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Village Squire, 1976-05, Page 15VanEgmond house will be a living memorial to the pioneers and their way of life. The long task of recreating that lifestyle is now underway at Egmondville. VanEgmond House becoming a living museum through long hard work BY ELAINE TOWNSHEND How did the pioneers make the shingles for the roofs of their houses? How did the women cook on open fireplaces and preserve enough fruit to feed a large family for the winter? How did they create the beautiful quilts and afghans that kept them warm on the sub -freezing nights? We will soon find out at the Van Egmond House in Egmondville, and we will even be able to try our hand at some of the pioneer skills under the watchful eyes of volunteer instructors. Imagine tasting preserves' that we boiled in an iron kettle over a fireplace! This "living museum" of the pre -Confed- eration way of life is the brainchild of a group of Seaforth and area people, that call themselves the Van Egmond Foundation. They bought the house about five years ago and, in December 1974, began restoring it to its original state. Why doe the house generate such enthusiasm? Its original owners, the Van Egmonds, spearheaded the industrial devel- opment of Egmondville and district. Constant Van Egmond, who constructed the mansion around 1847, founded the village of Egmondville and served as the Justice of the Peace. He and his four brothers, guided by their strong-willed mother, operated a grist mill, a flour mill, a woollen and carding mill, a distillery, a hotel, a gunsmith shop, and several saw mills. The family's achievements were inspired by the boys' father, Colonel Anthony Van Egmond, one of Ontario's most colourful pioneers, and it is to his memory the Van Egmond House is dedicated. Colonel Van Egmond was born in Holland in 1778 ancj was a:Dutch army officer during Napoleon's seige. He and his family emigrated to Pennsylvania in 1819. Eight years later they moved to Upper Canada, settling briefly near Berlin in Waterloo County and then moving to the Huron Tract near Seaforth. Working with John Galt of the Canada Company, he built the Huron Road that William "Tiger" Dunlop surveyed from Stratford to Goderich, now Highway #8. As payment for his services, the Colonel accumulated approximately 13,000 acres of land. He operated Huron's initial transit system, transporting settlers into the tract first with oxen and later with four -horse teams. In addition, he laid the educational foundation in .the community by building a school and by paying the first teacher's salary for one year. He protested against the Family Compact's unjust treatment of the immi- grants. In 1835 and 1836, he represented the Reform Party in Huron's first two elections. He was defeated, however, because many of the settlers didn't own land and were thus denied votes; others misunderstood the connection between the Canada Company VILLAGE SQUIRE/MAY 1976, 13