Kirkland Lake
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I almost moved toKirkland Lake, and I’ve always kind of regretted that it didn’t work out. Kirkland Lake is a neat little town that’s been described to me as the ‘wild west’ of northeastern Ontario.
Forty
five kilometres east of the Quebec border on road 66, Kirkland Lake is a town
of about 10 000
8000, and is the largest
town between North Bay and Thunder
Bay on Highway 11. Kirkland Lake was named after Winifred Kirkland,
a secretary at the old Ministry of Mines. (Ah to be an early provincial
bureaucrat – you might get a town named after you.) Kirkland Lake, arguably,
has it's own suburb - King Kirkland - which consists of about 20 houses and
trailers about ten minutes east of town on the highway.
Mines and Garbage
Kirkland Lake is extremely well known throughout Canada despite its small size and relatively remote location. Since gold was struck in the early 1900s, KL has been one of Canada’s most famous mining towns, complete with gold mines, drinking hotels, and highgraders. There’s a miner’s memorial as you come into town, which is actually quite classy and lists all the names of those who have died in mining accidents since the town began.
KL is also famous for Adams
Mine – an abandoned open-pit mine that would have been the site for Toronto’s
garbage, had the local community, First Nations, farmers and environmentalists
not fought it so effectively. They were in the media, they wrote thousands
of letters, they united many groups that had not worked together before.
Kirkland Lake is a story across Canada showing that no matter how small you may be if you do it right and smart – you can win. Adams Mine was seen as a huge story across Canada – so much so that the effort which started small eventually changed a lot of minds across southern Ontario. The provincial government put the plan to rest in 2003. The Grievous Angels, a band based in northern Ontario, wrote a song about it (the lyrics are here.)
Harry and Hockey and ... other interesting stuff
Sir Harry Oakes is probably Kirkland Lake’s most famous and
most wealthy citizen. American-born, he was a prospector who finally struck
it big in KL after stints in California, Australia, and the Klondike.
His mine in KL was the second largest gold mine in the Americas. By
the 1920s, Harry Oakes was Canada’s richest individual. However in 1943,
Oakes was allegedly murdered at his home in the Bahamas, and although
fingers were pointed towards his son-in-law, no one was ever convicted of
the crime. Today his former house is home to the Northern Ontario Museum
in KL.
In terms of other famous KLers, Kirkland Lake was also once home to Growing Pains star Alan Thicke, figure skater Toller Cranston, and former NHL goalie Darren Puppa.
On the subject of hockey, Kirkland Lake used to be
known as a hockey hotbed. CBC broadcaster Foster Hewitt used to call
KL “the town that made the NHL famous” due to so many Kirkland Lakers
filling the roasters of early NHL squads. Today KL is home to Hockey
Heritage North, a museum that celebrates hockey and northern Ontario’s role
in the NHL. Hockey Heritage North has a parkinglot that’s bigger than
the museum itself - seemingly twice the size of the facility – and the parkinglot
is probably a bigger draw for kids learning to ride bikes or for rollerblading
and skateboarding. In three visits I’ve come to believe that Hockey
Heritage North’s parkinglot is the nicest smoothest stretch of pavement in
all of northern Ontario.
Way back in the day, Kirkland Lake, however, was arguably almost as famous for its red house. KL had a reputation for being a party town, thanks in part to the mining boom and the many bachelors who ventured north to prospect and work. I have been told that one of the highlights of Kirkland Lake’s heyday was its internationally-known brothel. Soldiers from the area went to Europe to fight in World War One and regaled Europeans with tales of "the Red House of Kirkland Lake" or "5 Main Street" which was in fact a popular brothel well-known across the north. Supposedly the tales were so tall or so enthralling that other soldiers and even Europeans have actually come back to the area to visit Kirkland Lake’s red whorehouse. The house itself still standing but is no longer red.
Kirkland
Lake: The Town
Kirkland Lake, to me at least, is
a town of contrasts. When you enter the downtown along Government
Road, it looks a bit like Huntsville
in cottage country – a windy street revealing the town turn by turn, forming
the backbone of an old but not pretty interesting little downtown. Actually,
I like the downtown – it’s may not be "quaint" by some people's
standards but has character. With
a decent downtown and as a town of 10 000, Kirkland Lake is big by Highway
11 standards. There are two hotels (HoJo and Comfort Inn), a Canadian
Tire, a McDonald’s, a KFC, a Subway, a pizza shop, two Tim Horton’s (heck
Timmins only has three!), a northern Ontario Chinese place, the Downtown Family
Restaurant, and ‘The Zone’, which is a little club sort of thing in the basement
of the local MP’s office.
Yet one could say that there is very little shopping. Other than Giant Tiger and Hart, that’s about it. No Zellers, no Walmart, one (and a half) grocery stores, a music shop, a pawn shop, and that’s it. The Kirkland Lake Mall has maybe about 20 shops and services. I guess you either go to Timmins, or to Rouyn-Noranda.
For a number
of years, Kirkland Lake also had a significant Jewish community. As
the mining boom spread northwards, Jewish families from Eastern Europe and
even the United States moved up into the Englehart and Kirkland Lake area.
Some settled as farmers in the area around Krugerdorf,
while others formed the backbone of the commerce that fed Northeastern Ontario's
mining towns. A synagogue was built in 1927, with land donated by Sir Harry
Oakes on Station Road. The community thrived, peaking in the late 1940s at
a couple hundred members. Eventually, as the sons and daughters of the community
moved southwards, and as fewer immigrants came north, the community shrank,
and the synoguge was turned into apartments in 1980. Kirkland Lake's
original
'Ark' (or Aron Hakodesh, which I believe is the wooden structure which holds
the Torah) was eventually transported to the Beth Tikvah Synagogue in Toronto.
While the community may have migrated, the history and the impact of Jewish
immigrants lives long in the north, in places like Kirkland Lake, Iroquois
Falls, Krugerdorf, and Timmins.
Check out the virtual museum at the Kirkland Lake Jewish History link at the
bottom of the page for first hand stories from community members.
Kirkland Lake today
still has a bit of a reputation as a hard-scrabble town. The cyclical
ups and downs of the mining and logging industries make Kirkland Lake a boomtown
one decade and an economic sponge the next. Just like many towns in both northern
and southern Ontario, as life in Northern Ontario requires a little assistance
to get by the booms and busts of the economy. Like all mining towns, Kirkland
Lake is a little rough around the edges. But that's what makes places like
this interesting, and unique. Like someone posted below, KL is a mining town,
past, present, and future.
I have one beef with KL though, and I’ll get it off my chest now. The signs outside the town blatantly lie. They tell you it’s 15 kilometres to town and then 15 kilometres later you see a sign that says “Kirkland Lake 6 km” and then five minutes later you see another sign “Kirkland Lake 5 km.” Now I’m sorry, first off you’re lying the first time, and then the second time I was driving 90 kilometres an hour and I did not manage to go only one kilometre in that span of five minutes. It’s frustrating. Bad signage is one of my pet peeves in general.
I like Kirkland Lake. It has a lot of potential if marketed correctly. I’ll be back.
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KIRKLAND LAKE - |
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Larder Lake
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