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2024 CALENDAR OF EVENTS
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The Group of Seven at Pointe au Baril
Lawren Harris at The Ojibway - new sketches identified
2013 Nobel Laureate for Literature Alice Munroe in Pointe au Baril
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Map
Message from the President
OHPS Board
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1906-2006 Centenary Book
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Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Voices
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About the Author
Edith Bruckland Interview
Araby Lockhart Interview Waitress 1940's
Photos
1904 Ruth McCuaig collection
1931 Hotel Brochure Donated
Donors
2022 - 2023
2021 - 2022
2020 -2021
Gift Shop
Grocery Store
Contact us
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Ojibway Historical Preservation Society

News
2024 CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Annual Newsletters
The Group of Seven at Pointe au Baril
Lawren Harris at The Ojibway - new sketches identified
2013 Nobel Laureate for Literature Alice Munroe in Pointe au Baril
About
Mission & History
Map
Message from the President
OHPS Board
Past OHPS Boards
OHPS By-Laws
OHPS PROJECT PROCESS
OHPS Audited Financial Statements
OHPS AGM minutes
Videos
Projects
Pinewood 2020
The Gift Shop 2020
The Gift Shop Project Plans 2019
Back Beach Swimming Pavilion
Basswood
Walking Trails
1906-2006 Centenary Book
About The Book
Foreword
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Voices
Sidebars
TImeline
About the Author
Edith Bruckland Interview
Araby Lockhart Interview Waitress 1940's
Photos
1904 Ruth McCuaig collection
1931 Hotel Brochure Donated
Donors
2022 - 2023
2021 - 2022
2020 -2021
Gift Shop
Grocery Store
Contact us
Donate
1902

1902

Helen Davis visits Pointe au Baril and purchases an island, St. Helena, for $5.

1903

1903

Hamilton Davis, at age 38, stays at his sister’s new cottage.

1904

1904

Hamilton Davis purchases Iroquois Island (now called Nepenthe) and arranges for survey of Ojibway Island by Josiah Gershwin Sing.

1905

1905

Katharine Davis, Hamilton Davis’s eldest sister, purchases an island that she names Minnehaha.

1906

1906

Hamilton Davis purchases Ojibway Island for $210 ($5 per acre) in May.

Hamilton Davis transfers ownership of Ojibway Island to the Pointe au Baril Hotel Company Limited for $350 in June; shareholders invest $15,000 to build and operate the Ojibway Hotel. Hotel opens on June 23.

1907

1907

First regatta held at Ojibway wharf. Hamilton Davis marries Amelia (Millie) McIntosh – of Meaford, Ontario, and summer resident of Pointe au Baril Village – on September 17. Mechanic’s lien for $723.21 issued against Ojibway Island by Parry Sound contractors MacNabb and McKinney.

1908

1908

First CPR train to Pointe au Baril Station, formally known as Sucker Creek. Pointe au Baril Islanders’ Association formed at a meeting at the Ojibway Hotel.

1910

1910

The Pointe au Baril Hotel Company Limited changes name to Pointe au Baril Summer Hotel Company Limited.

1913

1913

$2,000 loan to the Pointe au Baril Summer Hotel Company Limited, at six percent interest, from Adele H. Clark, of Rochester, New York, to finance building of west wing of hotel and tower; secured by mortgage against Ojibway Island; discharged in 1916.

1916

1916

Millie McIntosh Davis dies.

1917

1917

Hamilton Davis marries Louie Irene Cloke of Hamilton, Ontario, on April 21.

1918

1918

Twin sons born to Hamilton and Irene Davis on June 24: Jeremy Griswold Davis and Hamilton Cloke Davis. Hamilton Cloke dies at age 15 days on July 8.

1922

1922

Hamilton Davis granted Canadian citizenship.

1924

1924

Jeremy Griswold Davis dies at age five, on April 25.

1937

1937

Highway 69 opens to Pointe au Baril.

1942

1942

Hamilton Davis sells Ojibway Hotel for $80,000 to a group of islanders, organized by Peter Campbell.

1943

1943

The Ojibway Hotel Limited officially takes over ownership of the hotel.

1947

1947

Hamilton Davis dies of a heart attack on February 10 in Orlando, Florida.

1954

1954

Preference shares issued to maintain the hotel; $23,300 raised from 1954 to 1959.

1956

1956

Parcel of land on south side of Ojibway Island leased to E. B. Kernaghan, who builds Kernwood cottage for use by his family and hotel guests (parcel purchased in 1966).

1957-58

1957-58

Three parcels of land sold on Ojibway Island (including Cedarwood cottage lived in by Hamilton Davis while he owned the hotel), to the MacLennan family, managers of Ojibway Hotel through the 1950s.

1959

1959

The Ojibway Club incorporated; the hotel continues to operate for several more years. Lease of southwest point of Ojibway Island (parcel purchased in 1977).

1960

1960

First annual meeting of the Ojibway Club.

1962

1962

Facilities still owned by the Ojibway Hotel Limited but operated as the Ojibway Club.

1964

1964

The Ojibway Club purchases assets of the Ojibway Hotel Limited by issuing debentures. Ojibway Hotel’s Sprucewood and Larchwood cottages sold.

1964

1964

The Ojibway Club purchases assets of the Ojibway Hotel Limited by issuing debentures. Ojibway Hotel’s Sprucewood and Larchwood cottages sold.

1977

1977

Property and buildings of the Ojibway Hotel Limited transferred to the Ojibway Club.

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1996

1996

Steps initiated by Don Kopas, Ojibway Club board member, to obtain charitable status for fundraising to restore buildings and infrastructure.

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2006

2006

Restoration of Ojibway buildings complete on eve of centennial celebrations.

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Alice Munro (July 10, 1931 - 2024) Canadian short-story writer, won the 2013 Nobel Prize for Literature, for her exquisitely drawn narratives. The Swedish Academy dubbed her a “master of the contemporary short story”, Her work noted for its “precise imagery and narrative style, which is at once lyrical, compelling, economical, and intense, revealing the depth and complexities in the emotional lives of everyday people”.

With the exception of Canadian-born American author Saul Bellow (who won in 1976), Munro was the first Canadian—as well as the 13th woman—to be named the Nobel literature laureate.