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Georgina Island

Coordinates:44°22′29″N79°17′37″W/ 44.3747°N 79.2937°W/44.3747; -79.2937(Georgina Island)
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Georgina Island
Native name:
Waaseyaagmiing
A satellite image of Georgina Island
Map
Geography
LocationLake Simcoe
Administration
CAN
ProvinceOntario
RegionYork
MunicipalityGeorgina

Georgina Island(Ojibwe:Waaseyaagmiing) is the largest of thelake islandsofLake Simcoe,located in southernOntario,Canada.[1]The island is aNative reservepopulated by theChippewas of Georgina Island First Nation,abandofOjibwapeople. It is also within the Town ofGeorginaand in theRegional Municipality of York.

Before the completion of theTrent–Severn Waterway,the water level on Lake Simcoe was low enough to enable residents to cross in wagons or walk in ankle-deep water to the mainland, at Virginia Beach, Ontario. After the Trent Severn Waterway was completed, the water level increased enough to submerge traditionalfarmlandsand to require a boat for crossing to the mainland.[2][3]

Pope John Paul IIstayed on neighbouring Strawberry Island for four days just beforeWorld Youth Day 2002in Toronto.[4]

The island is reached by aferryin summer and anairboatin winter. On the coldest days of winter Lake Simcoe is cold enough for anice roadto be built allowing light vehicles to drive across the frozen lake. The Women's Support Network of York Region has worked with theFirst Nationsof Georgina Island.[5]

Settlement

[edit]

During the American War of Independence, British colonial authorities began to strategically engage in relationships with the Native people of present-day Ontario, seeking to acquire and settle their territories for the purpose of defending British North America. TheChippewas of Lakes Huron and Simcoein the early nineteenth century consisted of several bands. Two groups, led byWilliam YellowheadandJoseph Snake,occupied areas of southernmostSimcoe County,which they relinquished to the government in 1818. A third group, led byJohn Aisance,occupied areas between Kempenfelt Bay and Penetanguishene, which they surrendered to the government in 1815. In 1830 the government set aside Georgina Island, Snake Island and Fox Island, all in Lake Simcoe, as a reserve for these groups, but encouraged them to settle instead in purpose-built villages at Coldwater (where Aisance and his people settled) and Atherley Narrows (where Yellowhead and Snake settled) where they might take up farming. The corridor of Crown land betweenLake Couchiching,and theSevern Riverwas informally given to the Chippewas as a hunting ground, but in 1836 a deal was struck to return this territory (including the two villages) to government hands, leaving the Chippewas with the Lake Simcoe islands as their last remaining reserve. Yellowhead and his band purchased land at Rama and settled there in 1838, whereas Aisance led his people to Beausoleil Island in Georgian Bay in 1842, from which they relocated to Christian Island in 1856. As part of this final dispersal of the Chippewas of Lakes Huron and Simcoe, some remained behind on Snake Island and the neighbouring islands with Snake as their leader.

The role of the colonial government had a significant impact on the people, enforcing a policy to enrol the people and grow dependent on the crown. The influence of this policy resulted in repeated promises of protection, food, clothing, lodgings and general welfare of the people. The transformation from independent and autonomous communities to those that were increasingly dependent to the Crown. The area betweenLake Ontario,Georgian BayandLake Simcoerepresented a region of prime military vulnerability and defence for Upper Canada.[6]This region was not only occupied by the Lake Simcoe Indigenous People, but also the people under the leadership of Joseph Brant of the Six Nations. Six Nations lies in the town ofOhsweken, Ontario.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"The Atlas of Canada - Lakes".Archived fromthe originalon 2013-01-22.Retrieved2008-09-06.
  2. ^"Georgina Island The Jewel of the Lake"(PDF).The Alliance for a Better Georgina. 2007. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 18 December 2014.Retrieved18 December2014.
  3. ^"Lake Simcoe Water Levels"(PDF).lsrca.on.ca.Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Authority. August 2013. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 26 December 2014.Retrieved18 December2014.
  4. ^John Paul to rest as cross makes way through Toronto
  5. ^"Council Meeting Minutes".Aurora.September 28, 2010. p. 12.RetrievedNovember 29,2013.
  6. ^"Home".georginaisland.com.
  7. ^"Home".sixnations.ca.

44°22′29″N79°17′37″W/ 44.3747°N 79.2937°W/44.3747; -79.2937(Georgina Island)