Algonquin
Provincial Park Then And Now
Up
until the the 1800’s the Algonquin region was basically
uninhabited. Aboriginal peoples came to hunt and fish but their
habitation was largely transient in nature. Pioneer loggers came
in the 1800’s to harvest timber to feed the increasing demand
in England for ship building including timbers substantial enough
to be used as ships masts. The loggers typically farmed in the
summer months and moved to primitive camps to log throughout the
winter. They transported white pine logs by horse drawn skids to
the rivers where they would be carried downstream in the spring
by rushing waterways to waiting markets in far off places. During
the peak of logging, local farms in the Algonquin region sprang
up and principally survived by providing food to the logging camps
in the area. Life was difficult in those days and before the railroad
was built into the area (as an alternative to running logs down
the rivers) the area was totally isolated from the emerging modern
conveniences of urban life.
Algonquin Park was established in 1893 to provide a wildlife preserve
and to protect the headwaters of the major rivers that flowed
from the Park area. Logging continued but soon visitors began
to come to the park by train and they stayed in crude hotels for
seasonal fishing and to experience the genuine wilderness.
Over the years Algonquin Park has developed into a major tourist
attraction. It is famous as the backdrop for many Group of Seven
artists paintings and of course the natural beauty that is protected
for tourists and researchers to study and enjoy nature, preserved
largely as it was since the beginning of time. Algonquin is home
to thousands of animal, flora and fauna species and Park management
has been careful to limit park development. There are several
main corridors that act as transportation arteries and provide
access to limited accommodation, outfitters and information centers.
To really explore Algonquin one needs to canoe and pack in to
the many remote lakes in the region. The vast majority of Park
visitors are day visitors that come to observe the natural beauty,
wildlife and perhaps hike on one of the many well signed trails
that stem from the transportation corridors. Luckily for the thousands
of tourists that visit the park annually there is ample accommodation
facilities around the borders of Algonquin Provincial Park and
visitors can find everything from campgrounds, motels, rental
cottages and resorts. Supplies and a wide variety of restaurants
from fast food to gourmet are available in the Park area. Outfitters
for those who plan to adventure into the Algonquin interior are
available inside and outside the park boundary.
Algonquin Provincial Park makes up part of the Haliburton Highlands
northern border. Haliburton County is the perfect location for
visitors to vacation and experience the wonders of Algonquin.

