More of Our Canada

My Hometown

Once a powerhouse for milling operations, the river that runs through the municipali­ty of Mississipp­i Mills now serves to enrich the local lifestyle

- By Karen Hirst, Almonte, Ont.

Quaint, charming and picturesqu­e, the villages and towns that dot the banks of the mighty Mississipp­i River flowing through the municipali­ty of Mississipp­i Mills in eastern Ontario immerse visitors and inhabitant­s alike in the essence and soul of their historic origins. Not only that, these long establishe­d communitie­s exude passion and

energy as they transform vision and potential into concrete action and results.

Comprising the amalgamate­d communitie­s of Almonte, Pakenham, Appleton and Clayton, as well as the rural areas of Ramsay Township, the municipali­ty shares a 130-year history of woollen mill operations along the banks of the Mississipp­i River. Each community continues to share with equal pride and gusto the binding ties of the river that flows through them.

With its torrential awakening in the spring, a mellowing flow through the lazy, hazy days of summer and on into the mystical, crystalliz­ing dress of winter, each community experience­s its own unique display of the river’s power, its beauty and joyful gaiety and playfulnes­s as it tumbles and rumbles, taking passage under the pathways above and over rocks and deepening excavation­s in the river bed below.

APPLETON

When opened, the weir at Appleton provides ribbons of rushing water over a slippery wall of concrete that drops a short distance down into a sudsy foam at its base.

Picking up momentum the river produces the swirling splash of its mesmerizin­g power before settling into a calming flow towards Almonte.

The power of the falls once supported a sawmill, a gristmill and for 130 years a woollen mill. In the absence of the mills, modernera Appleton is now a charming village retreat, home to the 100-year-old, 18-hole Mississipp­i Golf Club and a museum that preserves the history of the bygone productive days of mill operations, as well as that of their owners and employees.

ALMONTE

Almonte is the only town in Ontario named after a Mexican general. With a proud origin as a textile/mill town, Almonte once boasted seven busy woollen mills, the last of which closed in the 1980s. The Mississipp­i Valley Textile Museum, housed in the annex of the old Rosamond Woollen Mill—a national historic site of Canada—offers visitors an enlighteni­ng experience of recorded history on the mill operations as well as a large display of tactile and visual exhibits.

Almonte’s wealth of varying-sized water falls offers to its viewing audience both sights and sounds that leave no doubt as to the power and volume of the Mississipp­i. Grand Falls in particular gives forth an exquisite display during the height of its spring flow. With an abundance of power, the river currently supports two electrical power plants.

BLAKENEY

Flowing under the Blakeney bridge, the river lazily arrives from Almonte. Picking up momentum, it travels over smoothly polished rocks and with its gaiety and playful churning and gyrating, it moves with a swift white-water frothiness towards the village of Pakenham.

Blakeney is a quaint rural village. Although long-since demolished, there once were a number of thriving mills in Blakeney. It is now home to a provincial park tucked in along the curve of the river rapids, a delightful place to spend some quiet time or enjoy great outdoor recreation.

PAKENHAM

Reaching Pakenham, the Mississipp­i is met by the Five Span Bridge, which is the only one of its kind in North America. Built in 1901 to accommodat­e horse and carriage traffic on the way to the local mills, public pressure led to its restoratio­n rather than its demolition and replacemen­t in 1984 to handle modern-day traffic. Today, pulsating into peaks of sudsy foam and powered along by a strong current, the Mississipp­i continues its traditiona­l rapid course through and past the refurbishe­d stone arches, breaking against any obstacle in its path until eventually it joins forces with the Ottawa River near Arnprior.

The Mississipp­i River is one of the many treasures offered for a lifestyle that is second to none along its banks, in the community of Mississipp­i Mills. n

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada