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July 5, 2002A look at Alsace...Past and present
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The pioneer Alsace Road family of Philip and Maryann Strauss. Two
children in the photo, and five other Strauss children born later, died
in the 1888-1889 Diphtheria plague. Church History Room photo. |
The Rosseau (Muskoka) to Lake Nipissing Colonization Road (the Nipissing
Road) that was started in the 1860s was the last of twenty provincial roads
built through the bush to open "the new Ontario" to settlement and
resources. Two hundred and forty seven hundred acre lots were surveyed at each
side of the road and were available "free" to settlers who met
obligations of clearing and building a home. A stagecoach service, with various
stops along the way, became available for those who could afford it. Many
settlers used oxen to pull a "jumper"—two poles loaded with their
goods—and slept where they could on the way to their new land. Most of the
road is long abandoned as other routes became available and land was found to be
unfavourable, but places like Magnetawan, Commanda and Nipissing Village (each
with their own museum) owe much of their early existence to the road.
There were many side roads built off of the Nipissing Road to open new areas
to the east and west. Two of these roads branched east, north of Commanda. The
Barrett Road extended to the South River near Trout Creek through South
Himsworth Township and the Alsace Road, eight km further north on the Nipissing
Road, headed east through Nipissing Township as well, eventually reaching
Powassan through Nipissing Township.
This week, in the first of two articles on the Alsace Road, I will look at
the history of the St. John’s Roman Catholic church built near the junction of
the Nipissing Road and the Alsace Road in 1878. The location is actually Lot
188A on the Nipissing Road, meaning that it is the 188th lot up the
road on the right (A). The church is an excellent example of a new people
establishing a spiritual life in a new and isolated location.
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The original St. John’s Roman Catholic church on the
Alsace Road in Nipissing Township, built in 1878 and replaced in 1909.
Church History Room photo. |
In 1877 James Barrett and his family were staying temporarily near Commanda
on the Nipissing Road prior to the development of the road east that would
access their land. At the time Bishop Jamot of Bracebridge was travelling the
road to explore the development of Catholic services. He performed the first
Mass in the district in the Barrett home that June 125 years ago. The
significance of that event has been recognized and celebrated over the years and
will again this August 11th at the St. John’s Church in Alsace.
Before looking at the Alsace church, it should be noted that the Barretts and
many other German, Polish, Irish and other settlers did eventually establish an
important early community called the Barrett Settlement in South Himsworth, and
over the line into Gurd Township,with its own church (St. Mary’s), post office
and school. When the Grand Trunk Railway went through in the 1880s, the Barrett
Settlement (like the original village of Powassan) was abandoned as people moved
to the growing centre of Trout Creek on the new railway. Other residents moved
to the Alsace Road as well, and became active in the new log church built there
in 1878. (For a full history of the Barrett family and the Barrett Settlement
see the book The People of South Himsworth 1990).
Widely dispersed post offices, schools, and other services developed on the
Alsace Road, but no actual "Alsace" village ever developed, unless one
looks at the long road as a community. People came from miles around to the new
log church, which was replaced by a new frame and brick church in 1909. The log
church site, which was located across the road from the new church, is now the
St. John’s Cemetery. The new church had a drive shed (that is now gone) and
over the years has had additions and improvements. The church is affiliated with
the St. Joseph’s Church in Powassan and shares the same priest, Father John
Hickey.
The celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the formation of the whole
Parish was celebrated at an outdoor mass at the St. John Church in 1993. On that
occasion, an historical display was well-received and since then a History Room
loaded with church, school and family history has been developed. It is open
after mass when the church is open from May to October.
When the seventy-fifth anniversary of the first mass was celebrated at St.
John’s in 1952 over twelve hundred people attended. A cairn on the site of the
log church was built for the occasion. Two of the original Barrett daughters
attended along with many others, many of whom came a great distance.
Cairn celebrates the 75th anniversary of the first mass, in
centre being tended by Viola Rowan (L) and Galdys Piper. Doug Mackey
photo.
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The St. John’s Roman Catholic Church today,
with cemetery built on the site of the first church. |
I should mention that a new book on the history of the Powassan Parish
(including the Alsace Church) has recently been published, and is available at
St. Joseph’s in Powassan. I want to thank Viola Rowan and Gladys Piper who
showed me the beautiful St. John’s church and grounds, and the remarkable
History Room. A history of the Alsace Separate School lists all of the former
teachers including seventeen year old Dennis O’Leary, who taught there in
1944-45 and later became a Supreme Court Judge. Viola Rowan is the recently
retired Parish secretary and St. Joseph’s housekeeper and lives near the
Alsace Church and can be contacted regarding the History Room (729-5435). Glady
Piper, besides being an active historian and genealogist, is the great
granddaughter of Julia Strauss, one of the pioneers of the Alsace Road (see
photo). During the Diphtheria plague in 1888-89, twelve years after the photo
was taken, one of the children in the photo and five other Strauss children
(ages 9, 7, 5, 3 and 1) died. They are buried in the St. John’s Cemetery. One
of the children in the photo was married, had a child and lived in the Barrett
Settlement where they both died as a result of the same epidemic.
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