Gooderham village sprang up at the point where the waters from Pine Lake joined the Irondale branch of the Burnt River . The arrival of the Monck Military Road (1871) & the Burckhorn Colonization Road made the village a major transportation hub for the area. The waterfalls was an obvious spot for a mill site & the road network & river ac-cess plus the later arrival of the IB&O Railway cemented Gooderham's fate as a lumber town. Pioneer farmers ac-cessed the area mostly via the Monck Road from Kinmount. The Buckhorn Road, which ran from Buckhorn to Haliburton, followed a tortuous, rocky path and was never popular as a thoroughfare from the south. Few travellers used the entire route and by the 1920s, the road was often closed due to brush, grass & weeds blocking vehicles! If bridges, culverts or cause-ways washed out, nobody noticed & it often took years to repair them!
The first post office was established in 1873 and was called Pine Lake . There are 2 stories about how the name Gooderham was acquired. Local legend has it a smooth-talking liquor salesman from the Gooderham & Woorts Distillery Co in Toronto breezed into town with a ―sample keg‖ of his finest spirits to persuade the 3 local hotel keepers to feature his products. The sampling made such a lasting impression on the locals that Pine Lake was promptly changed to Gooderham Post Office! Now that‘s salesmanship! The other story maintains the same Gooderham family gave a grant of money to build a Methodist Church in the village.
The first businesses in Gooderham were hotels (with bars!). Thirsty lumbermen led to the establishment of 3 hotels in town by 1880: owned by Way, Whittaker & Scott. Needless to say, Gooderham had a reputation as a rough & rugged town. In the 1890s, the Howrey Lumber Co had extensive operations in the area. On camp was run by an American foreman from Michigan who earned a reputation as a bully. He would parade into town with his posse; pick a fight with a local man & the entire mob would severely beat the outnumbered local resident. So bad did the reign of terror become, the locals decided to set a trap for the bully. One day the American bully entered Scott‘s Hotel & proclaimed loudly: ―I‘m looking for some SOB with enough guts to fight me! Hotel owner Jimmy Scott (from Kinmount) replied ―You‘ve found him!‖ and the battle was joined. Jimmy Scott was an amateur boxer of local renown and soon gained an advantage on the bully. When the American‘s posse attempted to intervene, the back door of the dining room flew open & out issued a similar posse of vengeful local lads who soon evened the brawl. When the titanic struggle was over, the dining room looked like it had been bombed, but the American was carried home on a stretcher! No more did he play the bully in Gooderham.
The arrival of the Irondale, Bancroft & Ottawa Railway in 1891 led to a boom in the local sawmills industry. Several mills sprang up in & around the village, the most famous being the Hunter Mill. John Hunter had previously lived near Kinmount, but recognizing an opportunity, moved to Gooderham in 1875 & built a sawmill & later a gristmill on the falls coming from Pine Lake . So important was the gristmill to the local area, the Glamorgan Council exempted the business from taxes for 5 years. In a twist of fate, the gristmill was actually built, but never operated! It sat idle for decades before it was destroyed by fire & the local farmers had to take their grain down the road to Kinmount. One hundred years later, the Hunter Lumber Mill was still in full operation; long after the demise of the IB&O.
Glamorgan Township was never noted for its first-class farmland. A few stubborn pioneers tilled pockets of land more or less successfully, lumber made the economy turn in Gooderham. However, the village did contain a creamery (butter making) and was the home of the Glamorgan Agricultural Society & Fair until the Fair was discontinued in the 1940s. By 1900, the village had reached its zenith under the forest industry.
A business directory stated the village (population 150) contained the following businesses: Peter Barr – General Store J.J. Hunter – Sawmill, Davis & White – Stave Mill, John McColl – Shoemaker, J W Gould – General Store R. Hadley – Blacksmith, Donald McFadden – Shingle Mill, James Scott – Hotel. The village contained 3 Churches (Methodist, Anglican & Pentecostal) and of course an Orange Lodge.
In 1924, the Glamorgan ratepayers decided to consolidate 7 rural, one-room schools into a large consolidated school in Gooderham. The resulting large structure was a marvel of its time; containing 3 class-rooms & a community hall. To bring the student to the new structure, bussing was necessary. The buses were horse drawn vans, essentially boxes mounted on wagon boxes. The larger uses carried 20 – 25 students. In the nice weather, the driver sat outside, but in winter he was inside with reins running through holes in the front. The bus was heated by a small oil-drum stove in one corner. It was hoped they didn’t tip over! In winter there were no snow plows until the 1930’s so travel was often a challenge! Another sign of a prosperous village was the formation of a telephone company. The Glamorgan Telephone Company was formed in 1921 and serviced the area until 1970 absorbed by Dysart Telephone System & then Bell Canada.
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