Tay River | |
Pushpin Map: | Canada Southern Ontario |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location of the mouth of the Tay River in southern Ontario |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | Canada |
Subdivision Type2: | Province |
Subdivision Name2: | Ontario |
Subdivision Type3: | Region |
Subdivision Name3: | Eastern Ontario |
Subdivision Type4: | County |
Subdivision Name4: | Lanark |
Length: | 95km (59miles) |
Source1: | Bobs Lake |
Source1 Location: | Lanark Highlands |
Source1 Coordinates: | 44.7594°N -76.5225°W |
Source1 Elevation: | 162m (531feet) |
Mouth: | Lower Rideau Lake, Rideau River |
Mouth Location: | Port Elmsley |
Mouth Coordinates: | 44.8786°N -76.1128°W |
Mouth Elevation: | 125m (410feet) |
River System: | Ottawa River basin |
Basin Size: | 850km2 |
The Tay River is a river in Lanark County in Eastern Ontario, Canada.[1] [2] It is in the Saint Lawrence River drainage basin and is a left tributary of the Rideau River.
The Tay River watershed, covering a drainage area in excess of 800 square kilometers, is the westmost of the 6 recognized subwatersheds managed by the Rideau Valley Conservation Authority.[3]
This river starts at Bobs Lake and leaves the lake, controlled by a weir, near the community of Bolingbroke in geographic South Sherbrooke Township,[4] part of the municipality of Tay Valley. It heads northeast, passes under Lanark County Road 36, reaches Christie Lake and passes there into geographic Bathurst Township.[5] It continues northeast, passes under Lanark County Road 6, and divides into two channels; the right channel is known as Scotts Snye. The river then travels through the community of Glen Tay, continuing to Perth. The river splits into two main channels as it flows through downtown Perth. The two channels have recombined by the time it leaves Perth and continues to the Rideau River, which drains via the Ottawa River into the Saint Lawrence River.
The river is 950NaN0 in length and drains an area of 850-1NaN-1.[6] A canal connects the river to the Tay Canal, and Rideau Canal systems at Beveridge Bay on Lower Rideau Lake.
Abbott, Barton, Carnahan, Clow, Danby, Duncan, Eagle, Elbow, Leggat, Little Beaver, Little Mud, Long, Miller, Oconto, Scanlin, Spruce, Watson
Atwood, Beaver,Bobs & Crow,Buck Bay,Burns Pond,Christie,Crosby,Davern,Deer,Doran,Farrell,Green Bay,Lake of the Hills,Little Crosby,Little Rock,Little Silver,Little Twins,Lynn,Mud Bay,O’Brien,Pike,Rainbow,Rock (north),Sucker,Thompson Pond,Victoria,Weatherhead
Andrew, Doctor McLaren,Mills,Mud,Otty, Rock (south),Thoms Mud
The Tay River was formed during the retreat of the Champlain Sea after the last ice age. The name given to it by the Mississauga First Nation, who controlled its territory at the time of the arrival of the first European settlers, appears to have not been recorded. They used its territory for hunting, especially in the winter, and likely harvested manoomin (wild rice) on some of its lakes, for instance Christie Lake. Early European settlers called it the Pike River; the name Tay replaced it at some time during the arrival of many Scottish settlers after the founding of the Perth Military Settlement in 1816, doubtless in reference to the River Tay in Scotland. The new name was already clearly established during the construction of numerous mills on the river in the 1820s, and the Tay Canal in the 1830s.[7]
Mills on the Tay, the Tay Canal, and more broadly the resultant access to the Rideau Canal system provided important commercial connections from Frontenac and Lanark Counties to Ottawa and markets beyond, in particular for logging. Dams on the upper Tay created lakes (e.g. Bobs Lake) that were reservoirs of water for the Rideau Canal at the time, and are important to cottagers and seasonal residents today.
Following municipal amalgamation in Ontario in 1998, the river has provided its name to the municipality of Tay Valley, Ontario, even though the municipality neither wholly contains, nor is wholly contained by, the Tay River watershed.