The Daily Courier

Two surviving quints will visit birthplace

- By ALANNA RIZZA

NORTH BAY, Ont. — The two surviving Dionne quintuplet­s will be returning this week to the log cabin where they were born 84 years ago for a ceremony marking their birth as an event of national historic significan­ce.

A spokesman for the sisters said Cecile Dionne and Annette Dionne will be travelling to their birth home in North Bay on Sunday. A commemorat­ing plaque will be unveiled during the ceremony at the home, which has been turned into a museum.

Carlo Tarini said the sisters will be visiting the cabin for the first time in 20 years and have asked to take a photo with local children.

“It’s a very touching event for the sisters. They are very happy, they are very pleased to be able to return on that occasion,” he said.

The five Dionne sisters became internatio­nal sensations upon their birth on May 28, 1934 as they were the only known quintuplet­s at the time to survive for more than a few days.

“They were in fact pretty much the initial Kardashian kids, generating a huge amount of media coverage,” said Tarini.

The Ontario government took the quints from their parents and turned them into a tourist attraction for the first nine years of their lives, bringing in about $500 million to the province.

In the 1990s, three surviving Dionne sisters reached a $4-million settlement with the province after raising concerns about the alleged mismanagem­ent of a trust fund that had been set up to provide for their future.

“There was a lot of suffering for the sisters as part of their childhood,” he said. “So on Sunday what we want to do is talk about the good that can come out of their existence and their survival. It is truly a story of survival and about ensuring the proper raising of children.”

The quints were born near the village of Corbeil, Ont., just south of North Bay. Their birth home was bought by the city of North Bay, brought there in 1985 and turned into a museum.

 ?? HO-Carlo Tarini/The Canadian Press ?? Cecile Dionne, left, and sister Annette pose for a photo with Carlo Tarini in this file photo from June 2018.
HO-Carlo Tarini/The Canadian Press Cecile Dionne, left, and sister Annette pose for a photo with Carlo Tarini in this file photo from June 2018.

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