Huron Expositor, 2016-12-28, Page 5Wednesday, December 28, 2016 • Huron Expositor 5
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The Huron Road
ohn Galt, the Canada
Company's field
supervisor, under-
stood that cutting a trail
through the Huron Tract's
primal forests and
swamps was necessary
for settlement. In early
1827, Galt contracted the
building of what became
known as the Huron
Road which became the
pathway for thousand of
settlers into the county.
Galt's scheme to blaze a
trail through the Huron
Tract's 1 million acres of
virgin forest seemed obvi-
ous to everyone but the
Canada Company's direc-
tors. They believed that
settlers could enter into
the Huron Tract by the
lake. Road building, the
directors argued, could
come after settlement.
Eventually, the directors
did allowed Galt 3,000
pounds to construct the
road but made only one-
third payable to workers
in cash.
From the start, Galt
knew that it would be
difficult to find labour-
ers willing to work under
these conditions on
what he called the 'Colo-
nists' Road: However,
sometime in 1827, Galt
encountered 'Colonel'
Anthony VanEgmond, a
52 year old Dutch immi-
grant who claimed an
exaggerated aristocratic
pedigree and military
record. Most impor-
tantly, VanEgmond
impressed Galt with his
claim to have road
building experience in
Pennsylvania. As the
Lizars sisters wrote in
'The Days of the Canada
Company,' VanEgmond
'was a pushing clever
man' whom Galt
thought was up to the
Herculean task of build-
ing the Huron Road
from Wilmot Township
through Perth County
west towards Goderich.
Huron History
David Yates
It was stipulated that
the 55 mile stretch of
road that VanEgmond
was responsible for
building be 4 rods, or
one chain length wide
(66 feet) with every
stump less than a foot in
diameter removed from
the road bed.
Construction of the
Huron Road began
almost immediately in
the summer of 1827. The
Canada Company pro-
vided a surveyor, John
McDonald to shoot line
through the woods;
blazers followed him to
mark trees. The main
workforce of road build-
ers, lumberers and grub-
bers followed to clear
the road bed. Behind
them, wagon teams car-
rying supplies rounded
out the road building
party.
The rest of the work
force were largely Ger-
man or Irishmen were a
rugged, stalwart lot. On
one of the first days of
construction, 45 men
came down ill with the
ague. The Canada Com-
pany refused to employ a
doctor so Galt hired a
clerk who happened to be
a doctor and paid him as
such.
The roadbuilders bat-
tled mosquito clouds,
felled giant trees, bridged
swamps with corduroy
logs and at the end of the
day sat around the camp-
fire and made what the
Lizars sisters called "a
fusion of inharmonious
sounds:' On cold winter
nights, they slept 'spoon
style' where each man lay
on one side snuggled into
the backside of his neigh-
bour to keep warm. When
the end man shouted
'spoon', the entire line
turned over at the same
time.
Incredibly, the Huron
Road was opened to
Goderich by December
1828. It was more of a
'sleigh track' than a road
but it was a barely passa-
ble access way into the
Huron Tract to accom-
modate the influx of set-
tlers expected into the
area. As historian W. E.
Johnston wrote the road
"was not very safe but
useful." Poor drainage
meant that heavily laden
carts sank up to their
axles in mud; cross -
planked bridges thrown
across rivers and streams
shuddered and creaked
under the settlers' heavy
load. Major Samuel
Strickland, a Canada
Company officer living in
Goderich, recalled the
perilous journey his wife
and infant child had
while travelling on the
Huron Road in 1829.
Their wagon overturned
twice on the road. Mrs
Strickland carried her
baby whose "tender
flesh" was ravaged by
mosquitoes for most of
the journey.
VanEgmond had good
reason to rush the road's
completion. In order to
get workers, VanEgmond
offered to pay his workers
in cash in exchange for
their land credit. With the
Canada Company's cash
nearly running out,
VanEgmond was eager to
complete the road. By
1832, VanEgmond's thou-
sands of acres of land
made him, on paper, the
wealthiest man in Huron
County. Later, VanEg-
mond's dispute with the
Canada Company over
payment for building the
Huron Road was one of
the factors that drove him
to rebellion in 1837.
VanEgmond estab-
lished three 'Houses of
Entertainment' along the
way to provide food and
shelter for incoming
immigrants. According to
historian W. B. Kerr's arti-
cle 'The Pioneers in
Huron,' the Helmer, Fry-
fogel, and Seebach inns
were set up along the
Huron Road's Perth
County segment. VanEg-
mond set up his own
farm and tavern on the
Huron Road south east of
Clinton. Kerr claims that
VanEgmond was Huron
County's first 'bona fide
farmer.'
However, these
'houses of entertain-
ment' were more like
'shanties' according to
Strickland. In 1828,
after a hard day's trek
through deep snow,
Strickland stopped at
Seebach's inn anticipat-
ing a 'capital supper.'
Instead, he was served
'a piece of dirty looking
Indian meal bread, and
a large cake of beef tal-
low, and, to wash down
this elegant repast, a
dish of crust coffee
without either milk or
sugar.' It was the best
his hostess could do
under the circum-
stances while her hus-
band was away getting
supplies.
The inns' guests may
have slept on boards, in
drafty and dirty rooms
but none of the hundreds
of apprehensive families
who found shelter in
them on their journey
into the Huron Tract
complained about the
their hosts hospitality.
As Kerr observes,
VanEgmond 'had fulfilled
his contract faithfully and
well' in building the
Huron Road. VanEgmond
and his five sons, worked
on improving the road so
that by 1832, it was passa-
ble for wagons. Later, the
road was turnpiked,
meaning that the road
itself was built up in the
centre from earth dug
from ditches dug at the
roadsides. These ditches
also provided much
needed drainage along
the roadway. Yet, as late
as 1888, W. H. Breithaupt
in 'The Huron Road'
related that one traveller
who said that two thirds
of the Huron Road was
still corduroy where logs
or wood planks were laid
across the roadway. The
traveller noted that large
trees were still left stand-
ing in the middle of the
road making it barely
passible with 'roots pro-
jecting from the stumps
in a slanting direction'
ea orthhuronex a ositor.co
which 'kept the wheels
and axles of the wagons
moving up and down like
the beam of a steam
engine.'
Yet, despite its rough,
crude construction, the
Huron Road was the gate-
way into the Huron Tract
for thousands of settlers.
In 1858, the Buffalo to
Lake Huron branch of the
Grand Trunk Railroad ran
parallel to the Huron
Road. King's Highway #8,
for the most part, follows
the original Huron Road
from Goderich to Guelph.
John Galt, in his autobi-
ography, recalled of his
brief time with the Can-
ada Company that 'of one
thing I do not hesitate to
say I was proud, and with
good reason, too. I caused
a road to be opened
through the forest of the
Huron Tract.'
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