Highlands East, Ontario Explained

Highlands East
Settlement Type:Township Municipality (lower-tier)
Official Name:Municipality of Highlands East
Seal Size:200px
Seal Type:Logo
Pushpin Map:CAN ON Haliburton#Canada Southern Ontario
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Southern Ontario
Coordinates:44.9667°N -93°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Haliburton
Government Type:Township
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Dave Burton
Leader Title1:Governing Body
Leader Name1:Council of the Municipality of Highlands East
Leader Title2:MP
Leader Name2:Jamie Schmale (CPC)
Leader Name3:Laurie Scott
Established Title:Established
Established Date:2001
Area Land Km2:704.63
Population As Of:2016
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population Total:3343
Population Density Km2:4.7
Timezone:EST
Utc Offset:-5
Timezone Dst:EDT
Utc Offset Dst:-4
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:K0L 3C0
Area Code:705

Highlands East is a township municipality located in Haliburton County, Ontario, Canada.

History

The township was incorporated in 2001 through the amalgamation of the former townships of Bicroft, Cardiff, Glamorgan, and Monmouth.

Communities

Cardiff

See main article: Cardiff, Ontario. Cardiff is a former mining community; Bicroft and Dyno Mines opened in 1956 and closed several years later. The chief mineral being mined in Cardiff was uranium. Cardiff is located on Highway 118 between the towns of Bancroft and Haliburton. The Cardiff Elementary School is a small school. The community also has a Royal Canadian Legion hall, a Catholic and United church, an outdoor pool, which is popular during the summer, a post office, a municipal office, a library, and a skating rink that doubles as an outdoor basketball and floor hockey court. The entrance to the townsite, off of Highway 118, is marked by a large metal sculpture of a dragonfly.

Gooderham

Gooderham is bordered on the south end of the municipality in proximity to the Irondale River and Pine Lake to the north. It is located on a now defunct railway line, the Irondale, Bancroft and Ottawa (IB&O) Railway, part of which has been since converted into a trail network. The village of Gooderham is at the intersection of the Monck Road from the East and the Buckhorn Road from the South. The origin of the name Gooderham is not known for sure although it is likely that it was named after a member of the distillery-owning Gooderham family donated money for a local church. In any case, it was called Gooderham by the time the first post office was established in 1873. The first mills were built by 1875 using the waterfall between Gooderham Lake and the Irondale River. Logging and farming were the original attractions of the Gooderham area and Gooderham still has an active lumber mill.

Wilberforce

Wilberforce was established as "Pusey", a station on the IB&O Railway, and named for railway president Charles J. Pusey. This little railway had initially been built to carry iron ore from open pit mines at Irondale. Although the mines had closed, the railway had high hopes of extending to Bancroft, and even higher hopes of reaching Ottawa. At Wilberforce, where the railway skirted the southern shore of Pusey Lake (now Dark Lake), the Wilberforce Lumber Company put up a sawmill. In 1909 the Wilberforce mill was leased to James Lauder and Joseph Spears, of Toronto. The IB&O Railway was taken over by the Canadian Northern Railway in 1912. Messrs. Lauder and Spears along with Lucien B. Howland, (the former General Manager of the IB&O), looking for new business opportunities, acquired a sawmill on the new CNR line north of Parry Sound, Ontario. The three men eventually established the community of Lost Channel in the Parry Sound District and went bankrupt in the process. Wilberforce is known among geocachers as the "Geocaching Capital of Canada." The first cache in the town was "Wilberforce be With You" placed by Geofellas.

Other communities

The township also contains the smaller communities of Cheddar (ghost town), Cope Falls, Deer Lake, Dyno Estates, Essonville, Harcourt, Highland Grove, Hotspur, Ironsides, Maxwells, Pusey, South Wilberforce, Tory Hill, Upper Paudash, Ursa and Ward. Highland Grove was home to "Camp Diamond", the site of a fabled, but unfounded diamond mine. The site was used as a hockey camp for a short period of time and later became an all girls summer recreational camp.

Highlands East has 5 fire halls located throughout the municipality, with stations located in Cardiff, Highland Grove, Gooderham, Wilberforce and Paudash. The Highlands East Fire Department only has one full-time employee, its fire chief, with all of the firefighters being volunteers.

Demographics

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Highlands East had a population of living in of its total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of . With a land area of 688.18km2, it had a population density of in 2021.[2]

Lakes

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Census Profile, 2016 Census: Highlands East, Municipality . 8 February 2017 . . June 14, 2019.
  2. Web site: Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories, census divisions and census subdivisions (municipalities), Ontario . . February 9, 2022 . March 31, 2022.