<< ONTARIO
Recreation and Places of Interest
Ontario’s most important
scenic and recreational attraction is its water.
The province is home to some 250,000 lakes and
is threaded by thousands of rivers and streams.
Four of the Great Lakes—Lake Superior, Lake
Huron, Lake Erie, and Lake Ontario—and their
extensive shorelines provide a natural playground.
Lake Simcoe, the Muskoka lakes, and other easily
accessible lakes north of Toronto have also long
been popular vacation centers. Facilities for camping
and recreation have been developed along the routes
of major highways. Ontario shares with New York
one of the greatest scenic attractions in North
America, Niagara Falls, where the water of the
Niagara River plunges some 57 m (187 ft) at Horseshoe
Falls, on the Canadian side of the river.
National and Provincial Parks
Ontario has six national parks.
Point Pelee National Park has 20 km (12 mi) of
sandy beaches on Lake Erie, and is a prominent
bird migration area. St. Lawrence Islands National
Park, Canada’s smallest national park, consists
of all or parts of 21 of the scenic Thousand Islands
in the St. Lawrence River, about 90 islets, and
a narrow strip on the mainland. Georgian Bay Islands
National Park, located on Georgian Bay, an inlet
of Lake Huron, is complemented by the offshore
Fathom Five National Marine Park, Canada’s
first national marine park. The marine park includes
Flowerpot Island, with its unusual rock formations,
and a stretch of lake bottom noted for marine life
and shipwrecks. Pukaskwa National Park, on Lake
Superior near Marathon, is in the rocky wilderness
of the Canadian Shield. Bruce Peninsula National
Park is on Lake Huron.
Ontario has 272 provincial parks,
which are divided into six types: recreation, historic,
wilderness, natural environment, waterway, and
nature reserves. In total they cover more than
70,000 sq km (27,000 sq mi) and many are open year-round.
Activities and facilities exist for varied activities
such as birding, dog sledding, mountain biking,
fishing, hunting, canoeing, and camping. The largest,
oldest, and best-known provincial park is Algonquin
Park. Set in a vast scenic wilderness tract about
280 km (170 mi) north of Toronto, the park was
established in 1893 and covers 7,725 sq km (2,983
sq mi).
Libraries and Museums
Public libraries in Ontario grew
from the establishment of school-district libraries
and so-called mechanic’s institutes. Mechanic’s
institutes were libraries sponsored by industries
and trade groups that offered collections designed
to improve the skills of factory workers, clerks,
and apprentices. Ontario was the site of the first
state-supported library in Canada, the Toronto
Public Library, which was established in 1884.
The province also greatly benefited from the generosity
of American steel magnate Andrew Carnegie. From
1881 to his death in 1919, Carnegie donated millions
of dollars to English-speaking countries worldwide
for the construction of library buildings. In many
Ontario towns and cities the Carnegie Library forms
an important architectural ornament and a focus
of social life. Canada’s largest public reference
library is the Toronto Reference Library, part
of the Toronto Public Library system. The University
of Toronto has the country’s largest academic
library. The National Library and the National
Archives, a depository for public records, are
in Ottawa. A copy of every publication released
in Canada must be deposited in the National Library.
Many of Canada’s largest
museums and galleries are located in Ontario. The
two largest art collections are at the National
Gallery of Canada, in Ottawa, and the Art Gallery
of Ontario, in Toronto. The National Gallery is
one of a number of important museums in Ottawa,
which is also home to the National Museum of Science
and Technology, the Canadian War Museum, and the
National Aviation Museum. The massive Royal Ontario
Museum in Toronto is a center for scholarship and
public education, and has extensive collections
of Asian and Egyptian art and artifacts. An associated
museum, the Sigmund Samuel Gallery, focuses on
the collection of Canadiana. Toronto is also home
to the George R. Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art,
the Bata Shoe Museum, and the Museum for Textiles,
all of which reflect specialized interests within
the city. Other prominent galleries in Ontario
can be found on many university campuses throughout
the province, such as the McIntosh Gallery at the
University of Western Ontario, in London, or the
Agnes Etherington Art Center at Queen’s University,
in Kingston. Important collections also exist in
public galleries in Hamilton and Windsor. The Ontario
Science Center in Toronto and Science North in
Sudbury are innovative hands-on museums where visitors
are encouraged to participate in displays.
Other Places to Visit
Ontario is home to many historic
sites and places of interest. Among the province’s
attractions are the Alexander Graham Bell Homestead
in Brantford, which is the home of Alexander
Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone; Black
Creek Pioneer Village in Toronto, which depicts
the development of a 19th-century Canadian farming
community; Southwold Earthworks National Historic
Site, which commemorates a 16th-century aboriginal
village, near Saint Thomas; and Moose Factory,
which was the first post of the Hudson’s
Bay Company, near Moosonee. Other important sites
are the Martyr’s Shrine near Midland, a
church erected in honor of martyred 17th-century
missionaries; the recreated village of Sainte-Marie
among the Hurons, originally a French Jesuit
mission, adjacent to the Martyr’s Shrine;
and Casa Loma, a European-style castle that houses
a museum, in Toronto.
Source: MSN Encarta:
Online Encyclopedia