While I heard many wonderful things about the horticultural tour, I happened to be in the group led by Marie Carter and got some amazing insight to the history of Dresden. We started at the plaque that showed where Rev. Josiah Henson’s house (“Uncle Tom’s Cabin”) actually sat originally. From there we went along the famous and once sought after “Hughes Street” which is a street with beautiful houses and some intriguing stories to go with them. We saw a house that John A. MacDonald might have stayed at when he came to visit a good friend who lived in Dresden during his last campaign tour, stories of forbidden love, and just interesting facts of architecture and the first families like the McVean’s that settled in Dresden.
There were so many stories and different dynamics along this trail, from the Underground Railroad to the industries of Dresden, I couldn’t possibly list them. Growing up in small towns all my life I always had an understanding of the importance and the impact small towns have on surrounding areas. This trail has really brought a whole new understanding and appreciation that Dresden was, and still is, such an integral part to Southern Ontario. I will end this with the lesson I learned the most during this WalkCK walk; never take anything you see on a walk for granted, history is always surrounding us and trying to tell its story. Be aware and embrace it for what is was and how it has shaped the area you are in now.
A special thanks once again to Marie Carter and Lynda Weese
for making WalkCK’s walk a memorable, entertaining, and educational walk. For
anyone interested on going on the Dresden Trillium Trail you can find a
self-guided tour brochure at http://www.dresden.ca/TrilliumTrail.pdf.