
Manitoulin Island
'Manitoulin Island' is the world's largest
freshwater lake island. With an area of 2,766
km² (1,068
square miles), it is the
174th largest island in the world, and
Canada's 31st largest island. Part of
Ontario,
Canada, the island separates the larger part of
Lake Huron to its south and west from
Georgian Bay to its east and the North Channel to the north. Manitoulin Island itself has 108 freshwater lakes, some of which have their own islands; in turn a few of these "islands within islands" have their own ponds.
Lake Manitou (about 104 km²) is the largest lake in a freshwater island in the world. The Island in Mindemoya Lake is the largest island in a lake on an island in a lake in the world
[1]. Manitoulin island has three rivers, the
Kagawong,
Manitou, and
Mindemoya Rivers, which provide
spawning grounds for
Atlantic Salmon and
trout.
The island has two incorporated towns (
Northeastern Manitoulin and the Islands and
Gore Bay), eight
townships (
Assiginack,
Billings,
Burpee and Mills,
Central Manitoulin,
Dawson,
Gordon,
Robinson and
Tehkummah) and six
Anishinaabe reserves (
M'Chigeeng, Sheguiandah, Sheshegwaning, Aundeck Omni Kaning,
Wikwemikong and
Zhiibaahaasing.)
During the summer months the population (12,600 permanent residents) on the island grows by more than a quarter of its usual size due to the popularity of boating and other activities offered to tourists. The island, along with several smaller neighbouring islands, constitutes the
Manitoulin District census division of Ontario.
The island is physiographically part of
Southern Ontario, an "eastward extension of the Interior Plains, a region characterized by low relief and sedimentary underpinnings". It consists mainly of
dolomite. It is a continuation of the
Bruce Peninsula and
Niagara Escarpment, a geological structure running south into
Niagara Falls and continuing into
New York. The Cup and Saucer Hiking Trail, which climbs the
escarpment, provides a spectacular lookout over the island.

Cup and Saucer Hiking Trail.
Year-round motor-vehicle access to the island is via the
Little Current Swing Bridge, a one-lane
swing bridge that crosses the North Channel at
Little Current. From late spring to early October, a daily passenger-vehicle ferry, the
Chi-Cheemaun (Ojibwa for "Big Canoe"), travels between
Tobermory on the tip of the
Bruce Peninsula and
South Baymouth on Manitoulin Island.
Manitoulin Island's soil is relatively
alkaline, which precludes the growth of common
Northern Ontario flora like
blueberries, but allows for the island's trademark
hawberries. These berries are so distinctive that people born on the island are referred to as Haweaters. Each year on the August
long weekend, the island hosts the
Haweater Festival. The festival is a large tourist draw and includes
parades, firework shows, craft shows, and
rural competitions such as horse pulls.
The island is also home to the Mounted Animal Nature Trail, made famous by Canadian humor band
Arrogant Worms.
History
Manitoulin means ''spirit island'' in the
Ojibwe language. The island was a sacred place for the native
Anishinaabe people who were
Ojibwe,
Odawa and
Potawatomi.
The North Channel was part of the route used by the
voyageurs to reach
Lake Superior. The first known
European to settle on the island was Father Joseph Poncet, a
French Jesuit, who set up a mission near Wikwemikong in
1648. The Jesuits called the island "Isle de Ste. Marie". Diseases introduced by the visitors had a devastating effect on the island's population. Raids from the south by the
Five Nations Iroquois drove the remaining people from the island by
1650. According to oral tradition, the island was burned to purify it as they left and it remained largely unsettled for the next 150 years.
Native people (
Odawa,
Ojibwe,
Potawatomi) began to return to the island following the
War of 1812. The island was ceded to the Crown in 1836 and set aside as a refuge for natives. Jean-Baptiste Proulx re-established a Roman Catholic mission in
1838 which the Jesuits took over in
1845. In
1862, the Manitoulin Island treaty opened up the island for settlement by non-native people. The
Wikwemikong chief did not accept this treaty and that reserve remains unceded.
External links
★
Manitoulin Tourism Association
★
The Making of the Manitoulin Treaty of 1836
★
The Making of the Manitoulin Treaty of 1862
★
Manitoulin, an essay about Ojibway Indians and Lumbermen by Harold Nelson Burden (1895)