformation worked reasonably well, but once they moved north into the country of the Canadian Shield, the pace of settlement noticeably slackened. The province was not dissuaded and continued to survey townships for agriculture, while building Colonization Roads, hoping to attract migrants. 

Canoe Paddling in front of Island, Tom Thomson Lake
Maple Leaf Changing Colour

James Dickson of Fenelon Falls was one of the surveyors who was hired to lay out the Nipissing District (as the Province then called it). Dickson loving hunting, fishing and canoeing, and as he explored this region, he found that it was a paradise for the kind of recreation that he enjoyed. He realized that if he communicated how beautiful the region was, other people would want to visit it too. In 1886 he published Camping in the Muskoka Region, and was instrumental in persuading the Province to turn the region into its first park. Algonquin National Park (though it was administered by the Province, it was originally called a national park, it was a park of national significance) opened in 1893, reflecting Dickson’s ideas of what the park could be.

Mushroom

 

Maple Leaf on a Tree Stump, Tom Thomson Lake

Camping in the Muskoka Region explained to visitors how to reach the park (in the days before there was even a railway), then took them on a backcountry journey near what is now the Highway 60 Corridor. This photo essay follows a modern trip through the region that Dickson charted. 

 

An Interesting Burl at Campsite on Tom Thomson Lake

Check out the online exhibition on James Dickson:

James Dickson’s Vision of Algonquin Park

Camping in the Muskoka Region is also available online:

Camping in the Muskoka Region

Maryboro Lodge, The Fenelon Falls Museum has been hit hard by the pandemic.

If you want to make a donation to the museum, you can e-transfer to: [email protected]

or mail a cheque to :

Maryboro Lodge Museum

Box 179

50 Oak Street

Fenelon Falls, ON

K0M 1N0

 

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