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| #2997 "Singleton Pioneer Cedar Rail Coral" 12 X 16 (inches). Started 10:00 am Tuesday, February 3rd, 2026 |
I needed to loosen up my brushes after completing some very intricate work where accuracy really mattered. A short stroll along memory lane (aka Long Reach Lane) provided just what I needed.
History places the current time and experiences within context. Both are very important. The Singleton Sanctuary is mostly unchanged since the 1800s, except for the two acres of our home. Solar PV and hot water panels are relatively new inventions. The forest was never commercially logged, as it was pretty much inaccessible compared to other forests. The environment might even be better now for nature, considering all of the bird houses and shelters installed since 2006.
In 1783, Captain Justus Sherwood was sent by Frederick Haldimand, the governor of Quebec, to scout out potential locations for settling Loyalist refugees fleeing the 1776 American Revolution. Sherwood dismissed the forty-mile stretch of terrain north of the Thousand Islands between Elizabethtown (Brockville) and Kingston as "exceedingly bad, being a constant succession of stoney ledges and sunken swamps, altogether unfit for cultivation....". Sherwood was describing the UNESCO Frontenac Arch Biosphere (FAB) and our home. Designated in 2002, it is one of Canada’s 19 Biosphere Regions and is recognized for its significant biodiversity, acting as a natural bridge connecting the Algonquin Arch to the Adirondack Mountains. It is one of four such reserves located in Ontario.
Sherwood's fellow officer, Lieutenant Gershom French, led by Native guides, travelled up the Ottawa River that same summer, explored the Rideau River to its headwaters, and then portaged to scout the possibilities for settlement along the Gananoque River. Lieutenant French paddled in front of our home through Jim Day Rapids. His conclusion was equally bleak: "From our entrance in the River Gananoncoui to its fall into the St. Lawrence, I did not discover as much good land conveniently situated as would serve one Farmer."
Such were the 1783 descriptions of where we call home. A 1795 survey crew was attempting to locate a path for a canal designed to avoid the threat of an American invasion across the relatively narrow St Lawrence River. From their journal descriptions, the crew possibly camped under our shagbark hickory tree on the eastern shore of Singleton Lake. They produced map Number 4 for the Gananoque Canal Plan, referring to the waterway as "Jem Dey's Rapids". That Gananoque River alternative to the Rideau Canal never got built. Somehow, the name of the fast current morphed into "Jim Day Rapids". No one seems to know how or why. The shoreline still looks the very same more than 200 years later, except for where a boating channel was blasted in 1923, as noted in white on the following map.
These log structures and cedar rail fences probably date from the early 1800s. No one knows for certain. Lyndhurst, initially named Furnace Falls, was the site of the first iron smelter in Canada west of Quebec. The iron works were built in remote wilderness conditions in 1801 by Wallis Sunderlin, a loyalist ironmaster from Vermont. By 1803, there were two mills, and a hotel - complete with a 10-gallon liquor still. Furnace Falls fell apart in 1811 when the ironworks were destroyed by fire, Sunderlin died, and his family returned to the United States smeared with rumours that the ironworks had been used to make armaments for Yankee sympathizers - an unpopular action for the Loyalists.
The village was reborn in 1828 when Charles and Jonas Jones built new mills at the waterfall. The farm on the eastern shore of Singleton was only 5 kilometres downstream.
Life was certainly a struggle during the pioneering days. The agricultural and waterway potential for the area was panned by the military surveyors as being "exceedingly bad". The beauty of the natural environment was thus spared, just waiting to be rediscovered in 2006 for what it really was... We are so very lucky to be able to call it home.
For this and much more art, click on Pixels or go straight to the Collections. Here is the new Wet Paint Collection. Thank you for reading, and stay well!
Warmest regards, and keep your paddle in the water,











































