Celebrate Canada Day in 1907 Style

There are many Canada Day celebrations happening around the area, but the Friends of Murphys Point have a party with a twist! Let us take you back to the year 1907 when the Silver Queen Mine was in its heyday. Sir Wilfred Laurier was our Prime Minister and King Edward VII sat on the throne in Britain.

On Sunday, June 30, join us for a 40thbirthday celebration to mark Canada Day 1907 with a BBQ and Canada Day cake at the Silver Queen Mine bunkhouse from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. The Paddling Puppeteer provides entertainment for kids of all ages. Try your hand at some heritage games and win pennies dated pre-1907. There is a small fee for the BBQ but the entertainment and the cake are free to all visitors. Complimentary ice cream coupons will be provided to anyone who dresses in red and white or in a heritage costume! Get out your finery and help us celebrate!

Ringing the triangle for food at the bunkhouse.

Ringing the triangle for food at the bunkhouse.

The Silver Queen Mine at Murphys Point Provincial Park is one of the Seven Wonders of Lanark County. Take some time during the celebrations to take a tour underground to see how the early mine was operated at the turn of the last century. Costumed interpreters will be on hand to answer questions and tell stories of the mine’s operations.

Heritage Mica Days is in its fourth year of operation and is a program of the Friends of Murphys Point Park. A full schedule description of all festival events can be found at www.heritagemicadays.ca. For more information, email eventsmurphys@ripnet.com or call 613-267-5340. This Canada Day celebration is supported in part by the Celebrate Canada Program at Canadian Heritage.

Posted in Friends of Murphys Point, Geology, Heritage, Heritage Mica Days, Heritage Mica Festival, Mica Festival, mica mine, Murphys Point, Murphys Point events, Murphys Point Provincial Park, Seven Wonders of Lanark County, Silver Queen Mine, Tay Valley Township | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Heritage Mica Days Start This Weekend!

The 2013 edition of the Friends of Murphys Point’s annual Heritage Mica Days begins this weekend with a great concert and a pancake breakfast!

Join us at 8 p.m. this Saturday, June 22 for a music concert at the outdoor amphitheatre in the park with the Celtic Rathskallions. These professional musicians perform more than 100 shows a year. This interactive and entertaining performance will include Celtic songs and tunes performed on a wide variety of musical instruments: Celtic harp, tin whistle, bodhran,  autoharp, guitar, bass, oboe, English horn and many more. Their show includes Ontario-style step-dancing and an original Celtic story dramatized and set to music. The Friends will be selling lemonade and cookies at this event.

On Sunday, June 23, we’ll be hosting a Pancake Brunch on the Beach from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. – or until we run out of our supply of delicious pancakes, Lanark maple syrup, local sausages, juice, and coffee served up (for a fee) by volunteers with the Friends’ Heritage Mica Days.

Hope to see you there!

Posted in Friends of Murphys Point, Heritage Mica Days, Heritage Mica Festival, Mica Festival, Murphys Point, Murphys Point events, Murphys Point Provincial Park, Tay Valley Township, Volunteer | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Beautiful New Display Unveiled!

On Saturday, June 15 the Friends were part of a special ceremony to unveil a new interpretive display along the Silver Queen Mine Trail at Murphys Point. The ceremony was an opportunity for us, with the Park, to thank a dedicated group of volunteers who saw a need and had a passion to get the job done.

The new ore wagon display with interpretive signage.

The new ore wagon display with interpretive signage.

Tobi Kiesewalter, the Park’s Natural Heritage Education Leader, put everything into context with his address at the ceremony, which appears below:

About 150 years ago the mining industry got its start in North Burgess Township. It was not trained prospectors or experienced miners who got the ball rolling. It was mostly farmers who used their expertise, resourcefulness and whatever tools they had to extract the green and shiny black minerals that they had stumbled upon in their fields. This, in turn, helped them to eke out a living on the rugged and unforgiving Canadian Shield.

As the industry caught on, companies began to invest and, for a brief time, business was good. Companies like the General Electric Company, the German American Apatite Company and the Dominion Improvement and Development Company purchased and operated mines in the area. They acquired steam boilers, machinery, wagons and horses, they built infrastructure and hired workers. It was a mining boom that left North Burgess at the centre of one of the mining capitals of the world.

Tobi explains the use of sugar barrels to transport minerals, such as the mica shown, from the Silver Queen.

Tobi explains the use of sugar barrels to transport minerals, such as the mica shown, from the Silver Queen.

These are the facts about a significant chapter in Ontario’s history. Of course there’s more to it than that. There’s a whole story that we strive to interpret to anyone visiting the site. Some of the story bits are known, others are left to the imagination. For example, we know that the Adams Wagon Company made this wagon in their large factory in Brantford, Ontario. We know that it likely was the first line of transportation of minerals from Lanark County to markets around the world, including England, Germany and the United States. We can speculate about the mine manager who may have ordered this wagon from the Adams Wagon Company catalogue or the wagon driver who  pocketed a few pennies to transport the odd extra passenger or the ever-obedient horses who worked so hard along the uneven roads.

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These stories will be brought to life for visitors to this site thanks to the efforts of a very dedicated group of volunteers – Rudy Lepp; Tom Spence; John, Judy and Ian Bufton; Gord Munroe; Dan Woods; Wayne Smith; Bob Laidlaw; Tony Walsh and Larry Paquette – who researched and accurately restored the ore wagon, engineered and built a shelter for it, positioned the horses, outfitted them with harnesses and equipment, and subsequently repaired the porcupine damage with new equipment. These guys… and Judy… are not miners or trained restoration experts. But, just like the farmers who 150 years ago started the industry, they are incredibly resourceful and they brought a wealth of expertise to this project.

If a picture is worth a thousand words, then a professional museum-quality, 3D display with original artifacts has got to be worth even more than that. The thousands of visitors who walk down this trail annually have had the benefit of some interpretation and storytelling in the past. What this display now does is so effectively set the tone and context of what visitors will get to see further down the trail. It signals the beginning of a story of survival on the Canadian Shield, the world economy, entrepreneurship, hopes and dreams of prospectors, workers and company men and the brief but significant chapter in Ontario’s history when the minerals of Lanark County went out to the rest of the world.

The new interpretive signs at the site provide info about the mining history at Murphys Point.

The new interpretive signs at the site provide info about the mining history at Murphys Point.

On behalf of the visitors who venture down this trail, thanks to you for your passion and dedication.

Thank you also to Grover Lightford, who donated this wagon from the nearby McLaren Mine Site many years ago, along with many other artifacts. You had the foresight to realize that this was part of a bigger story that deserved to be heard. Thanks also to the efforts of the Friends of Murphys Point Park and Beth Peterkin for raising the grant money required to buy materials, fake horses, barrels and an interpretive sign. And, finally, thanks to Ontario’s Highlands Tourism Organization and Valley Heartland for contributing the necessary funds.

The crew from BurgessWood.

The crew from BurgessWood.

Great work, everyone!

(Photos by Stephanie Gray)

Posted in Friends of Murphys Point, Geology, Heritage, mica mine, Murphys Point, Murphys Point Provincial Park, Seven Wonders of Lanark County, Silver Queen Mine, Tay Valley Township | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment