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The Village Squire, 1981-07, Page 17Heritage by Jeanne Kirkby Can you imagine a village where the pigs are allowed to run loose and "live off the land", or a peaceful township sideroad where echoes of the past bring you the whistle of a furniture factory across the road, while your feet shuffle down the imaginary boardwalk of a thriving main street area? Can you picture the teamsters with their wagons carrying logs or farm produce behind spans of heavy draught horses up the mud -rutted roads toward their railway link in the village of Seaforth? Can you see the Maitland's spring freshet releas- ing the log booms and bringing huge platelets of ice to crash against the narrow wooden bridges, sweeping them away from their stone -filled abutments? Conditions have sure changed since the establishment of farms and villages in the most southerly Township of the Queen's Great Bush. Morris Township, County of Huron. is celebrating its 125th Anniversary as an incorporated municipality this July 31st to August 3rd. While the occasion will bring forth a festival of dances, parades, contests and barbecues in nearby Brus- sels, the real celebration will be in honor of the developers of that agricultural township. through a century and a quarter of progression from its first state of "trees as thick as the hair on a dog's back", to its present stage of careful and scientific cultivation - one of Huron County's finest agricultural townships. As well as Bluevale, Walton and Belgrave. Morris nas vanished hamlets Sunshine and Bodmin, My how Morris twp. has changed that once were known as Bodmin, Sunshine, Morrisdale, Morrisbank, Jamestown and Bushfield, now only memories in the hearts of the old-timers. Bodmin had the first grist and saw mill located in the Township as early as 1854. What a convenience that would be for the early settlers who used to walk a two day journey to Goderich, with wheat to be ground into flour. Sunshine was the site of Morris Township's first church, a New Connection Methodist, built in 1856 and remaining in full use until 1927. NORM'S BLUEWATER SMOKED FISH LOFT Ltd. Today Newcombe's General Store and Holland's Hotel at Bushfield are long gone, leaving only St. Michael's Ceme- tery on the 7th line as a marker for Morris Township's earliest Catholic community. No longer do the farmers of the Jamestown area team their logs to the Maitland riverbank each winter so that the spring melting will carry them to the saw mill in Bluevale. The Canadian Census of 1881 listed the population of Morris as 3,815, compared to today's estimate of 1700 from the assessment rolls. When the early rail- roads reached across the land to carry out the agricultural produce, many of the sons and daughters of the first settlers were lured away to the west. Mechan- izaton became the trend, and the nature of farming changed, and changes still today into specialized food producing operations. The small villages that the railway lines passed by quietly disintre- gated and the rural population turned toward the larger village centres. Eleven school houses remain on the concessions, yet not one classroom is used for Morris students within the Township. The sites of former churches who lost their congregations to the bigger church communities are transformed back into farmland, with only the remaining cemeteries and their pioneer memorial cairns marking the burial. Morris Township'a 125th Anniversary Celebration promises to be one of the highlights of the local summer season ❑ Featuring the finest smoked fish in the world Rainbow Trout • White Fish • Salmon Eels • Smoked Turkeys Live bait Fresh Fish Come in and try our free samples each has its own separate flavour 236-7705 Hwy 21. 8 mi north of Grand Bend 236-4063 VILLAGE SQUIRE/JULY 1981 PG. 15