The sparkling blue water of the St. Lawrence River is an essential part of the spirit of Morrisburg, Ontario, the river shaping the very foundation of the town. Resilient United Empire Loyalists and settlers carved homesteads and farms out of the forested wilderness in Upper Canada’s Dundas County, creating a small village named West Williamsburg.
By 1832, the community on the St. Lawrence River shore received a Royal Mail post office. The river was the fastest transportation route between Montreal and the Great Lakes, vessels serving settlements along the way. The rapids in the St. Lawrence River were a shipping hindrance and safety hazard. Between 1843 and 1856, a series of canals and locks were constructed on the north side of the great river near West Williamsburg to circumnavigate the rapids. Politician James Morris of Brockville promoted the Williamsburg Canal project and helped the Upper Canada House of Assembly with funding. The canals brought commerce and new residents to the village.
Main street Morrisburg looking west, ca 1910 |
Southwest panorama of Morrisburg |
The St. Lawrence River continued to influence the town with Morrisburg transforming into a lively waterfront playground. The Old Power House near Lock 23 in front of the town became an attractive site for scuba divers, the submerged stone building covered with barnacles and home to an abundance of underwater life. Each summer for over 40 years, the town has hosted “Tubie Races” weekends, drawing buoyant local and distant crowds to the river’s edge. A sparsely populated frontier village in the early 1800s, Morrisburg developed into a modern small town, the great St. Lawrence River entrenched in its past and still shaping its future.
By Susanna Mcleod
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