Going Home To 'Lost Villages'
Our Canada|February/March 2018

One of the costs of building the Saint Lawrence Seaway was a devastating loss of communities—and history

Jennifer DeBruin
Going Home To 'Lost Villages'
For most of us, going back to our childhood hometowns, often to share memories with our children and future generations, is something we take for granted. The former citizens of the “Lost Villages” of the Saint Lawrence River and their families, however, can never truly go home again.

Born in Cornwall, Ont., I, like many young people, never really took much interest in where I came from or what the history of the area meant in the context of our Canadian identity. To me it was just the place I lived. Only now, as history and genealogy have become popular, have I realized that my history is not only tied to the beautiful Saint Lawrence River, but lies beneath it.

The Lost Villages, as they came to be known, were nine communities in the former townships of Cornwall and Osnabruck, which were dismantled and then flooded in July 1958—the “price of progress” as the Saint Lawrence Seaway and Hydro Electric project was being implemented. These were, however, places of our earliest history.

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