One of the highlights of our weekend at the cottage was going to the Hawk Lake Log Chute. We have been there several times, but this trip was the first time we went knowing the role my husband's family had in introducing log chutes to Canada.
At the Hawk Lake Log Chute we read the historic boards with new eyes and were pleased as punch that they mentioned the log chute my husband's ancestors built over the Chaudière Falls in Ottawa.
The log chute here in Haliburton is the last one in Ontario, so we were mighty proud to be standing near something that my husband's ancestor had introduced to Canada that had been so important to the early timber trade.
In the 19th century logs were hewn into square timbers and then joined to make cribs, which were then attached together to make large rafts. The lumbermen lived and worked on these rafts navigating them down the river to Quebec City and then by ship to Europe. When they came to a rapids or falls, the rafts would be broken apart and sent down the log chutes in separate cribs. The log chutes prevented the logs from being damaged while going over the falls.
Apparently it was not only timber that went down the log chutes, however. A popular activity was to ride down the slides for a small fee. When the Prince of Wales visited Ottawa in 1860, he rode down the Chaudière Falls log chute right after laying the cornerstone for the new Parliament Building of Canada.
Now does that look like fun, or what?
Back in April, my husband was reunited with his brother and sister after 50 years (which you can read more about here) and, along with meeting his siblings, my husband learned about his ancestors. It turns out that my husband is a great-great-great-great grandson of Philemon Wright, the man who founded Ottawa and Hull. One of Philemon Wright's sons, Ruggles Wright (you've got to love a man named Ruggles), went to Norway in the 1820s and observed how they navigated logs over rapids and falls to get them down the river. He then modified the idea of the log chute when he returned to Canada, to allow wider timber rafts over the falls.
At the Hawk Lake Log Chute we read the historic boards with new eyes and were pleased as punch that they mentioned the log chute my husband's ancestors built over the Chaudière Falls in Ottawa.
The log chute here in Haliburton is the last one in Ontario, so we were mighty proud to be standing near something that my husband's ancestor had introduced to Canada that had been so important to the early timber trade.
In the 19th century logs were hewn into square timbers and then joined to make cribs, which were then attached together to make large rafts. The lumbermen lived and worked on these rafts navigating them down the river to Quebec City and then by ship to Europe. When they came to a rapids or falls, the rafts would be broken apart and sent down the log chutes in separate cribs. The log chutes prevented the logs from being damaged while going over the falls.
Cookery on a timber raft on the Ottawa River, 1880 |
Apparently it was not only timber that went down the log chutes, however. A popular activity was to ride down the slides for a small fee. When the Prince of Wales visited Ottawa in 1860, he rode down the Chaudière Falls log chute right after laying the cornerstone for the new Parliament Building of Canada.
The Prince of Wales going down the log chute in 1860 from A History of Canada Online |
"Slowly at first, but quickly gaining speed, the crib shoots down in a wild spray of water. Riders and spectators roar their excitement, rivaling the thundering of the crib as it sways and bounces in a flurry of flying water." (Source)
The royal party going down the Chaudiere log chute in 1901 |
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