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Almaguin Chronicles

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Almaguin Chronicles explores the relationship between lumbering and settlement in the Parry Sound District the last frontier of this part of Ontario.
  • 31 January 2007
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The Almaguin Highlands is a region that was once coveted for its game, silver birch and majestic white pine. For centuries this area stretched up to the shores of Lake Nipissing and embraced an unbroken forest that remained largely intact save where lakes, streams and beaver meadows punctuated the forest floor. In 1900, the northernmost areas of the District of Parry Sound were still not accessible by even a conventional roadway. Homesteaders, their claims precariously strung along the Pickerel River, relied on the waterway as their transportation route. What must it have been like at the outset for the lumbermen who cut down the white pine? And how did the settlers-those intrepid folk who trekked across the district with only the lumberjack’s blazed trails for a guide-cope in the wilderness?

Almaguin Chronicles explores the relationship between lumbering and settlement throughout the Parry Sound District-the last frontier of this part of Ontario. Throughout, rare archival photographs and excerpts from unpublished memoirs augment the text.

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Price: $24.99
Pages: 192
Publisher: Dundurn Press
Imprint: Natural Heritage
Publication Date: 31 January 2007
Trim Size: 10.00 X 8.00 in
ISBN: 9781550027600
Format: Paperback
BISACs: NATURE / Natural Resources, Environmental management, HISTORY / Canada / General, HISTORY / General
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Astrid Taim spent most of her summers at the family's summer residence in the District of Parry Sound. Before joining the editorial staff at the Almaguin News in 1988, Astrid spent a number of years as a district correspondent with the North Bay Nugget.