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Recent News
In Memoriam – Don Shanahan
In Memoriam – Don Shanahan  Presqu'ile Provincial Park and The Friends lost a good friend with the passing of Don Shanahan on Tuesday, 17 .....Full Story
January 19, 2012
They came, they shopped, they laughed
      Photo credit Karen Longwell Carolyn and Joan have every reason to look happy. They sold more of our famous rum cake than ever before .....Full Story
November 25, 2011
',,,,it was awesome'
Summer Camp 2011  Through rain and shine our Kids 'n Nature campers were all smiles and ready to explore the incredible biodiversity Presqu'ile .....Full Story
October 19, 2011
Bumper Fungi Crop
Bumper Fungi Crop Put twenty keen Fleming College students in the Presqu'ile Park habitat for two hours and the result is .....Full Story
October 12, 2011
TOURING BIRDERS STOP AT PRESQU'ILE
TOURING BIRDERS STOP AT PRESQU'ILE Presqu'ile has a world-wide reputation as a must-stop destination for birders building up a list. Nigel .....Full Story
August 4, 2011
Settlement History and the Speedy
 
In 1787 a part of a large tract of land, the area that makes up Presqu'ile, was ceded to the British by the Mississauga Indians.  In 1800 the peninsula was designated as the site of ‘Newcastle’, the planned capital of a new district that would later become the counties of Northumberland and Durham.

A courthouse, the first of several projected public buildings, was to be inaugurated with the trial of an Ojibway Indian arrested for the murder of a fur trader.  In October 1804, a schooner from the town of York (Toronto), carrying the prisoner, witnesses and the government dignitaries who were to try him, sank off of High Bluff Island with the loss of all hands.

The loss of the schooner, Speedy, and her notable passengers was a serious blow to the young province.  Soon after that, the Governor of Upper Canada, decided that the site was inconvenient for a courthouse and jail, and the capital was erected at what later became the town of Cobourg.

Presqu'ile never developed as a commercial centre, although some of the land was cleared for farming.  By 1830 most of the early settlers had re-located to the near-by town of Gosport, which had better transportation connections to the mainland.  By 1869 only 19 families remained on the peninsula and most of those drifted away over the years.  By 1927 only the Atkins farm remained and they were usually the only winter residents of the peninsula for many years.  In 1957 the Atkin’s farm was purchased by the province to be added to the provincial park and the last farm at Presqu’ile was gone.
 
 
Further Information
 
Special website constructed 2004 for 200th anniversary of the sinking of The Speedy http://www.friendsofpresquile.on.ca/speedy/
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coming Events
Saturday Feb. 18 - 2012
Saturday Mar. 17 - 2012
Sunday Mar. 18 - 2012
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