The St. Williams
Forestry Farm
By R. Robert
Mutrie
Introduction
With today’s concern for conservation and reversal
of human encroachment on our environment, an article about the restoration of
nature in Norfolk County by descendants of the Long Point Settlers is apropos
as a kind of epilogue to the pioneer progress.
The goal of the early Long Point Settlers was to
clear the land and plant crops for sustenance and sale. This process
unwittingly created a new problem. A spreading dust bowl blew in central
Norfolk County by the end of the nineteenth century. Sand dunes took over
previously productive farms. Lot 24 Concession 5 in Walsingham Township was
wholly taken over by the blow sand.
Shortly after the turn of the twentieth century a
different kind of pioneer appeared in Norfolk County—the reforestation pioneer.
A descendant of Long Point Settler Donald McCall named Walter McCall
spearheaded the reforestation of the central part of eastern Walsingham
Township. Other pioneer descendant names represented in the project included
Horton, Price, Ferris, Mabee, Newkirk, Underhill, Cline, Butler, Heath and
more.
Their pioneer ecological creation, long called the
St. Williams Forestry Farm and the St. Williams Forestry Station, this is today
the St. Williams Nursery & Ecology Centre.
The following article is reprinted from St.
Williams: The History by R. Robert Mutrie. Published in 1988 the book went
out of print soon after. It will be republished in 2011, using paperless
electronic media. The title will be burnt onto the surface CD-Rom rather than
on a paper label and all notification will be in electronic form rather than
print.
The Forestry Farm
For a taste of Northern
Ontario’s rugged wilderness in the south, a trip to St. Williams is a must.
Just drive along Highway 24 or Regional Road 16 on the northern approaches to
the village and you will be treated to a wholly unexpected immersion into a
verdant forest landscape bringing to mind the lush images of our northern
regions.
Stepping out of the car
and standing at the intersection of the two roads, you can’t help but feel
dwarfed while craning your neck to see the tops of the majestic white pine. The
trees look like a race of giants marching grandly off into the distance, proud
refugees from the two centuries of “progress” surrounding them. It is really
amazing when you consider this very corner existed as a barren plot of
windblown sand only just eighty years before!
When our pioneer
forefathers came to this province during the closing years of the eighteenth
century it had looked much like this area does now—deeply forested,
impenetrable underbrush, a rugged, wild country, and yes there were mosquitoes
then too.
For a century or more,
the area farmers set about clearing the land of all trees and brush in their
inevitable push to develop ever larger arable acreages. In fact, logging became
and important industry in itself during the developing years. The sons of the
area farmers earned a little extra income cutting the trees and floating them
down the rivers to be incorporated into ships and the new buildings of the fast
growing cities. Norfolk walnut was especially prized for furniture making.
Little did those enterprising farmers and their sons expect the terrible
ravages of soil erosion caused by wind and rain pelting the vulnerable
unprotected land they left behind. By the turn of the nineteenth century, it
became generally recognized the time had arrived for reversing that process. The picture at the right taken about 1920 shows sand dunes dotting the landscape of an unplanted part of the Forestry Farm lands.
One concerned citizen
was St. Williams businessman Walter F. McCall. For several decades prior to
1900, the McCall sawmill and furniture making business under Daniel McCall and
then his son Walter snapped up Norfolk trees just as fast as they could be cut
to craft their wooden masterpieces for home an office, unwitting contributors
to the area’s deforestation. Walter McCall became conscious of the devastation
being left behind by this process. He couldn’t miss it actually with the
company mill right on the edge of the sane dunes of “Bunker’s Hill” northwest
of St. Williams. He made it his personal crusade to turn back the hands of time
and in 1905, planted a first few young saplings near the mill as an experiment.
McCall’s small planting
captured the imagination of Norfolk County’s Member of the Provincial
Legislature, Lieutenant Colonel Arthur C. Pratt an old family friend. A native
of nearby Lynedoch, Pratt was familiar with that desolate eroded Bunker’s Hill
area and took an active interest in his friend’s pioneering efforts. He was
impressed with the concept of converting the blow sands into a woodlot. Pratt
took the larger view of the potential value such an idea could have for the
entire province should the experiment prove successful.
It wasn’t long before
the two Norfolk men involved the renowned Ontario Agricultural College at
Guelph. The project held a special appeal for Dr. Edward Zavitz at that time
Canada’s foremost professor of forestry. He summered at a cottage in nearby
Turkey Point and, intrigued by the project, Dr. Zavitz rode his trademark
bicycle over to see what was happening at St. Williams. McCall and Pratt took
him deep into the sand dunes and then to the mill site to see the barren
property and the new beginnings.
As a result of his
visit, Dr. Zavitz set about formulating Ontario’s first formal reforestation
program for presentation by Lt. Col. Pratt to a 1908 session of the Ontario
Legislature for its approval.
The province took out
options on that worthless 100 acres of blow sand at the northwest corner of the
Fifth concession (present day Highway 24) and Townline Road (present day
Regional Road 16) for $1000. It was agreed if trees could grow here they could
grow anywhere!
Dr. Zavitz initially
took direct responsibility for his project then chose George Lane to execute
the plan as the Superintendent of the new “Forestry Farm” as it was called.
Like Dr. Zavitz, Lane was also a specialist with the Department of Lands and
Forests at the Ontario Agricultural College and a valuable ally in the project
from the beginning.
As his right hand man
Lane had with him Edward “Scotty” Telford and the two took on the logistics of
creating an oasis out of a desert, a kind of pioneer challenge in reverse.
George Lane and Scotty
Telford arrived at St. Williams with their families in the fall of 1908 and
took up residence in a derelict weather-beaten farm house with sand to the
front and back. There were only the dunes and some scraggly brush as far as the
eye could see.
The new Superintendent
and his assistant wasted no time in getting started. In the spring of 1909,
they hired five local men, bought horses, made emergency repairs and put a
foundation under the Station house, laid sod over the sandy yards, planted
hedges as the first stop-gap windbreaks and built a windmill to power a pump to
draw water up the hill from the mill pond. Farsighted, they built two wooden
towers to be used as lookouts for forest fires. Walter McCall provided the
finished lumber from his nearby mill, itself taken over by the Station in due
course. Even an in-house creosote plant was built for treating the lumber.
The central point of the
project was the reforestation of the land. The men planted 350,000 seeds that
first spring. The purchase order of April 13, 1909 placed with the Ontario
Agricultural College consisted of 200,000 white pine, 100,000 Scotch pine and
50,000 spruce. A small crew including George Lane, Scotty Telford, William
Rogers, Ernest Hammond, Andy Horton, John Gilmore and Reese Cleverly made this
first planting. It is the fruits of that seeding which we see at that corner
today. In 1910, Lane ordered an additional 335,000 seeds consisting of 300,000
Scotch pine, 5,000 European larches, 5,000 Japanese larches and 20,000 American
arborvitae. Area children gathered up the walnuts and hickory nuts they could
find and delivered them to the Station to earn a little spending money.
Those first experimental
saplings received intensive care and attention as they began to rise above the
surrounding sands and soon showed signs of flourishing. As the trees matured,
the men gathered cones and in a specially built processing house placed them in
vats made of chicken wire for drying. The workers occasionally cranked the vats
over and the seeds fell onto the canvas floor to be gathered for the spring and
fall plantings. In this manner the Station soon became self-propagating.
Seeing the early success
of the St. Williams reforestation project, others in the area felt encouraged
to repeat the experiment on their own marginal acreages. The Forestry Station
was soon harvesting and shipping out 100,000 seedlings per year to points all
over Southwestern Ontario for reforesting areas of blow sand and providing
windbreaks around farm buildings, orchards and fields. In addition, Lane,
Telford, Zavitz and their associates provided a free advisory service to those
planning tree planting projects.
Dr. Zavitz was often on
the scene to watch his concept become a reality. As it developed into an
unqualified success he earned for himself the title of “Father of
Reforestation.” He then gained appointment as the first Provincial Forester in
1912 then from 1926 until 1934 served as the Deputy Minister of Forestry in the
Ontario Department of Lands and Forests. He then continued as Provincial
Forester.
In 1913, there were
fourteen employees at the Station: George Lane, Scotty Telford, Ernest Hammond,
John (Doc) Price, George Coombs, William (Musket) Rogers, James (Casey) Jones,
William Stackhouse, Joseph Watts, Frank Price, Frank Newman, Fred Heskett, Andy
Horton and Burt (Jack) Hammond.
Frank S. Newman, a student
in the Forestry School at the University of Toronto came to the Station to do
practical work under the supervision of George Lane, and became proficient in
every aspect of the operation. George Lane died in 1915 and Newman, returning
from overseas military service in 1919 became official Superintendent.
Under Newman, the Forest
Station embarked on ever more ambitious projects, doubling and tripling over
and over again the acreage under reforestation plots. The fledgling forest
begun by Lane continued to push the “desert” back and the whole area took on a
life of its own. The record of planting to that time was an impressive one. In
1920, the inventory of trees on the Station lands stood at 1,178,139 including
thirty different species. Annual production of seedlings ran at an impressive
3,000,000 plants. In that year, the foresters planted another 1,800,000 Scotch
pine, 1,500,000 white spruce, 95,000 white pine, 8,200 Australian pine, 65,000
Norway spruce and 1,500 Hemlock.
By 1932, the total
acreage reclaimed to forest reached just over 1,100 and there were 2,162,870
trees planted. The dust bowl years in the Prairie Provinces during the Great
Depression gave new emphasis to the need for natural restoration. In 1936, an
impressive 5,357,665 trees were shipped to customers in twenty-six Ontario
counties and two other provinces. In Ontario, the lion’s share went to four
hundred people for reforestation and windbreaks. The new planting at the
Station reached 2,744,700. The inventory of trees on Station lands stood at
45,195,000.
Newman expanded the
Reforestation Station throughout his forty-one year career. In 1950 the
reforested lands reached nearly 4,000 acres at St. Williams and Turkey Point
and included 52,418,000 trees and saplings of which 44,245,000 were conifers
and the balance hardwoods.
Frank Newman retired in
1954 and was succeeded by John S. Ball (1954-1956), William R. Bunting
(1956-1961), A. A. Russell (1961-1964), Verdon W. Fish (1964-1965), William
Foreman (1965-1966), William E. Edwards (1966-1968), Rolf E. Laupert
(1968-1982) and the present Superintendent A. (Dolf) Wynia.
The foremen at the
Forestry Farm were: Edward Telford (1908-1915), Joseph Watts (1915-1933),
Gordon Telford (1933-1944), Arthur Heald (1944-1969), L. C. Pattyson (1969-1978)
and Ron Thayer (1978-present).
By 1970, the annual
planting reached close to 2,000,000 seeds consisting of twenty species ranging
from the popular pines and spruce to such exotic trees as the black locust,
tulip and cottonwood. Shipments to customers ran at 6,000,000 per year.
Today there are two
hundred and sixty-four acres under nursery stock production and 4,000 acres of
woodlands and recreational facilities including a large picnic area open to the
public, a forestry museum and a fishing pond. The woodlots and plantations now
contain more than 546,000 cubic feet of standing timber growing at the rate of
more than 5,000 cubic inches per year. Not bad for a former wasteland!
Employees of the St. Williams Forestry Station in
1936
Ray
Earls Harold Mayo Alex Gee
Bill
Morris Fred Parsons Ace Stewart
Ker
Smith Elgie
Coles Burton
Mills
Jack
Hammond Charles
Rose Freeman
Raymond
Gib
MacAinch Bud
Price John Jackson
Harry
Tricket Alex
Bellas Frank
Bellas
George
Goosling Harry
Lalone Clarence
Starling
Ernest
Smith William
Trickett Archie
Caldwell
Mel
MacDonald Basil
Ferris Alex
Horton
Frank
S. Newman Jacob
Butcher James
Mabee
Edward
Telford Earl
Parson Bert Newkirk
Charles
Mudford Charles
Underhill Stan
Jenny
Fern
Wingrove Arthur
Heald William
Raymond
Norm
Butler Carson
Trickett Archie
Fisher
Jim
Cline Wes LaRose Jack Dancey
Mic
MacAinch James
Jones Harry
Carpenter
Curtis
McAinch Tink
Molton Roy
Andrews
Roy
Mayo William
Shoup Harry
Burke
John
Heath
The Reforestation Pioneers
When the George Lane
family arrived on the barren wind-swept reaches of Lot 24 Concession 5
Walsingham Township with the goal of converting it into a forest, they became
modern day pioneers in the old sense of the word. Leaving behind a well-ordered
existence and a comfortable suburban home on the grounds of the Ontario
Agricultural College campus in the prospering city of Guelph, they settled on a
sandy wasteland, “Bunker’s Hill” as the locals called it, a “God-forsaken
place” as the Lanes would refer to it. The family in the fall of 1908 consisted
of George aged 50, his wife Margaret aged 38, son George “Ritchie” 11 and two
daughters Ina May 8 and Erma Alice 2.
They had for company
Edward Telford aged 26, known as “Scotty” for his origins in Dalkeith,
Scotland. He was also an employee of the Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph
and came with his new bride Helen Peacock aged 23 in the Lane expedition to St.
Williams.
The two families arrived
by train in the spring of 1909 and were picked up at the station by Charles
Woodward who would become a life-long friend of the Lanes and Telfords. He
drove them around to their new lodgings and what a disappointing sight it must
have been. They found only two derelict old wind-blown frame houses badly in
need of repairs and a coat of paint. There was sand at the front door and more
sand at the back door.
It is little wonder that
one of their early projects was to make the home properties habitable.
Foundations and basements were put in, the yards sodded and hedges planted. The
couples had no plumbing or electricity. Coal oil and wood fuelled lamps and
stoves. Keeping in touch with the world held a top priority for the Lanes and
they were the first in the district with a rural phone when the service came to
St. Williams.
As the forestry station
developed, George Lane always concerned himself with his workers. When any of
the men was absent from work, he hitched up his horse and buggy and went to
their home to find out if they were ill or in trouble, and may times found
both.
These were dirt poor
families in that district affected by the downgraded soil conditions on the
farms. In those days there was a lot of tuberculosis, at that time known as
“consumption”, in the district homes, a number of which were unsanitary. The
terrible disease took two teachers at the Unger School where the Lane children
attended class. This was a far cry from the more genteel schools of the city.
Margaret Lane worried about her children being in the company of so many rough
rural children. They were sometimes even given the spectacle of fights between
fathers as they walked home from their classes. Lunch for those children was
little more than sour-dough bread and a hard boiled egg. They watched enviously
as the Lane children opened their lunch pails to what must have looked like a
feast for the less fortunate.
George Lane and Scotty
Telford worked tirelessly in their quest to made that first Forestry Farm an unqualified
success. Lane died prematurely in Jul 1915 leaving his wife Margaret and young
children. They continued to live on the Forestry Farm until 1922 when they
returned to Guelph.
Scotty Telford was a
life-long employee of the Forestry Farm he helped pioneer. One of his six sons,
Gordon followed in his father’s footsteps and worked there until retiring in
1952. He held his father’s position of foreman from 1933 to 1952.
Frank Newman came in as
Lane’s successor in 1919. A former pupil of Lane the new superintendent brought
with him his war bride Lalah from Aberdeen, Scotland. At first, for want of
other accommodation their home was a tent pitched beside the Station pond. Here
they had two children before finally moving into two rooms in the west end of the
Lane house, and when the Lanes moved back to Guelph, the Newmans took over the
house. The Station offices were then installed in the west end rooms. In due
course, the present large station house was built for them east of the old
house and continued there until Newman’s retirement in 1954. This is now the
Long Point Bird Observatory.
Sources:
The Plantation Books and
Records of the St. Williams Forest Station Library and Museum courtesy of Tony
Wynia, Superintendant
Notes of Clayton McCall
Reminiscences of Erma
Lane Murray and Madeline C. Mutrie