National Historic Sites
Site | Date(s) | Designated | Location | Description | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adelaide Hunter Hoodless Homestead | 1839 (completed) | 1995 | Brant County 43°01′54″N 80°20′20″W / 43.031608°N 80.338898°W / 43.031608; -80.338898 (Adelaide Hunter Hoodless Homestead) |
The childhood home of activist and organizer Adelaide Hunter Hoodless, educational reformer and co-founder of the Women's Institute, the National Council of Women of Canada and the Victorian Order of Nurses | |
Algoma Central Engine House | 1912 (completed) | 1992 | Sault Ste. Marie 46°31′41.38″N 84°21′1.94″W / 46.5281611°N 84.3505389°W / 46.5281611; -84.3505389 (Algoma Central Engine House) |
A well-preserved example of a brick engine house, and the first in Canada to have an internal turntable | |
Algonquin Provincial Park | 1893 (established) | 1992 | Nipissing - Unorganized South Part (primarily) 45°35′03″N 78°21′30″W / 45.58417°N 78.35833°W / 45.58417; -78.35833 (Algonquin Provincial Park) |
The first provincial park in Canada, noted for its pioneering role in park management, visitor interpretation programs and the development of park buildings and structures, as well as its role in inspiring artists such as the Group of Seven | |
Amherstburg First Baptist Church | 1849 (completed) | 2012 | Amherstburg 42°6′9.66″N 83°6′20.65″W / 42.1026833°N 83.1057361°W / 42.1026833; -83.1057361 (Amherstburg First Baptist Church) |
A modest wooden church that was a major Underground Railroad church in Upper Canada and that played a crucial role in the development of the Black community in Ontario | |
Amherstburg Navy Yard | 1796 (established) | 1928 | Amherstburg 42°6′6.78″N 83°6′45.21″W / 42.1018833°N 83.1125583°W / 42.1018833; -83.1125583 (Amherstburg Navy Yard) |
The site of a Royal Navy shipyard from 1796–1813, which served as the hub of the British naval presence on the upper Great Lakes | |
Annandale House/Tillsonburg Museum | 1882 (completed) | 1997 | Tillsonburg 42°51′45″N 80°43′18″W / 42.86250°N 80.72167°W / 42.86250; -80.72167 (Annandale House/Tillsonburg Museum) |
One of the best surviving illustrations in Canada of the Aesthetic Movement and the movement's major impact on domestic architecture in Canada | |
Backhouse Grist Mill | 1798 (completed) | 1998 | Norfolk County 42°38′34″N 80°28′29″W / 42.6427°N 80.4748°W / 42.6427; -80.4748 (Backhouse Grist Mill) |
One of the few gristmills in this region not to be burned during the War of 1812, it is one of the oldest and best preserved examples in Canada of small-scale, water-powered establishments found throughout the country in the 19th and early 20th centuries | |
Banting House | 1900 (completed) | 1997 | London 42°59′23.85″N 81°13′54.46″W / 42.9899583°N 81.2317944°W / 42.9899583; -81.2317944 (Banting House) |
A yellow-brick house recognized as the site of the defining moment in the discovery of insulin by Frederick Banting | |
Barnum House | 1820 (completed) | 1959 | Grafton 43°59′39.97″N 78°0′57.2″W / 43.9944361°N 78.015889°W / 43.9944361; -78.015889 (Barnum House) |
A noted example of Neoclassic domestic architecture as brought to Canada by settlers from New England | |
Battle Hill | 1814 (battle) | 1924 | Southwest Middlesex 42°41′39″N 81°42′18″W / 42.69417°N 81.70500°W / 42.69417; -81.70500 (Battle Hill) |
The site of the Battle of Longwoods during the War of 1812 | |
Battle of Crysler's Farm | 1813 (battle) | 1920 | South Dundas 44°56′31.12″N 75°04′12.62″W / 44.9419778°N 75.0701722°W / 44.9419778; -75.0701722 (Battle of Crysler's Farm) |
The site of a victory by badly outnumbered British troops in the War of 1812, prompting the American forces to abandon the St. Lawrence Campaign; the original battle site was submerged in 1958 by the construction of the Saint Lawrence Seaway, so the 1895 monument was relocated to its current location in Crysler’s Farm Battlefield Park near Upper Canada Village | |
Battle of the Windmill | 1838 (battle) | 1920 | Prescott 44°43′15″N 75°29′14″W / 44.7209°N 75.4871°W / 44.7209; -75.4871 (Battle of the Windmill) |
The site a battle fought during the Upper Canada Rebellion, whereby Loyalist forces defeated an invasion attempt by Hunter Patriot insurgents based in the United States | |
Beausoleil Island | 2011 | Muskoka District 44°51′57.96″N 79°52′11.64″W / 44.8661000°N 79.8699000°W / 44.8661000; -79.8699000 (Beausoleil Island) |
An island within Georgian Bay Islands National Park; a cultural landscape of the Anishinaabeg | ||
Beechcroft and Lakehurst Gardens | 1870 (ca.) (established) | 1978 | Roches Point 44°16′24″N 79°30′11″W / 44.273312°N 79.503025°W / 44.273312; -79.503025 (Beechcroft and Lakehurst Gardens) |
Gardens reportedly designed by Frederick Law Olmsted | |
Bell Homestead | 1858 (completed) | 1996 | Brantford 43°06′29″N 80°16′15″W / 43.107918°N 80.270837°W / 43.107918; -80.270837 (Bell Homestead) |
The first home of Alexander Graham Bell in North America, it is associated with the conception of and early long-distance trials of the telephone | |
Belle Vue | 1819 (completed) | 1959 | Amherstburg 42°5′35.6″N 83°6′45.99″W / 42.093222°N 83.1127750°W / 42.093222; -83.1127750 (Belle Vue) |
A two-storey, white painted, brick house constructed for the Deputy Assistant Commissary General of the garrison at Fort Malden, ranking among the finest examples of Palladian architecture in Canada | |
Belleville Railway Station (Grand Trunk) | 1856 (completed) | 1973 | Belleville 44°10′44.41″N 77°22′29.05″W / 44.1790028°N 77.3747361°W / 44.1790028; -77.3747361 (Belleville Railway Station (Grand Trunk)) |
A railway station representative of the larger stations erected for the newly-formed Grand Trunk Railway along the key Toronto to Montreal line during the mid-19th century, it is the oldest continuously operating passenger train station in Canada | |
Bethune Memorial House | 1880 (completed) | 1996 | Gravenhurst 44°55′13.45″N 79°22′34.09″W / 44.9204028°N 79.3761361°W / 44.9204028; -79.3761361 (Bethune Memorial House) |
The birthplace of Dr. Norman Bethune | |
Bethune-Thompson House / White House | 1805 (completed) | 1966 | Williamstown 45°08′38″N 74°34′29″W / 45.143798°N 74.574788°W / 45.143798; -74.574788 (Bethune-Thompson House / White House) |
A noted early Ontario home, representative of the design and construction techniques from the period; portions date to the 1780s when Loyalist Peter Ferguson settled on the site, but the main structure was built in 1805 as a manse for Reverend John Bethune, the first Presbyterian minister in Upper Canada and was later the residence of explorer David Thompson | |
Billy Bishop Boyhood Home | 1884 (completed) | 2002 | Owen Sound 44°33′59″N 80°56′51.5″W / 44.56639°N 80.947639°W / 44.56639; -80.947639 (Billy Bishop Boyhood Home) |
The birthplace and childhood home of First World War flying ace Billy Bishop | |
Bois Blanc Island Lighthouse and Blockhouse | 1837 (lighthouse completed), 1839 (blockhouse completed) | 1955 | Bois Blanc Island 42°5′16.17″N 83°7′11.48″W / 42.0878250°N 83.1198556°W / 42.0878250; -83.1198556 (Bois Blanc Island Lighthouse and Blockhouse) |
The site of the attack by Canadian rebels and their American supporters in January 1838 during the Upper Canada Rebellion; in response to the raid, the blockhouse was built to complement the reconstructed Fort Malden | |
Bridge Island / Chimney Island | 1814 (blockhouse completed) | 1936 | Front of Yonge 44°28′7.11″N 75°50′4.21″W / 44.4686417°N 75.8345028°W / 44.4686417; -75.8345028 (Bridge Island / Chimney Island) |
Formerly the site of a naval station during the War of 1812 | |
Buxton Settlement | 1849 (established) | 1999 | Chatham-Kent 42°18′20.4″N 82°13′13.5″W / 42.305667°N 82.220417°W / 42.305667; -82.220417 (Buxton Settlement) |
A community founded by abolitionist Reverend William King, 15 former American slaves, and an association which included James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin, then the Governor General of Canada, to create a haven for fugitive slaves escaping via the Underground Railroad | |
Canadian Car & Foundry | 1912 (completed) | 2009 | Thunder Bay 48°21′25.37″N 89°18′20.42″W / 48.3570472°N 89.3056722°W / 48.3570472; -89.3056722 (Canadian Car & Foundry) |
Located within the Bombardier Transportation facility, the historic complex was the main plant of Canada's largest aircraft manufacturer during the Second World War, with 10% of the world's production of the Hurricane built there; representative of the wartime contributions made by women workers and of the country's post-war mass-transit manufacturing industry | |
Canal Lake Concrete Arch Bridge | 1905 (completed) | 1988 | Bolsover 44°33′29.91″N 79°2′46.02″W / 44.5583083°N 79.0461167°W / 44.5583083; -79.0461167 (Canal Lake Concrete Arch Bridge) |
A bridge spanning the Trent-Severn Waterway, it is the earliest known reinforced concrete bridge in Canada | |
Carrying Place of the Bay of Quinte | 1787 (treaty negotiated) | 1929 | Carrying Place 44°2′54.77″N 77°34′58.35″W / 44.0485472°N 77.5828750°W / 44.0485472; -77.5828750 (Carrying Place of the Bay of Quinte) |
The location where Sir John Johnson and Chiefs of the Mississauga negotiated a treaty ceding a river and portage route between Lake Ontario and Lake Huron | |
Castle Kilbride | 1877 (completed) | 1993 | Baden 43°24′15″N 80°40′17″W / 43.40417°N 80.67139°W / 43.40417; -80.67139 (Castle Kilbride) |
An Italianate villa, the former residence of the "Flax and Oil King of Canada" James Livingston, known for its interior decorative mural paintings | |
Chiefswood | 1856 (completed) | 1953 | Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation 43°6′3.88″N 80°5′41.88″W / 43.1010778°N 80.0949667°W / 43.1010778; -80.0949667 (Chiefswood) |
Italianate-style birthplace of poet E. Pauline Johnson | |
Christ Church, Her Majesty's Chapel Royal of the Mohawk | 1843 (completed) | 1995 | Deseronto 44°11′08″N 77°04′24″W / 44.185535°N 77.073405°W / 44.185535; -77.073405 |
A historic chapel linked with establishment of Mohawk nation in Ontario; one of only two Royal chapels in Canada, representing the historic alliance between the British Crown and the Mohawk peoples | |
Claverleigh | 1871 (completed) | 1990 | Creemore 44°19′4.85″N 80°6′7.84″W / 44.3180139°N 80.1021778°W / 44.3180139; -80.1021778 (Claverleigh) |
A noted example of a Gothic Revival-style wood villa | |
Cliff Site | 1670 (event) | 1919 | Port Dover 42°47′8.13″N 80°11′46.72″W / 42.7855917°N 80.1963111°W / 42.7855917; -80.1963111 (Cliff Site) |
Marked by a large memorial cross, the site where two Sulpician priests, François Dollier de Casson and René de Bréhant de Galinée, laid claim to the north shore of Lake Erie in the name of France | |
Cobalt Mining District | 1903 (established) | 2002 | Cobalt 47°23′51.34″N 79°40′27.67″W / 47.3975944°N 79.6743528°W / 47.3975944; -79.6743528 (Cobalt Mining District) |
A cultural landscape comprising buildings and structures associated with early 20th-century silver mining and urban settlement, once one of the largest silver producing areas in the world | |
Cox Terrace | 1884 (completed) | 1991 | Peterborough 44°18′13.56″N 78°19′34.4″W / 44.3037667°N 78.326222°W / 44.3037667; -78.326222 (Cox Terrace) |
A noted example of a residential terrace built in the Second Empire style | |
Cummins Pre-contact Site | 1981 | Thunder Bay |
Extensive late Paleo-Indian quarry | ||
Darlingside | 1830 (established) | 1992 | Leeds and the Thousand Islands 44°22.097′N 75°58.159′W / 44.368283°N 75.969317°W / 44.368283; -75.969317 (Darlingside) |
Rare surviving example of the wood depots that sold fuel to the steamboats that plied the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes | |
Donaldson Site | 500 BC - 300 AD | 1982 | Chippewa Hill 44°30′21″N 81°20′03″W / 44.505756°N 81.334042°W / 44.505756; -81.334042 (Donaldson Site) |
Aboriginal archaeological site | |
Ermatinger House | 1823 (completed) | 1957 | Sault Ste. Marie 46°30′22.53″N 84°19′28.66″W / 46.5062583°N 84.3246278°W / 46.5062583; -84.3246278 (Ermatinger House) |
A stone house believed to be the oldest surviving house in Northwestern Ontario, it was built by Charles Oakes Ermatinger, an active partner of the North West Company, and was used as a temporary headquarters by Garnet Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley during the Red River Expedition | |
Etharita Site | 1647–49 | 1982 | Duntroon 44°24′43″N 80°12′38″W / 44.412°N 80.210583°W / 44.412; -80.210583 (Etharita Site) |
The main village of the Wolf Tribe of the Petun | |
Fairfield on the Thames | 1792 (established), 1813 (destroyed) | 1945 | Chatham–Kent 42°37′55.77″N 81°52′11.03″W / 42.6321583°N 81.8697306°W / 42.6321583; -81.8697306 (Fairfield on the Thames) |
The site of the original village of Fairfield, founded in 1792 by Aboriginal refugees and Moravian missionaries who came to Canada from Ohio, fleeing persecution in the United States after refusing to take sides during the American Revolutionary War; the village was destroyed in 1813 by American invaders during the War of 1812, when the inhabitants were accused of sheltering British officers | |
Finnish Labour Temple | 1910 (completed) | 2011 | Thunder Bay 48°25′56″N 89°13′48″W / 48.43222°N 89.23000°W / 48.43222; -89.23000 (Finnish Labour Temple) |
A two-storey brick building that played an important social and community role for Finnish immigrants to Canada | |
First Commercial Oil Field | 1858 (discovery of oil) | 1925 | Oil Springs 42°47′0.3″N 82°7′0.38″W / 42.783417°N 82.1167722°W / 42.783417; -82.1167722 (First Commercial Oil Field) |
The site of the first commercial oil well in the world, the first drilled well in Canada, the first gumbeds that were commercially used in the world, and the first gas gusher in Canada | |
Forbes Textile Mill | 1863 (established) | 1989 | Cambridge 43°25′39″N 80°19′13″W / 43.427510°N 80.320160°W / 43.427510; -80.320160 (Forbes Textile Mill) |
A wool mill that was, for a time in the early decades of the twentieth century, the largest woollen and worsted mill in Canada | |
Former Almonte Post Office | 1891 (completed) | 1983 | Almonte 45°13′31.95″N 76°11′42.51″W / 45.2255417°N 76.1951417°W / 45.2255417; -76.1951417 (Former Almonte Post Office) |
A stone post office with a steep gabled roof and central clock tower; designed by Thomas Fuller, the building has undergone no major exterior alterations, so remains an excellent representative example of early multi-use federal buildings in small communities | |
Former Brockville Post Office | 1886 (completed) | 1983 | Brockville 44°35′23.32″N 75°41′5.58″W / 44.5898111°N 75.6848833°W / 44.5898111; -75.6848833 (Former Brockville Post Office) |
A stone post office, blending Flemish, Queen Anne and classical elements; a good example of the post offices erected by the Department of Public Works in smaller urban centres during Thomas Fuller's term as Chief Dominion Architect | |
Former Elora Drill Shed | 1865 (completed) | 1989 | Elora 43°40′48.2″N 80°25′44.01″W / 43.680056°N 80.4288917°W / 43.680056; -80.4288917 (Former Elora Drill Shed) |
A good representative example of the early stage in drill hall construction in Canada (when rural militia units, rather than the Department of Defence, were responsible for their construction), noted for its classical proportions, the fanlight over the door and the oculus in the gable | |
Former Galt Post Office | 1887 (completed) | 1983 | Cambridge 43°21′30.08″N 80°18′55.99″W / 43.3583556°N 80.3155528°W / 43.3583556; -80.3155528 (Former Galt Post Office) |
A limestone-clad post office, blending elements of Romanesque Revival, Gothic Revival and Second Empire architectural styles; representative of small urban post offices designed by Thomas Fuller | |
Former Port Perry Town Hall | 1873 (completed) | 1984 | Port Perry 44°6′11.87″N 78°56′50.16″W / 44.1032972°N 78.9472667°W / 44.1032972; -78.9472667 (Former Port Perry Town Hall) |
A noted example of a municipal meeting hall; the lower hall was used for village council meetings, and the balconied opera house on the second storey served as the village's social centre | |
Fort Malden | 1799 (Fort Amherstburg completed), 1815 (fort initially rebuilt) | 1921 | Amherstburg 42°6′27.76″N 83°6′45.52″W / 42.1077111°N 83.1126444°W / 42.1077111; -83.1126444 (Fort Malden) |
British fort (initially known as Fort Amherstburg) that served as the principal defence of the western frontier for the period until 1813 (when it was captured and later destroyed by the Americans), and also served as an important fortification during the border raids associated with the Upper Canada Rebellion in 1837-38 | |
Fort Norfolk (Turkey Point) | 1814 (completed) | 1925 | Norfolk County 42°41′57.86″N 80°19′29.9″W / 42.6994056°N 80.324972°W / 42.6994056; -80.324972 (Fort Norfolk) |
The site of a British military and naval post between 1814 and 1815; abandoned shortly after the War of 1812 | |
Fort Sainte Marie II | 1649 (established) | 1920 | Christian Island 44°49′26.98″N 80°9′51.24″W / 44.8241611°N 80.1642333°W / 44.8241611; -80.1642333 (Fort Sainte Marie II) |
A Jesuit mission to the Huron-Wendat 1649-50; in 1651, remaining Huron-Wendat made their last stand against the Iroquois from this mission before fleeing to Quebec | |
Fort St. Joseph | 1796 (established) | 1923 | St. Joseph Island 46°03′48″N 83°56′48″W / 46.06333°N 83.94667°W / 46.06333; -83.94667 (Fort St. Joseph) |
Built as a counterpoint to an American garrison on Mackinac Island, Fort St. Joseph was the British Empire's most westerly outpost; destroyed by the Americans in 1812 when British forces left to take Fort Michilimackinac; the ruins of the fortifications and the archaeological resources on the site reveal the complex aspects of military, domestic and commercial life (both Aboriginal and European) in a frontier outpost | |
Fort St. Pierre | 1731 (established) | 1934 | Fort Frances 48°37′6.19″N 93°21′36.36″W / 48.6183861°N 93.3601000°W / 48.6183861; -93.3601000 (Fort St. Pierre) |
The first French fort built west of Fort Kaministiquia by Pierre La Vérendrye in Northwestern Ontario | |
Fort Wellington | 1813 (established) | 1920 | Prescott 44°42′46″N 75°30′31″W / 44.7129°N 75.5085°W / 44.7129; -75.5085 (Fort Wellington) |
One of the best preserved nineteenth-century fortifications in Canada, the fort protected shipping along the St. Lawrence River during War of 1812 | |
Fort William | 1803 (established) | 1923 | Thunder Bay 48°20′34″N 89°21′30″W / 48.34278°N 89.35833°W / 48.34278; -89.35833 (Fort William) |
Important North West Company post, now serving as a reconstructed living history site | |
François Bâby House | 1812 (completed) | 1950 | Windsor 42°19′07″N 83°02′33″W / 42.3185°N 83.0424°W / 42.3185; -83.0424 (François Bâby House) |
During the War of 1812, American forces crossed the Detroit River and used the house as headquarters for their invasion; when the Americans retreated one month later, the Bâby House was occupied by British forces under Major-General Isaac Brock, who built an artillery battery on the property and used it to open fire on Fort Detroit | |
Fulford Place | 1901 (completed) | 1992 | Brockville 44°35′50.24″N 75°40′14.97″W / 44.5972889°N 75.6708250°W / 44.5972889; -75.6708250 (Fulford Place) |
An excellent intact example of the type of mansion erected by wealthy Canadians in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with the general layout of the site remaining as it was originally laid out by the Olmsted Brothers | |
Gillies Grove and House | 1937 (completed) | 1993 | Arnprior 45°26′41.96″N 76°21′32.22″W / 45.4449889°N 76.3589500°W / 45.4449889; -76.3589500 (Gillies Grove and House) |
House associated with two of the most prominent forest industry families in the Ottawa Valley, the McLachlins and the Gillies; surrounded by one of the few remaining accessible woodlots containing significant stands of old growth Ottawa Valley White Pine | |
Glanmore / Phillips-Faulkner House | 1883 (completed) | 1969 | Belleville 44°10′1.11″N 77°22′3.13″W / 44.1669750°N 77.3675361°W / 44.1669750; -77.3675361 (Glanmore / Phillips-Faulkner House) |
House designed by architect Thomas Hanley for J.P.C Phillips, a wealthy Belleville banker and financier; an excellent representative example of the Second Empire style popular among the upper middle class in late 19th-century Canada | |
Glengarry Cairn | 1840 (completed) | 1921 | South Glengarry 45°7′18.19″N 74°29′23.33″W / 45.1217194°N 74.4898139°W / 45.1217194; -74.4898139 (Glengarry Cairn) |
Large cairn erected by the Glengarry militia to commemorate the services of Sir John Colborne, commander-in-chief of the armed forces during the Upper Canada Rebellion | |
Glengarry House | 1792 (completed) | 1921 | Cornwall 45°2′22″N 74°37′8.75″W / 45.03944°N 74.6190972°W / 45.03944; -74.6190972 (Glengarry House) |
The ruins of the residence of Lieutenant Colonel John Macdonell, a pioneer in the settlement of Ontario, first Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada, and a hero of the Battle of Queenston Heights | |
Glengarry Landing | 1814 (flotilla construction) | 1923 | Edenvale 44°27′6.58″N 79°54′0.24″W / 44.4518278°N 79.9000667°W / 44.4518278; -79.9000667 (Glengarry Landing) |
Site at the junction of the Nottawasaga River and Marl Creek, where in 1814 the Glengarry Light Infantry Fencibles, under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Robert McDouall, constructed a flotilla of boats to relieve the British garrison at Fort Michilimackinac and to effect the subsequent capture of Prairie du Chien during the War of 1812 | |
Guelph City Hall | 1857 (completed) | 1984 | Guelph 43°32′38.7″N 80°14′51.9″W / 43.544083°N 80.247750°W / 43.544083; -80.247750 (Guelph City Hall) |
A two-storey, limestone building built in the Renaissance Revival style, it is an excellent example of a multi-functional city hall, which contained the market, fire hall, police office and jail, library, a reading room, a large public hall, along with town offices and a council chamber; symbolic of Guelph's mid-19th-century confidence following the arrival of the Grand Trunk Railway in the community | |
Hamilton and Scourge | 1813 (sinking) | 1976 | Lake Ontario (11 kilometres (6.8 mi) north of St. Catharines) 43°17′46.32″N 79°17′52.6″W / 43.2962000°N 79.297944°W / 43.2962000; -79.297944 (Hamilton and Scourge) |
The USS Hamilton and USS Scourge were two merchant schooners pressed into service by the Americans in the War of 1812, both of which capsized and sank in a sudden squall; the ships are in remarkable condition at the underwater wreckage site and are rare examples of surviving War of 1812 vessels | |
Her Majesty's / St. Paul's Chapel of the Mohawks | 1785 (completed) | 1981 | Brantford 43°7′28.01″N 80°14′5.84″W / 43.1244472°N 80.2349556°W / 43.1244472; -80.2349556 (Her Majesty's / St. Paul's Chapel of the Mohawks) |
The first Protestant church in Upper Canada, now the oldest surviving church in Ontario, and one of only two Royal Chapels in Canada; symbolic of the important role played by the Loyalist Mohawks in the development of the province | |
Hillary House | 1862 (completed) | 1973 | Aurora 44°0′10.09″N 79°28′7.06″W / 44.0028028°N 79.4686278°W / 44.0028028; -79.4686278 (Hillary House) |
Now operating as the Koffler Museum of Medicine, an excellent example of a Picturesque house in the Gothic Revival style | |
Homer Watson House / Doon School of Fine Arts | 1834 (completed) | 1980 | Kitchener 43°23′41.52″N 80°25′6.58″W / 43.3948667°N 80.4184944°W / 43.3948667; -80.4184944 (Homer Watson House / Doon School of Fine Arts) |
Once the home and studio of Canadian landscape artist Homer Watson; some of Watson’s most well-known works are views of the surrounding countryside from various vantage points on this property | |
Homewood | 1801 (completed) | 1982 | Augusta 44°37′59.55″N 75°37′0.73″W / 44.6332083°N 75.6168694°W / 44.6332083; -75.6168694 (Homewood) |
A two-storey fieldstone residence built for Dr. Solomon Jones, a prominent Loyalist; the house reflects the lifestyle of a prominent rural professional in the early 19th century and its design uniquely melds the Palladian style and the rural architectural traditions of nearby Quebec | |
Huron County Gaol | 1841 (completed) | 1973 | Goderich 43°44′58.83″N 81°42′29.82″W / 43.7496750°N 81.7082833°W / 43.7496750; -81.7082833 (Huron County Gaol) |
A distinctive octagonal jail design in the Panopticon style of prison construction | |
Inverarden House | 1823 (completed) | 1968 | Cornwall 45°01′53″N 74°40′16″W / 45.031325°N 74.671071°W / 45.031325; -74.671071 (Inverarden House) |
Built for retired North West Company partner John MacDonald of Garth, the manor house is an excellent early example of Regency architecture in Canada | |
Joseph Schneider Haus | 1816 (completed) | 1999 | Kitchener 43°26′41.35″N 80°29′40.66″W / 43.4448194°N 80.4946278°W / 43.4448194; -80.4946278 (Joseph Schneider Haus) |
A house museum associated with the migration of German Mennonites from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania to Waterloo County in the early 19th century, and illustrative of the typical Mennonite house plan from the period | |
Kay-Nah-Chi-Wah-Nung (Rainy River Mounds) | 3000 BCE (ca.) | 1969 | Morley (Stratton) 48°38.816′N 94°05.641′W / 48.646933°N 94.094017°W / 48.646933; -94.094017 (Kay-Nah-Chi-Wah-Nung) |
One of the most significant centres of early habitation and ceremonial burial in Canada, with evidence of 5,000 years of human habitation, including burial mounds from the Laurel and Blackduck cultures; a cultural and historic focal point for the Rainy Lake and River Bands of Saulteaux | |
Lansdowne Iron Works | 1801 (established) | 1932 | Leeds and the Thousand Islands 44°32′57.58″N 76°7′33.7″W / 44.5493278°N 76.126028°W / 44.5493278; -76.126028 (Lansdowne Iron Works) |
The first ironworks in Upper Canada, destroyed by fire after a decade in operation | |
Leaskdale Manse | 1886 (completed) | 1996 | Leaskdale 44°12′11″N 79°09′38″W / 44.203097°N 79.160434°W / 44.203097; -79.160434 (Leaskdale Manse) |
The home of Lucy Maud Montgomery when she wrote 11 of the 22 works published during her lifetime; the house and its immediate area figure prominently in her posthumously published journals | |
Leeds and Grenville County Court House | 1844 (completed) | 1966 | Brockville 44°35′27.11″N 75°41′8.69″W / 44.5908639°N 75.6857472°W / 44.5908639; -75.6857472 (Leeds and Grenville County Court House) |
A landmark building set on a hill at the top of the historic Brockville town square; one of the most grandiose district courthouses built in Upper Canada | |
Lynnwood / Campbell-Reid House | 1851 (completed) | 1972 | Simcoe 42°50′16.43″N 80°18′11.96″W / 42.8378972°N 80.3033222°W / 42.8378972; -80.3033222 (Lynnwood / Campbell-Reid House) |
Excellent example of a modestly-sized house in the Neoclassical style; located on a rise overlooking the Lynn River | |
Macdonell-Williamson House | 1819 (completed) | 1969 | East Hawkesbury 45°33′49.06″N 74°22′59.72″W / 45.5636278°N 74.3832556°W / 45.5636278; -74.3832556 (Macdonell-Williamson House) |
A stone house built on the banks of the Ottawa River as a retirement home for former North West Company partner John Macdonell | |
Matheson House | 1840 (completed) | 1966 | Perth 44°54′3.92″N 76°15′2.39″W / 44.9010889°N 76.2506639°W / 44.9010889; -76.2506639 (Matheson House) |
Built for Roderick Matheson, a local merchant and politician, the house is a good example of an affluent, pre-Confederation residence; it occupies a key position in one of the best surviving historic streetscapes in Canada, and now serves as the Perth Museum | |
Mazinaw Pictographs | 1982 | Bon Echo Provincial Park 44°54′2.06″N 77°12′23.12″W / 44.9005722°N 77.2064222°W / 44.9005722; -77.2064222 (Mazinaw Pictographs) |
The largest rock art site on the southern Canadian Shield and the only major pictograph site in Southern Ontario | ||
McCrae House | 1858 (ca.) (completed) | 1966 | Guelph 43°32′9.7″N 80°14′42.1″W / 43.536028°N 80.245028°W / 43.536028; -80.245028 (McCrae House) |
The birthplace of John McCrae, the author of In Flanders Fields | |
McMartin House | 1830 (completed) | 1972 | Perth 44°53′52.13″N 76°14′48.99″W / 44.8978139°N 76.2469417°W / 44.8978139; -76.2469417 (McMartin House) |
Built for Daniel McMartin, a member of Upper Canada's Tory Loyalist elite; an example of American federal architecture that was elaborate for the time and place of construction | |
Merrickville Blockhouse | 1833 (completed) | 1939 | Merrickville–Wolford 44°55′0.54″N 75°50′16.03″W / 44.9168167°N 75.8377861°W / 44.9168167; -75.8377861 (Merrickville Blockhouse) |
A relatively large, British-designed blockhouse, considered an excellent example of the structures erected for the defence of the Rideau Canal in the 19th-century | |
Middleport Site | 1953 | Middleport 43°05′54″N 80°04′04″W / 43.098337°N 80.067828°W / 43.098337; -80.067828 (Middleport Site) |
Archaeological site related to the Middle Ontario Iroquois | ||
Middlesex County Court House | 1829 (completed) | 1955 | London 42°58′55.59″N 81°15′15.65″W / 42.9821083°N 81.2543472°W / 42.9821083; -81.2543472 (Middlesex County Court House) |
A very early and nationally significant example of the Gothic Revival style in Canada; associated with the early government of the province, as the site of the building was proposed by John Graves Simcoe for the provincial capital | |
Mission of St. Ignace II | 1649 (attack) | 1955 | Tay 44°43′10″N 79°43′05″W / 44.71939°N 79.717977°W / 44.71939; -79.717977 (Mission of St. Ignace II) |
Destruction of Saint Ignace II and nearby Saint-Louis sealed the fate of the Huron- Wendat confederacy, leading to the abandonment of their traditional homeland | |
Mnjikaning Fish Weirs | 3300 BCE (ca.) | 1982 | Ramara 44°36′15.63″N 79°22′10.6″W / 44.6043417°N 79.369611°W / 44.6043417; -79.369611 (Mnjikaning Fish Weirs) |
The site of the largest and best preserved wooden fish weirs known in eastern North America, in use from about 3300 B.C. until the recent past | |
Moose Factory Buildings | 1673 (established) | 1957 | Moose Factory 51°16′43.21″N 80°38′21.5″W / 51.2786694°N 80.639306°W / 51.2786694; -80.639306 (Moose Factory Buildings) |
19th century buildings associated with the second Hudson's Bay Company post in Canada; after the 1821 merger with the North West Company, Moose Factory became the supply point for posts inland as far as Lake Timiskaming | |
Nanticoke | 1813 (battle) | 1924 | Nanticoke 42°47′51.38″N 80°3′12.02″W / 42.7976056°N 80.0533389°W / 42.7976056; -80.0533389 (Nanticoke) |
The site where the Norfolk volunteer militia routed a band of American marauders who had been pillaging area farms and terrorizing the country, an exploit that inspired the British military forces and the people of Upper Canada during the War of 1812; now the location of the Nanticoke Generating Station | |
Napanee Town Hall | 1856 (completed) | 1984 | Greater Napanee 44°14′54.92″N 76°57′2.48″W / 44.2485889°N 76.9506889°W / 44.2485889; -76.9506889 (Napanee Town Hall) |
An early Ontario example of a combination town hall and market, and a rare extant example in Canada of a town hall in the Greek Revival style; symbolic of the development of local government in Ontario in the 19th century | |
Nazrey African Methodist Episcopal Church | 1848 (completed) | 1999 | Amherstburg 42°6′4.89″N 83°6′21.65″W / 42.1013583°N 83.1060139°W / 42.1013583; -83.1060139 (Nazrey African Methodist Episcopal Church) |
A simple fieldstone chapel, now part of the North American Black Historical Museum complex; it has an important association with Bishop Willis Nazery, the first leader of a wholly Canadian denomination (the British Methodist Episcopal Church) founded by Underground Railroad refugees | |
Normandale Furnace | 1818 (commenced operations) | 1927 | Normandale 42°42.585′N 80°18.593′W / 42.709750°N 80.309883°W / 42.709750; -80.309883 (Normandale Furnace) |
The site of an early 19th century Ontario iron smelter | |
Old Hay Bay Church | 1792 (completed) | 2001 | Greater Napanee 44°6′11.45″N 77°1′1.33″W / 44.1031806°N 77.0170361°W / 44.1031806; -77.0170361 (Old Hay Bay Church) |
Built by United Empire Loyalist settlers, it is the oldest surviving Methodist building in Canada and is associated with the role played by Methodists in Upper Canada’s early development; a significant element of the history of the United Church of Canada | |
Old Stone Church | 1853 (completed) | 1991 | Beaverton 44°25′34.63″N 79°6′57.15″W / 44.4262861°N 79.1158750°W / 44.4262861; -79.1158750 (Old Stone Church) |
A small rural fieldstone church; a particularly good example of the few early stone vernacular churches surviving in Canada | |
Old Stone Mill | 1810 (completed) | 1970 | Delta 44°36′36.74″N 76°7′20.57″W / 44.6102056°N 76.1223806°W / 44.6102056; -76.1223806 (Old Stone Mill) |
A three-storey stone gristmill which played an important role in the settlement and economic development of Leeds County; one of the oldest surviving mills in Ontario | |
Old Woodstock Town Hall | 1853 (completed) | 1955 | Woodstock 43°7′45.77″N 80°45′26.9″W / 43.1293806°N 80.757472°W / 43.1293806; -80.757472 (Old Woodstock Town Hall) |
A two-storey, buff-brick, Italianate-style town hall building; an excellent example of a Canadian colonial adaptation of a British town hall | |
Oro African Methodist Episcopal Church | 1849 (completed) | 2000 | Edgar 44°30′9.68″N 79°38′10.87″W / 44.5026889°N 79.6363528°W / 44.5026889; -79.6363528 (Oro African Methodist Episcopal Church) |
A log church with an unmarked cemetery; the last built remnant of a community of Black Canadians with United Empire Loyalist roots | |
Ossossane Sites | 1982 | Ossossane Beach 44°40′56″N 79°57′05″W / 44.682325°N 79.951254°W / 44.682325; -79.951254 (Ossossane Sites) |
Archaeological site of the principal village of Bear Clan of the Hurons | ||
Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception | 1888 (completed) | 1990 | Guelph 43°32′34.78″N 80°15′5.87″W / 43.5429944°N 80.2516306°W / 43.5429944; -80.2516306 (Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception) |
Influenced by the medieval cathedrals of France, the church on a hill is an exceptional example of the Victorian High Gothic style in Canadian architecture | |
Oxford-on-Rideau Township Hall | 1875 (completed) | 1984 | Oxford Mills 44°57′45.35″N 75°40′43.16″W / 44.9625972°N 75.6786556°W / 44.9625972; -75.6786556 (Oxford-on-Rideau Township Hall) |
A two-storey stone building with a cupola, this small town hall is representative of early local government in Canada | |
Parkhill | 8000 BCE (ca.) | 1982 | Parkhill | The first major Palaeo-Indian habitation site reported in Ontario, consisting of concentrations of stone artifactual material distributed over 6 hectares (15 acres) | |
Parkwood | 1940 (completed) | 1989 | Oshawa 43°54′11.95″N 78°52′6.48″W / 43.9033194°N 78.8684667°W / 43.9033194; -78.8684667 (Parkwood) |
A residential estate developed between 1915 and 1940 by Canadian industrialist Samuel McLaughlin; among the finest and most intact surviving examples of Canadian architectural and landscape design, featuring the work of Pearson and Darling, Frances Loring, John M. Lyle, Florence Wyle and others | |
Penman Textile Mill | 1874 (completed) | 1989 | Paris 43°11′51″N 80°23′23″W / 43.197577°N 80.389683°W / 43.197577; -80.389683 (Penman Textile Mill) |
A knitting mill complex | |
Perth Town Hall | 1864 (completed) | 1984 | Perth 44°53′56.86″N 76°14′55.98″W / 44.8991278°N 76.2488833°W / 44.8991278; -76.2488833 (Perth Town Hall) |
A two-storey stone building topped by a layered cupola with clock, symbolic of the role and importance of local government in the 19th century | |
Peterborough Drill Hall / Armoury | 1909 (completed) | 1989 | Peterborough 44°18′31.16″N 78°19′20.26″W / 44.3086556°N 78.3222944°W / 44.3086556; -78.3222944 (Peterborough Drill Hall / Armoury) |
Built in the Romanesque Revival style, the armoury is representative of the third phase of drill hall construction in Canada (1896–1918); one of the largest and best designed examples from the 1907-1909 period | |
Peterborough Lift Lock | 1904 (completed) | 1979 | Peterborough 44°18′27.65″N 78°18′1.04″W / 44.3076806°N 78.3002889°W / 44.3076806; -78.3002889 (Peterborough Lift Lock) |
A large boat lift along the Trent-Severn Waterway designed to lift boats 19.8 metres (65 ft); it is the highest hydraulic lift lock in the world, and at the time of its construction was an engineering achievement of national and international renown | |
Peterborough Petroglyphs | 900 to 1400 (ca.) | 1981 | Otonabee-South Monaghan 44°36′48.4″N 78°2′38.86″W / 44.613444°N 78.0441278°W / 44.613444; -78.0441278 (Peterborough Petroglyphs) |
An outcrop of exposed marble inscribed with hundreds of realistic human and animal forms, as well as numerous abstract and symbolic images; one of the largest known concentrations of pre-contact petroglyphs in Canada | |
Pic River Site | 1981 | Pic River 48°37′34.78″N 86°17′5.66″W / 48.6263278°N 86.2849056°W / 48.6263278; -86.2849056 (Pic River Site) |
A site comprising four archaeological nodes: the Pic River site, Fort Pic, the Heron Bay site, and the Duncan site, which together represent numerous Aboriginal and European occupations dating from 12000 BCE to the late 19th century | ||
Point Clark Lighthouse | 1859 (completed) | 1966 | Point Clark 44°4′22.28″N 81°45′26.37″W / 44.0728556°N 81.7573250°W / 44.0728556; -81.7573250 (Point Clark Lighthouse) |
One of six Imperial Towers on Lake Huron; noted for its distinctive lantern and the quality of its architecture | |
Pointe au Baril | 1923 | Maitland 44°38.255′N 75°36.575′W / 44.637583°N 75.609583°W / 44.637583; -75.609583 (Pointe au Baril) |
The "Iroquoise" and "Outaouaise", the last two French warships that navigated Lake Ontario, were built on this point | ||
Port Stanley | 1669 (first European contact) | 1923 | Port Stanley 42°39′56.99″N 81°12′43.01″W / 42.6658306°N 81.2119472°W / 42.6658306; -81.2119472 (Port Stanley) |
An important landing point for a succession of explorers and travellers of the 17th and 18th centuries, marked by a cairn commemorating events including the landing of Adrien Jolliet in 1669 (during the first descent of the Great Lakes by Europeans) and the encampment by Isaac Brock and his troops in the War of 1812 | |
Port Talbot | 1803 (established) | 1923 | Port Talbot 42°38.403′N 81°21.969′W / 42.640050°N 81.366150°W / 42.640050; -81.366150 (Port Talbot) |
Founded in 1803 by Thomas Talbot, the settlement was one of the most prosperous of its time in Upper Canada, noted for its good roads, with Talbot keeping out land speculators and securing hard-working settlers; Talbot's authoritarian control of the settlers led to his downfall at the hands of colonial authorities | |
Prescott Railway Station (Grand Trunk) | 1855 (completed) | 1973 | Prescott 44°42′39.66″N 75°31′28.6″W / 44.7110167°N 75.524611°W / 44.7110167; -75.524611 (Prescott Railway Station (Grand Trunk)) |
A small, stone train station, typical of the smaller stations erected for the Grand Trunk Railway during the first construction period of the GTR line between Montreal and Brockville | |
Rideau Canal | 1837 (completed) | 1925 | Ottawa to Kingston 45°25′33″N 75°41′50″W / 45.42583°N 75.69722°W / 45.42583; -75.69722 (Rideau Canal) |
Built for the British government by Lieutenant-Colonel John By as a defensive work in the event of war with the United States, the canal is the best preserved example of a 19th century slack water canal in North America, with most of its original structures intact | |
Ridout Street Complex | 1838 to 1870 (period of construction) | 1966 | London 42°59′1.27″N 81°15′17.46″W / 42.9836861°N 81.2548500°W / 42.9836861; -81.2548500 (Ridout Street Complex) |
Comprising three mid-19th-century residential and commercial buildings, the grouping is representative of the appearance of Ontario cities in that period and of London's early residential and commercial architecture | |
Rosamond Woollen Mill | 1866 (established) | 1986 | Almonte 45°13′41.17″N 76°12′1.32″W / 45.2281028°N 76.2003667°W / 45.2281028; -76.2003667 (Rosamond Woollen Mill) |
At one time one of the largest mills in Canada, it is characteristic of late 19th-century textile mills in Canada | |
Royal Flying Corps Hangars | 1917 (completed) | 1989 | Essa 44°16′8.14″N 79°53′18.45″W / 44.2689278°N 79.8884583°W / 44.2689278; -79.8884583 (Royal Flying Corps Hangars) |
Eight surviving First World War hangars at CFB Borden which played a significant role in the development of military aviation in Canada | |
Ruin of St. Raphael's Roman Catholic Church | 1821 (main church completed) | 1996 | South Glengarry 45°12′42.19″N 74°35′49.34″W / 45.2117194°N 74.5970389°W / 45.2117194; -74.5970389 (Ruin of St. Raphael's Roman Catholic Church) |
St. Raphael’s roof, tower and interior decoration were destroyed by fire in 1970, but the ruins were preserved; one of the earliest surviving Roman Catholic monuments in English-speaking Canada | |
Ruthven Park | 1846 (completed) | 1995 | Cayuga 42°58′45″N 79°52′30″W / 42.979279°N 79.875090°W / 42.979279; -79.875090 (Ruthven Park) |
An estate with a Greek Revival villa, laid out by David Thompson; associated with the transformation of Upper Canada from a "settler" to a "settled" society | |
Saint-Louis Mission | 1649 (attack) | 1920 | Victoria Harbour 44°43′45″N 79°46′53″W / 44.729096°N 79.781283°W / 44.729096; -79.781283 (Saint-Louis Mission) |
A 2-hectare (4.9-acre) archaeological site, once the site of a stockaded Huron-Wendat village and nearby Jesuit mission; an Iroquois attack in 1649 led to a chain of events resulting in the abandonment of Huronia by the Huron-Wendat in 1650 | |
Sainte-Marie Among the Hurons Mission | 1639 (established) | 1920 | Midland 44°44′04″N 79°50′44″W / 44.734364°N 79.845420°W / 44.734364; -79.845420 (Sainte-Marie Among the Hurons Mission) |
The reconstructed main Jesuit mission to the Huron-Wendat; over ten years, it grew into a sizeable colony, but was abandoned in 1649 due to disease and conflict | |
Sandwich First Baptist Church | 1851 (completed) | 1999 | Windsor 42°17′30.47″N 83°4′48.92″W / 42.2917972°N 83.0802556°W / 42.2917972; -83.0802556 (Sandwich First Baptist Church) |
One of the oldest Baptist churches surviving from this period in Ontario; representative of the churches in border settlements built to accommodate the communities created by Underground Railroad refugees | |
Sault Ste. Marie Canal | 1895 (completed) | 1987 | Sault Ste. Marie 46°30′46″N 84°21′05″W / 46.51278°N 84.35139°W / 46.51278; -84.35139 (Sault Ste. Marie Canal) |
Now operated as a recreational facility, the canal and associated works were a significant part of Canada’s national canal system at the time of their construction; the first electrically-powered lock in the world | |
Serpent Mounds | 50 BCE to 300 CE (ca.) | 1982 | Keene 44°12′40″N 78°09′25″W / 44.21111°N 78.15694°W / 44.21111; -78.15694 (Serpent Mounds) |
A grouping of six separate burial mounds forming a serpentine shape approximately 60 metres (200 ft) long; the only one of its kind in Canada | |
Sharon Temple | 1831 (completed) | 1990 | Sharon 44°06′05″N 79°26′31″W / 44.101332°N 79.441874°W / 44.101332; -79.441874 (Sharon Temple) |
A temple built by the Children of Peace, a schismatic Quaker sect, and its design and aesthetics embody the values of the group; acquired by a local historic group in 1917, and is representative of the early heritage conservation movement in Canada | |
Sheguiandah | 11,000 BCE (ca.) (first occupation) | 1954 | Manitoulin District 45°52′40.69″N 81°54′4.12″W / 45.8779694°N 81.9011444°W / 45.8779694; -81.9011444 (Sheguiandah) |
An archaeological site on Manitoulin Island where successive aboriginal peoples quarried quartzite, leaving behind artifacts spanning approximately 10,000 years of occupation | |
Sir John Johnson House | 1792 (original core completed) | 1961 | Williamstown 45°8′41.05″N 74°34′46.11″W / 45.1447361°N 74.5794750°W / 45.1447361; -74.5794750 (Sir John Johnson House) |
A wooden house of typical 19th-century Ontario vernacular design; associated with noted Loyalist Sir John Johnson, 2nd Baronet | |
Smiths Falls Bascule Bridge | 1913 (completed) | 1983 | Smiths Falls 44°53′49.97″N 76°1′37.39″W / 44.8972139°N 76.0270528°W / 44.8972139; -76.0270528 (Smiths Falls Bascule Bridge) |
A bascule bridge over the Rideau Canal; an early example of distinctive design in movable bridges, it is the oldest surviving structure of its type | |
Smiths Falls Railway Station (Canadian Northern) | 1914 (completed) | 1983 | Smiths Falls 44°53′57.08″N 76°1′39.75″W / 44.8991889°N 76.0277083°W / 44.8991889; -76.0277083 (Smiths Falls Railway Station (Canadian Northern)) |
Now serving as the Smiths Falls Railway Museum, the station's distinctive turret, polygonal waiting room and substantial construction were a departure from the usual practice of building cheaply from standard plans; representative of Canadian Northern Railway's efforts to compete directly with the Canadian Pacific Railway | |
Southwold Earthworks | 1500 (ca.)(occupation) | 1923 | Iona 42°40.459′N 81°21.63544′W / 42.674317°N 81.36059067°W / 42.674317; -81.36059067 (Southwold Earthworks) |
Rare and well-preserved archaeological remains of an Attawandaron fortified village | |
St. Jude's Anglican Church | 1871 (completed) | 1993 | Brantford 43°08′24″N 80°15′13″W / 43.139872°N 80.253493°W / 43.139872; -80.253493 (St. Jude's Anglican Church) |
A small 1871 church in the High Victorian Gothic Revival style; known for its striking interior murals, painted in 1936, influenced by the Arts and Crafts Movement and the work of William Morris | |
St. Marys Junction Railway Station (Grand Trunk) | 1858 (completed) | 1973 | St. Marys Junction 43°16′19″N 81°07′53″W / 43.271821°N 81.131257°W / 43.271821; -81.131257 (St. Marys Junction Railway Station) |
A one-storey limestone building in the Italianate style which served for a time as the western terminus of the Grand Trunk Railway; representative of the Grand Trunk’s original Ontario stations, and a rare surviving stone example | |
St. Thomas City Hall | 1899 (completed) | 1984 | St. Thomas 42°46′45″N 81°11′34″W / 42.779096°N 81.192723°W / 42.779096; -81.192723 (St. Thomas City Hall) |
A well-designed late Victorian civic building with a commanding clock tower, reflective of the tremendous growth of the city at the end of the 19th century; one of the few surviving unaltered Richardsonian Romanesque town halls in Canada | |
Stephen Leacock Museum / Old Brewery Bay | 1928 (completed) | 1992 | Orillia 44°36′30″N 79°23′38″W / 44.608257°N 79.393977°W / 44.608257; -79.393977 (Stephen Leacock Museum / Old Brewery Bay) |
A two-storey house on a four 4-hectare (9.9-acre) property on the shores of Lake Couchiching; home of and inspiration to Stephen Leacock, one of Canada's most celebrated authors and humorists | |
Stratford City Hall | 1899 (completed) | 1976 | Stratford 43°22′12″N 80°58′56″W / 43.369998°N 80.982188°W / 43.369998; -80.982188 (Stratford City Hall) |
A monumental red brick city hall with a prominent clock tower; a noted late 19th-century Picturesque municipal building, representative of an era when growing cities sought to express their civic pride and ambition in impressive civic buildings | |
Thistle Ha' Farm | 1852 (livestock operation began) | 1973 | Claremont 43°56′23″N 79°06′33″W / 43.939734°N 79.109140°W / 43.939734; -79.109140 (Thistle Ha' Farm) |
An 80-hectare (200-acre) working farm where groundbreaking breeding of pedigree livestock in Canada occurred in the 19th century; the work undertaken here played an important role in improving stock breeding throughout the Americas | |
Thunder Bay Tourist Pagoda | 1909 (completed) | 1986 | Thunder Bay 48°26′04″N 89°13′05″W / 48.434571°N 89.218050°W / 48.434571; -89.218050 (Thunder Bay Tourist Pagoda) |
An octagonal brick tourism bureau featuring a pagoda-shaped roof with cupola, surrounded by a verandah and with an entrance surmounted by a carved beaver; symbolic of civic boosterism and novelty architecture | |
Trent–Severn Waterway | 1830 (commenced) - 1920 (completed) | 1929 | Trenton 44°07′15″N 77°35′29″W / 44.120826°N 77.59142°W / 44.120826; -77.59142 (Trent-Severn Waterway Trenton) to Port Severn 44°48′13″N 79°43′15″W / 44.803700°N 79.720702°W / 44.803700; -79.720702 (Trent-Severn Waterway Port Severn) |
A 386-kilometre (240 mi) natural and man-made waterway that links Georgian Bay to the Bay of Quinte; an important transportation route noted for the high number of surviving unmodified structures in some sections dating from the waterway's construction | |
Victoria Hall / Cobourg Town Hall | 1860 (completed) | 1959 | Cobourg 43°57′34″N 78°10′04″W / 43.959410°N 78.167808°W / 43.959410; -78.167808 (Victoria Hall / Cobourg Town Hall) |
A neoclassical three-storey civic building; one of the more extravagant examples of town halls constructed in Canada West after landmark municipal legislation in 1848, symbolic of the prosperity and optimism of Cobourg during the 1850s | |
Victoria Hall / Petrolia Town Hall | 1889 (completed) | 1975 | Petrolia 42°52′52″N 82°08′49″W / 42.881198°N 82.146825°W / 42.881198; -82.146825 (Victoria Hall / Petrolia Town Hall) |
A buff brick town hall with prominent clock tower, reflective of the time in the 1880s when Petrolia was among the wealthiest towns in Canada due to the local oil boom | |
Walker Site | 1982 | Onondaga 43°07′00″N 80°07′00″W / 43.116667°N 80.116667°W / 43.116667; -80.116667 (Walker Site) |
Large Iroquoian archaeological site pertaining to the historic Attiwandaronk tribe | ||
Wellington County House of Industry and Refuge | 1877 (completed) | 1995 | Fergus 43°41′35″N 80°23′59″W / 43.693071°N 80.399773°W / 43.693071; -80.399773 (Wellington County House of Industry and Refuge) |
A former farm dominated by a two-storey Italianate-style stone building; oldest known state-supported poorhouse or almshouse in Canada, now serving as the county museum and archives | |
Whitefish Island | 300 BCE (ca.) (first Aboriginal encampments) | 1981 | Sault Ste. Marie 46°30′40″N 84°21′14″W / 46.511°N 84.354°W / 46.511; -84.354 (Whitefish Island) |
A small, naturalized island that was occupied by eight successive cultures, culminating in the development of the Ojibwa nation; its location made it a focal point of pre-contact trade and settlement | |
Wilberforce Red Cross Outpost | 1916 (completed); 1922-57 (health centre operational) | 2003 | Wilberforce 45°02′20″N 78°13′25″W / 45.038905°N 78.223590°W / 45.038905; -78.223590 (Wilberforce Red Cross Outpost) |
A simple frame house that served as the first outpost of the Ontario Division of the Canadian Red Cross; dedicated women provided nurse care with minimal medical backup, facilities and equipment, and the site is representative of the key role of nurses in providing health care and education in isolated areas | |
Wintering Site | 1669–70 (event) | 1919 | Port Dover 42°47′41″N 80°11′22″W / 42.794624°N 80.189332°W / 42.794624; -80.189332 (Wintering Site) |
Explorers François Dollier de Casson and René de Bréhant de Galinée and seven other Frenchmen wintered at this site - the first Europeans known to have ascended the Great Lakes to Sault Ste. Marie | |
Wolfe Island Township Hall | 1859 (completed) | 1984 | Wolfe Island 44°11′35″N 76°26′27″W / 44.193123°N 76.440800°W / 44.193123; -76.440800 (Wolfe Island Township Hall) |
A small Italianate rural town hall; an unusually sophisticated example of its type | |
Wolseley Barracks | 1888 (completed) | 1963 | London 43°00′00″N 81°14′02″W / 43.000138°N 81.233897°W / 43.000138; -81.233897 (Wolseley Barracks) |
The first purpose-built infantry training school erected by the federal government, originally used to house Company “D” of the Infantry School Corps of The Royal Canadian Regiment; an important early step in the development of a permanent military force in Canada following the withdrawal of regular British troops from Canada in 1871 | |
Woodside | 1853 (completed) | 1952 | Kitchener 43°27′49″N 80°28′51″W / 43.463578°N 80.480722°W / 43.463578; -80.480722 (Woodside) |
A one-and-a-half-storey house on a wooded estate which served as the childhood home of William Lyon Mackenzie King, the longest serving Prime Minister of Canada; the subject of many of King's writings in adult life |
Read more about this topic: National Historic Sites In Ontario
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