Industry Business

The Burley Mine

To the south and west of the still-visible slag pile of the former Sultana Mine is a small man-made island – The Burley Mine.

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The Hilliard House

In 1883, local hotelier Louis Hilliard opened the Hilliard House on the northeast corner of Main and Second Streets in Rat Portage (now Kenora). The following is the story of Hilliard’s fine establishment as recounted in newspapers of the day at three significant times in the building’s history.

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The Hudson’s Bay Company in Rat Portage

The Hudson's Bay Company in Rat Portage  Lake of the Woods Museum NewsletterVol. 14 No. 2 - Spring 2004 by the Hudson's Bay Company Archives  1836. That is the earliest reference to a trading post near the site known as Portage du Rat or the rat carrying place....

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McLeod Park

McLeod ParkLake of the Woods Museum NewsletterVol. 13 No. 3 - Fall 2003 by Lori Nelson  There’s a small parcel of land situated between downtown Kenora and Tunnel Island that, in its history, mirrors a substantial part of the development of the entire area....

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Farming on the Canadian Shield

Farming on the Canadian ShieldLOUIS HILLARD’S FINE FARM Rat Portage Miner and News – September 6, 1904 Excerpted from a letter written to the editor by a visitor to Mr. Hillard’s farm which was located in Jaffray, about 2 miles from downtown Rat Portage (now Kenora)....

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Western Algoma Brick Co.

Western Algoma Brick Co.  Lake of the Woods Museum NewsletterVol. 17 No. 2 - Spring 2007  On July 31, 1894, the local newspaper, The Semi-Weekly Record, made this pronouncement… “The wooden era of our town is at an end and we have entered upon the brick and stone...

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The Prominent Business Houses of Rat Portage

The Prominent Business Houses of Rat Portage  Lake of the Woods Museum NewsletterVol. 18 No. 4 - Fall 2008  In 1888, “The New West”, a publication from Winnipeg, Manitoba, published the following account entitled Prominent Business Houses of Rat Portage. QUEEN’S...

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Did you know?

During the Second World War German prisoners of war were brought to the Lake of the Woods area to cut wood for the local mills.  Many of the prisoners enjoyed their time in the Canadian wilderness, and a number of them immigrated to Canada when the war ended.