Sean Jensen photograph.

 

Directly across the river from Clayton, Gananoque similarly has long been a year-round village, a trading center for the surrounding countryside, rather than merely a seasonal resort. Scenic environs of the Admiralty and Lake Fleet groups of islands attracted visitors, however, and the major inn here has welcomed them since 1896.

 

Admiralty Islands off Gananoque, on the mainland at upper left.. A cable ferry connects the mainland to the

road on Howe Island that appears at the bottom of the photograph, with Grindstone Island at the upper right.

Ian Coristine / 1000 Islands Photo Art

 

The river is seven miles wide here. Five-mile long Grindstone Island lies between the villages, so they seem more remote from one another than may be expected. At one time a ferry connected the two communities, however, and steamboats stopped at both on their regular routes.

As Clayton has developed its Antique Boat Museum as its distinctive institution and attraction, so Gananoque now has its Casino--the only gaming facility in the region.

 

Photograph courtesy Country Squire Resort, Gananoque

 

The casino, accessible directly from America's busiest highway, is more oriented to the road than the water. Highway 401 has also brought throngs of visitors to Gananoque in recent years, patronizing not merely the casino but the excellent theatres, restaurants, and lodgings that have made Gananoque one of the premier destinations of the region. Gananoque is one of several major ports for boat tours of the islands.

 

Courtesy Festival of the Islands, Inc.

 

Gananoque is host to special events of wide interest, like the Festival of the Islands and the Poker Run. It's attractions, however, are also regular. Two theaters and several fine restaurants draw visitors nightly through the season. Those coming from afar find quality accomodations at the historic inn and several bed-and-breakfast lodgings.

 

Confederation Park, courtesy Gananoque Chamber of Commerce

 

Centerpiece of the village, the 1831 John McDonald House serves as the town hall. The handsome historic structure stands in an attractive park, bordering the Gananoque River with fountain and swans.

 

John McDonald House, Gananaoque Town Hall. Gordon L. Wolford photograph

 

Gananoque provides a model for commercial development: Heritage Village on the waterfront effectively employs the local tradition of nineteenth-century resort buildings, arranged in a well maintained park setting. A book store and gift shops attract many visitors, as do adjacent boat tour docks.

 

 

Photograph courtesy of Gananoque Heritage Village.

Centerpiece of Heritage Village is the Arthur Child Heritage Museum of the 1000 Islands. A historical display, a gallery of changing exhibits, and a fine craft shop occupy two floors of the building constructed as a visitor facility.

 

Photograph courtesy of Arthur Child Heritage Museum of the 1000 Islands.

The waterfront development, opened in 1995, is an example of a project enabled by local, provincial, federal, and private collaboration.  Funding came from the Gananoque Municipal Government, Provincial and Federal Governments, together with Brockville-Leeds Community Futures program and benefactor Arthur Child, who donated funds for the museum to inform the public about the history, life and times of the Thousand Islands region.

 

Arthur Child Heritage Museum of the Thousand Islands. Photographer unidentified.

 

Tourists throng the Gananoque waterfront, attracted by the boat tours that embark from the Heritage Village area.

 

John Schuck photograph

 

Craig Briscoe photograph

 

Although some of its important main street structures were lost to modern development, Gananoque retains some remarkable historic buildings, like the distinctive tower, built with "entasis," the Greek curvature of vertical lines, seen on classical columns. A Boston architect, Franklin Townsend [Frank T.] Lent, designed the Stone Street landmark as well as the Clayton Opera House and many cottages, mostly in the Gananoque vicinity.

The book Ah, Wilderness! provides more information about the architect and some of his local buildings, as does a website.

 

 

 

 

Courtesy Gananoque Chamber of Commerce

 

 

 

Gananoque. Photographer unidentified.

 

 

 

[To be continued].

 

 

 

 

Header photographs by Ian Coristine, Mike Franklin, Paul Malo.

E-mail: info@ThousandIslandsLife.com

(c) ThousandIslandsLife.com 2005