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Festival at Fort Willow will provide blast from the past

Oct. 1 event at Historic Fort Willow Conservation Area will highlight area's past
2018-09-29 Fort Willow 11 RB
The Festival at Fort Willow is returning to the Historic Fort Willow Conservation Area in October. | Raymond Bowe/BarrieToday file photo

NEWS RELEASE
NOTTAWASAGA VALLEY CONSERVATION AUTHORITY
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On Saturday, Oct. 1, visitors will be able to travel back in time at the Historic Fort Willow Conservation Area.

The Festival at Fort Willow is an annual event where visitors experience what life was like pre-European contact, during the fur trade and the War of 1812. Re-enactors will be dressed in historically accurate clothing and will be demonstrating life as it was during those times.

Visitors will have opportunities to make candles, find out what items were traded between Indigenous peoples and Europeans, experience first-hand how sailors work on ships, see how food was made by settlers, watch live wood-carving demonstrations, chat with the Barrie Garden Club about the Three Sisters Indigenous gardening practices, muster up and march in the King’s army and listen to the cannons roar.

“In the past, this site was used for centuries by Indigenous peoples, during the fur trade and by French explorers as part of a major transportation route known as the Nine Mile Portage,” said Kyra Howes, manager of lands and operations. “It was also strategically located as a supply depot during the War of 1812. Both Fort Willow and the Nine Mile Portage are provincial and national historic sites.”

The Festival at Fort Willow will be held at the Historic Fort Willow Conservation Area (2714 Grenfel Rd., Utopia) on Oct. 1 from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Tickets for the event are $10 per person or $35 for a family of four. Children under two years of age are free. Tickets can be purchased at fortwillow.nvca.on.ca.
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