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The Rural Voice, 1987-09, Page 98HISTORICAL GREY F rom a gold rush to discoveries of oil, Grey County has had a colourful and varied past. The history of the county has largely been shaped by its natural resources and location. The face of the county has changed gradually since the mid -1800s. It is likely that few people would recognize the county as it once existed and it is doubtful that many would want to be faced with the hardships that the pioneers endured. The beginnings of agriculture in Grey County were necessarily prim- itive and developed from the days when a tree was made into a "wagon" for drawing in the crops. A tree would be cut down and the branches trimmed off to construct a lattice by tying the branches with vines or strips of bass- wood bark. Oxen were hitched to the stump and the load drawn to a stack, or a barn if there was one. This meth- od of hauling hay or grain was crude, but innovative too, for those were the years of discovery and invention. It was a time of "Doors with wooden pings, harrows with wooden teeth, plows with wooden teeth, harness made of basswood bark." Timber was plentiful in the county and the huge virgin tracts of forest were the source of a major lumber industry. The number of sawmills grew rapidly in the mid -1800s, and the coming of the railway and steamers increased shipments of wood and lumber. Furniture factories came in the wake of the sawmills, and Grey County is still noted for the manufac- turing of quality furniture. A potash industry also followed the lumber trade. Trees were burned and the ashes gathered carefully into a hollow log through which water was run. This leaching process distilled a watery mixture from the ashes, which was boiled down until a blue flame could be seen. Potash was made from the resulting lye, and lye was sold for cash, something that was seldom seen in the early settlement years. Ash gatherers become a common sight as they collected ash for the large leacheries that sprang up. Ship building evolved from a combination of the timber trade and the location of Owen Sound on Georgian Bay. In 1846, the Ann McKenzie was probably the largest vessel built in Owen Sound. The ship, 100 feet in length with a 24 -foot beam, was considered quite impres- sive at the time. The ship builders were fine craftsmen and built ships that withstood the test of the often violent seas. After being buffeted by many storms on Georgian Bay, the Ann McKenzie was sent to Toronto, loaded with lumber for Quebec, and sent across the Atlantic to a British port and on to Rio de Janeiro. A line of steamers was established between Collingwood and Chicago following the completion of a railroad to Collingwood in 1855. So much has changed since Captain William Fitzwilliam Owen, in 1815, sailed into what is now Georgian Bay. When the early set - 12 GREY COUNTY PLOWING MATCH EDITION