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Clinton News-Record, 1986-07-16, Page 52T he Point Farm Hotel was a sumnier rural rete -eat Romance, tragedy, and a young Dutch baron's Huron land deals all form part of the story of Point Farm summer hotel, but • it really came of a young Englishman's dream about a pleasant rural retreat for tired city people. "So impressed was I, the first time I saw it." wrote J.J. Wright, "with the location - and interesting surroundings of the place, it appeared to me just the spot for tired, rundown"city people who desired a change in every respect in home living, and I con- ceived the idea of building a place that. could be called a home in every sense of the word.' The ho Four-M.i , at what was formerly called Point, on the shore of Lake Huron north of Goderich, undoubtedly fill- ed a need, as Wright foresaw, and flourish- ed greatly in its time. It died a slow death as competition arose and the Motor Age - advanced. In a joint issue published by the two Goderich newspapers in 1889 it was said of Point Farm that "its patrons extend over a continent, while even from across the seas parties seek rest and health beneath its spacious roof." Certainly thousands from Canada and the United States found a haven there, and its story, enriched by the founder's reminiscences, deserved to be told. The hotel was built in the 1870s on Lot 8, Lake Road West, Colborne township. First owner of the land (after the Canada Com- pany) as well as the lots south to and in- cluding The, Ridge, was the Right Honourable Vincent Gildemeester, Baron van Tuyll van' Serooskerken. His father, Carel Lodewijk van Tuyll, had arranged in the 1830s, with the Canada Company in London, for the purchase of land in the newly opened Huron Tract. Whatever the precise nature of this bargain, and its documentation, if any, the fact is that no deeds were executed until some years afterward, when the son came to Canada. The deeds are dated in 1840 and 1841: Baron Vincent at Once mortgaged the properties to the Bank of Upper Canada, which seems to have been highly vulnerable to the applications of titled 1836 customers. On the lake shore, lots, the baron borrowed 1,293 pounds sterling. Eventually the Bank got the lots back on its hands and sold them to various persons. Lot 8 became the property of Charles Boulton Davies, a young Englishman who had married Susan Ellen, daughter of John Hawkins, a Port Albert pioneer. Davies was, the only son of Rev: Morgan Davies, M.A., and a grandson of Sir Mor- timer Davies. His father had been station- ed in India, and Charles was born at Balgarrie, near Bombay, in 1830. The family was from Flintshire, Wales. Susan Ellen Hawkins was born in Lon- a don, Ontario. Boulton and his wife lived in Goderich at first. The late William Camp- bell, whose recollections usually were dependable, said the Davies couple lived in ,a stone house on East Street. The records show that Davies never owned either of the two stone houses on that street, but could have been a tenant. At any rate, the family moved to Colborne, where the lake shore farm reportedly was bought for them by Charles' father in England. "Serving Colborne Township for Forty -Six Years'." Page 31 They had been on the property some ' time, and erected a house and out- buildings, when. Davies, returning to Goderich with supplies, was drowned in Lake Huron, July 22, 185.6, "to the great grief of his most affectionate -widow," as the stone in Port Albert cemetery records. Mrs. Davies became a surety for ad- ministration of the estate and in due course received title to the property. The Davies' only child, Thomas Frederick Boulton, died July 31, 1855, aged 11 mon- ths, and is buried at Port Albert. In 1859, still only 25 years of age, Mrs. Davies was married to Joseph Joshua Wright, 26. Whether or not through caution on the part of the bride's father, the wed- ding was preceded by the execution of a quaintdocument setting forth that "a mar- riage is intended shortly to be, had and, solemnized," and transferring to H.T. Pell and Samuel Wright the 200 -acre farm, "dwelling and outbuildings, household goods and chattels, cattle and farm im- continued •Local and Long Distance Hauling •Livestock, Feed, Seed Grain and Fertilizer Have a great time at our Sesquicentennial FROM ALL OF US AT: .... .... ....rr ..... . till