![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||
| |
||||||
![]() |
Articles of Interest
|
|||||
|
|||
Township History - Cardwell TownshipThis article first appeared in the April 2001 newsletter, Volume 17 - Number 1 Situated in the district of Muskoka, Cardwell Township is bounded by Stisted Township to the east; Watt Township to the south; Humphrey Township to the west and Monteith Township to the north. The two latter townships are in the District of Parry Sound. There were a total of 46,275 acres in the township available for settlement. Some of the first settlers may have come to Cardwell Township by way of the Parry Sound Road, opened in the mid-1 860s, (Certainly the opening of a steamship service on Lake Rosseau would have been a more attractive alternative to the always-questionable condition of the roads). This road passed through the southwestern part of Cardwell and lots were surveyed perpendicular to the line of the road. (see insert). T. A Baldwin completed the survey of Cardwell Township into lots and concessions in 1866. He noted that only a small part of the township had been located at that time. It should be noted that the townsite of Helmsley (now Rosseau) located in Humphrey Township on the north east comer of Lake Rosseau and near the Parry Sound Road and adjacent to Cardwell Township was surveyed in 1866. Located in Humphrey Township a short distance west of Helmsley, the earlier settlement of Ashdown Comers at the junction of the Parry Sound Road and the Nipissing Road would soon decline in preference to Helmsley, accessible by steamship. By 1879 it was noted in the Muskoka and Parry Sound Atlas that still only a small part of Cardwell Township had been located. The Rosseau River which flows through the township, emptying into Lake Rosseau, offered possible mill sites according to Mr. Baldwin. In the early years there were 2 mills near the mouth of this river where it emptied into Lake Rosseau. The fint settlers were a group families from Iceland who arrived in about 1873 to settle in the sixth concession. They named their community Hekkla after a volcano in their homeland. The largest family was the Helgasons, who cleared some land and built a house on Lot 20 Con 7. There were four brothers, Oscar, Baldwin, Walter and Peter, and two sisters. The Tomson family lived on Lot 2 Con 8. Their two daughters married Oscar and Baldwin Helgason. Baldwin and Walter went to Manitoba and Oscar lived on Lot 18 Con 7 where he kept the Hekkla post office for a time. All the Helgason family went west before 1900. Bjarni Snaebjornson lived alone in a house on lot 16. His brother Pall and three daughters came from Iceland in 1887. One daughter, Jorunn married Jakob Einarson. After a short time in Hekkla, the Lindals and the Thorkelsons went to Manitoba and North Dakota. The Asgiersons arrived in 1883. One son, Noah, was Police Chief in Huntsville in the 1940’s while his brother, Oliver, operated Oliver’s Taxi in Huntsville. The first non-Icelander was Charles Robertson who settled on Lots 31 and 32 in the second concession, then Matthew Wilson arrived in the spring of 1875 and. located Lots 20 and 21 in concession 6. Later that summer Mr. E. Case settled Lots 61 and 62 in Concession A. (on Crawford’s Road), later moving to Lots 20 and 21 in Concession 5, the old Middlebrook farm. Cardwell Township was incorporated in 1878 in union with Watt Township. Charles Robertson was the first Reeve; H.J. Coate was the Clerk and Treasurer, Councillors were William Lawranson , S. Cressweller, Robert Spratt and Matthew Wilson. Mr. Robertson remained Reeve until about 1887 when James Wilson succeeded him and carried on without a break until 1918. Mr. Coate served as Clerk and Treasurer until 1884 when James Ruxton was appointed. James would not act so Matthew Wilson resigned as councillor and became the second Clerk and Treasurer from 1884 until 1930 when he retired. Matthew Wilson’s home burned in 1908 and the early Cardwell Township records went with it. There was plenty of virgin timber on the township so lumbering became a thriving business. The first timber to be taken out were board or square timber. The very best pine was used. It had to be clear. The pine logs were left as long as possible. They were hewn with a broad axe and drawn by horses to Rosseau Lake. Hewing required skill and a hewer always received top wages. These logs were made into rafts and towed down the lakes to Gravenhurst to be loaded on flatcars and taken to the east coast where they were loaded onto ships and taken to England to be used for masts for sailing ships. Following the square timber trade, logs were cut and floated to Gravenhurst where they were sawn up at the many sawmills in Gravenhurst or floated down the Musquash River to Georgian Bay and taken to Penatanguishine or Midland. The logging camps created a good market for the farmers who supplied the camps with butter, eggs and meat as well as hay and grain for their horses. Raising beef and dairy cattle had always been one of Cardwell’s farmers chief industries and they took great pride in exhibiting them at local fairs. The first telephone line was installed in the township in 1916 by Mr. Bell and Mr. Campbell who later sold out to a company formed by the subscribers and called the Humphrey Municipal Telephone Company. In the fall of 1938 the Hydro Electric Power Co., built a line through the township as far as the Hekkla settlement making life more comfortable for those who still lived in the community. The development of settlement followed the pattern of all new settlements with the establishment of post offices. The establishment and closure of the post offices often indicate the life span of individual communities. (See insert for information about the post offices in Cardwell Township.) Schools were often established before churches and used for church services. The following school sections were established in Cardwell Township.
SS # 1: Rosseau Falls: The first school in this section was located on Charles Robertson’s property, Lot 29 Con 2, west of the Rosseau River, and not far from one of the large mills that operated at the mouth of the Rosseau River in the early years. The board and batten structure was apparently opened in 1888 and closed in 1915. This school remained closed until 1932, when a new brick school was built east of the river and remained in use until 1952. Teachers since 1911 were: Elvin Black, 1911; Bella Clements, 1912; Eva Ariss, 1913; Gladys Clements, 1915 - 15; Jean Ross, 1932-33; Ruth Fletcher, 1934 - 35; Jean Campbell, 1936-37; Muriel Crawford, 1938-39; Annie Robertson, 1940; Amy Beley, 1941; Helena Kime, 1945,47; Helena Kime, 1948-50; Mrs. P. Andrews, 1952.
S.S. # 5: Bear Cave: The ratepayers met at the home
of James Foreman for the first meeting of S.S. # 5 early in 1888. A log
schoolhouse was built on Lot 28 Con 13 across from the log Anglican Church
and was ready for classes by January 28h 1889. A box was obtained in which
the teacher kept books, papers, etc. Other equipment was soon acquired:
2 blackboards; maps at the cost of $11.70, a Bible, a dictionary and other
necessities. The pupil’s lessons were done on slates. Miss L. Harvie
was the first teacher. In 1949, Neil Brodie, (the last teacher before
the school was closed) expressed some of his feelings: “ when I
turned from the paved road to Parry Sound onto a dirt road towards Bear
Cave, I felt less and less jubilant. The road became narrow fast, hydro
disappeared and we were left with one simple means of communication with
the outside world - a party line. Being young and fresh of spirit and
out of grade 13 1 had not the maturity to realize the beauty, the space,
the realism and simplicity of life that was there. That comes later, with
age.”
The following churches in Cardwell Township are listed in Places of Worship before 1900 in Muskoka District.7 Christ Church, Bear Cave: The sign above the door reads “1880 - Christ Church -Anglican - North Cardwell”. Gary Denniss says it is located on Lot 27 Con 12. Built as a non-denominational church it was later taken over by the Anglicans. From “A History of the Church of the Redeemer, Rosseau, Ontario 1871 - 1893. “1891: Mr. John Foreman gave a lot in North Cardwell for the building of a church. He gave no deed and the log church was used as a Union Meeting house and a place of worship. nis little church served the people of Bear Cave and all those who farmed or logged in the area. Timbering was a very flourishing business and brought in many families. The log church was the scene of marriages and christenings and the centre of all activities. A school house was built across the road so the children could receive their schooling. This church became one of the points of the Parish of the Church of the Redeemer, along with the Bent Riverdale Mission, Ufford: and St. 7homas in Ullswater. This represented quite an area especially when one takes in to consideration the state of the roads and the “means of conveyance’. The 1901 census indicates that Presbyterian and Anglican were using the same building. The building seated 25 - 15 were Presbyterian.
|
Site Map What's New Search Home
Copyright © 2008 - Muskoka, Parry Sound Genealogy Group